CrossFit – Tue, Mar 17

CrossFit Republic – CrossFit

No Endurance Option Today

I’d like the community to experience this Zercher RDL and gain the benefits of it and allow coaches to keep a close eye on athletes while they’re performing it. Also, I’d like everyone to perform the benchmark “Annie.”

Daily Strength W.O.D. – 15 Minutes (5 Rounds for weight)

Zercher Romanian Deadlifts (From the Rack)

5 Sets of 8 Reps

RPE 7 (You should feel like you can do 3 – 4 reps past 8).

What is the Zercher RDL?

The Zercher Romanian Deadlift is a posterior-chain strength movement where the bar is held in the Zercher position (in the crooks of the elbows) while performing a hinge pattern like an RDL .

Instead of the bar being in your hands, it sits in front of your torso, forcing your core, upper back, and hips to work harder to stay in position.

This is a total trunk + posterior chain builder .

What is it doing?

The Zercher RDL trains:

Hamstrings – eccentric control and length strength

Glutes – hip extension power

Lower back – isometric stability

Upper back – posture under front load

Core / abs – resisting collapse forward

Biceps & arms – supporting the Zercher hold

Bracing mechanics – learning to stay tight under awkward load

Because the weight is in front of you, your body has to fight to not fold and that’s the point. It teaches you to stay strong when the position isn’t perfect.

Why do we do it?

Most athletes are strong when everything is ideal.

Bar in the hands.

Neutral grip.

Comfortable rack.

Perfect stance.

Sport and real training are not like that.

The Zercher RDL forces:

Front-side loading

Long lever hinge

Core under tension

Upper back endurance

Hamstrings under stretch

This makes it one of the best lifts for:

Strongman style events

Odd object lifting

Sandbags / stones / carries

Wrestling / football / grappling

CrossFit hinge strength

Injury prevention

It builds strength that transfers.

Why should we do it more?

Most athletes lack strength in positions where:

The load is in front

The torso wants to collapse

The hamstrings are long

The core is fatigued

That’s exactly what this lift trains.

Doing more Zercher hinges helps:

Fix weak posterior chain

Fix bad posture under load

Improve deadlift mechanics

Improve squat stability

Improve bracing

Build resilience in the low back

If you only train perfect positions,

you get strong only in perfect positions.

How to perform the Zercher RDL correctly

1. Set the Zercher position

Bar in elbow crease

Hands together or fists up

Keep bar tight to body

Chest tall, ribs down

2. Hinge, don’t squat

Push hips back

Slight bend in knees

Feel stretch in hamstrings

Keep torso rigid

3. Keep the bar close

Bar stays against torso

Don’t let it drift forward

If it drifts, your core is loose

4. Stop when position breaks

Go until hamstrings limit you

Not until your back rounds

5. Stand by driving hips forward

Squeeze glutes

Brace abs

Finish tall, not leaning back

Common mistakes

Squatting instead of hinging

Letting elbows drop

Rounding upper back

Losing brace at the bottom

Going too heavy too soon

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Daily Conditioning W.O.D. – 12 Minutes (Time)

“Annie”

50-40-30-20-10 reps for time:

Double Unders

Ab Mat Sit Ups

What Is the Annie Workout?

Annie was first programmed on CrossFit.com on Sept. 7, 2005, and is considered to be a classic benchmark test. It is a workout that looks simple on paper but packs a potent dose in a short timeframe as the workout design promotes intensity and a fast pace. Named after CrossFit pioneer Annie Sakamoto , this benchmark workout features a descending rep scheme of double-unders and sit-ups: 50 double-unders, 50 sit-ups, 40 double-unders, 40 sit-ups, 30 double-unders, 30 sit-ups, 20 double-unders, 20 sit-ups, and finally 10 double-unders and 10 sit-ups.

The highest level athletes will finish this workout in under 6 minutes, while performing a variation of this workout that allows for completion in 10-12 minutes is a great goal for all levels of athletes.

This workout primarily challenges cardio-respiratory endurance and stamina, as well as neurological components of fitness, specifically with the double-under.

About the Annie Workout

Annie is a task-priority workout. The amount of work the athlete completes is fixed, and athletes complete the workout as quickly as possible — for time — while maintaining sound movement mechanics and full ranges of motion.

With this type of workout, it’s important to note the time required for completion. When repeating this workout, the goal is to perform the workout faster or in a similar timeframe but with more challenging scales.

This workout can be scaled to meet the current capacity of any athlete.

Intended Stimulus

Sub-10:00; advanced athletes in sub-6:30.

Double-unders in 1:00 or less for the first two rounds.

Constantly moving on sit-ups without breaks

Step 1:

35 – 25 – 15 – 10 – 5…

Single Unders, Line Hops, or Plate Taps

Ab Mat Sit Ups

Step 2:

75 – 60 – 45 – 30 – 15…

Single Unders

Ab Mat Sit Ups

Step 3: Same as RX

Annie (Time)

50-40-30-20-10
Double-unders
Sit-ups