CrossFit – Fri, May 22

CrossFit Republic – CrossFit


RESTORE • REBUILD • PERFORM

Our next Yoga cycle at CrossFit Republic runs from June 13 through August 9 with classes every Saturday at 10:30 AM.

Led by Instructor Katie Fulp, who brings 15+ years of experience, this 8-week block program is designed to improve flexibility, balance, coordination, stability, recovery, and overall movement quality. Whether you’re looking to support your CrossFit training, move better in everyday life, or create more balance in your overall health and fitness, this program is built for all experience levels.

$120 for the full 8-week program

$15 drop-ins available if you’d prefer to attend at your leisure

Please note: We will not hold class during 4th of July weekend, but the program will still include all 8 sessions.

To maintain the integrity of quality coaching and sound instruction, classes will be capped at 20 participants.

Follow our social media pages for registration details and additional program updates.

The link to purchase all 8 weeks is in the bio and comment section!

Sign Up Here:

https://crossfitrepublic.wodify.com/OnlineSalesPage/Main?q=ReviewPurchase%7COnlineMembershipId%3D307689%26LocationId%3D11453%26OnlineMembershipPaymentOptionId%3D1516836

Daily Strength W.O.D. – 15 Minutes (Weight)

Build to a heavy but quality set of…

2 Snatch Pulls + 1 Power Snatch

*Does not need to be unbroken.

**The snatch pull is completed with long arms and just a shrug (triple extensions). No elbow drive.

***Complete at least 5 sets

Intended Stimulus

This is a technical development session focused on:

Bar path

Pull mechanics

Lat engagement

Timing and extension

Position awareness under load

Today is less about max loading and more about creating opportunities for:

Repetition

Coaching feedback

Immediate correction

Better understanding of the movement

This is where coaches can really slow athletes down and teach the mechanics of the snatch.

Why This Complex Works

The snatch pulls isolate:

The first pull

Proper positioning

Staying connected to the bar

Full extension

Then the power snatch tests whether the athlete can carry those exact mechanics into the complete lift.

A lot of athletes pull well until they know they have to go overhead. Then everything changes:

They lose tension

Yank with the arms

Stop using the legs

Disconnect from the bar

This complex exposes that immediately.

The Importance of the Lats in Olympic Lifting

The lats are one of the biggest missing pieces in developing Olympic lifters.

Your lats:

Connect the barbell to your body

Keep the bar close

Transfer force from the legs and midline into the arms and ultimately the barbell

Without lat engagement:

The bar drifts away

Power leaks

Extension becomes inefficient

Turnover becomes inconsistent

What Good Lat Engagement Looks Like

Athletes should feel like they are:

Pulling the bar INTO themselves

Keeping the armpits “tight”

Actively sweeping the bar back into the hips

The arms are not just hanging loose.

The lats create tension that allows:

Force from the floor

Through the legs and hips

Through the trunk

Into the barbell

That connection is what makes strong Olympic lifts look smooth and effortless.

Snatch Pull Focus

During the pull:

Stay over the bar

Push through the floor

Keep the bar connected to the body with the lats

Finish vertically through hips, knees, and ankles

The pull should feel:

Tight

Connected

Balanced

Not loose and yanked upward with the arms.

Power Snatch Focus

The power snatch should simply be:

The same pull

Followed by an aggressive turnover overhead

If the pull changes because the athlete is worried about getting under the bar, that’s the issue coaches should attack today.

What Coaches Should Watch For

Good Signs

Bar stays close

Extension finishes completely

Athlete stays balanced through the feet

Elbows stay high and outside during the pull

Common Errors

Early arm bend

Bar looping away from the body

Losing lat tension off the floor

Jumping forward or backward excessively

Pulling “up” instead of staying connected to the body
Loading Guidance

Build gradually

Quality dictates loading today

Advanced athletes can challenge heavier power snatches

Developing athletes should prioritize mechanics and consistency

The best sets today will look the same at heavier loads as they did light.

Daily Conditioning W.O.D. – 12 Minutes (AMRAP – Rounds and Reps)

As Many Rounds and Reps as Possible with a Partner in 12 Minutes of…

60 Pull Ups

60/48 Calorie Echo Bike

30 Chest to Bar Pull Ups

30/24 Calorie Echo Bike

Intended Stimulus

This is a high-volume pulling and aerobic output workout .

The challenge is balancing:

Grip fatigue

Pulling stamina

Bike intensity

Recovery management

The pull-up volume is high enough that strategy matters immediately. Teams that manage fatigue early will continue moving while others stall on the rig.

Time Domain Breakdown

60 Pull Ups

3:00 – 4:00

60/48 Cal Echo Bike

3:00 – 4:00

30 Chest to Bar Pull Ups

2:00 – 3:00

30/24 Cal Echo Bike

1:00 – 2:00

Workout Expectation

Most teams complete:

1 full round + partial second round

Advanced teams may approach:

2+ rounds

This workout is dictated more by pulling endurance than conditioning alone.

Strategy Notes

Pull Ups

Small, repeatable sets early

Avoid hitting failure

Fast transitions beat hero sets

Examples:

5s

10s

Short alternating intervals

Chest to Bar

More technical and demanding

Stay efficient in the kip

Break before the movement breaks down

Missing reps here becomes very expensive.

Echo Bike

Hard but sustainable pace

Don’t destroy your legs trying to “win” calories

Use the bike to recover grip and pulling muscles slightly

Short aggressive calorie bursts usually work best.

Partner Strategy

One athlete should always be moving

Communicate transitions before stopping

Avoid one athlete carrying too much pulling volume early

This workout rewards consistency more than hero efforts.

Common Errors

Opening with massive pull-up sets

Going to failure early

Overbiking and destroying recovery

Letting transitions become rest periods

Final Thoughts

If your pull-up sets collapse early, your opening strategy was too aggressive.

Step 1:

40 Seated Banded Lat Pull Down with PVC

40/32 Calorie Echo Bike

20 Seated Barbell Strict Pull Ups

20/16 Calorie Echo Bike

Step 2:

40 Jumping Pull Ups

40/32 Calorie Echo Bike

20 Pull Ups (Kipping or Banded)

20/16 Calorie Echo Bike

Step 3:

40 Pull Ups

40/32 Calorie Echo Bike

20 Chest to Bar Pull Ups

20/16 Calorie Echo Bike

Step 5:

60 Chest to Bar Pull Ups

60/48 Calorie Echo Bike

30 Bar Muscle Ups

30/24 Calorie Echo Bike