CrossFit – Thu, Feb 12

CrossFit Republic – CrossFit


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Volunteers Needed – Barbell Games Team Fitness Competition

We’re looking for volunteers to help us deliver a smooth, professional competition at The Barbell Games.

We need support in:

• Judging

• Reset Crew

• Set-Up / Load-In

• Load-Out

All volunteers receive a shirt, swag bag, meal vouchers, snacks, and drinks (non-alcohol for those that will ask me) during their shift.

The Science Behind Negatives with Supramaximal Loads

The Big Idea

Humans are stronger eccentrically than concentrically (you can lower more than you can lift).

Negative training takes advantage of this by exposing the nervous system and muscles to supra-maximal loads safely.

This creates adaptations you simply cannot get from normal lifting alone.

1) Eccentric Loading Produces Greater Strength Gains

One of the most consistent findings in strength research:

Eccentric training produces greater increases in maximal strength than concentric training.

Why:

Higher force production possible

Greater motor unit recruitment

Higher mechanical tension per rep

Key research:

Roig et al., 2009 meta-analysis (Journal of Applied Physiology)

→ Eccentric training produced greater strength increases than concentric-only training.

What this means for athletes:

Heavy negatives teach the body to handle heavier loads , which carries over to higher 1RM potential.

2) Improves Neural Drive & Confidence With Heavy Loads

Heavy negatives improve the nervous system’s ability to:

Recruit high-threshold motor units

Coordinate heavy lifting patterns

Reduce neural inhibition around heavy weights

In plain terms:

Your brain stops treating heavy weight as a threat and starts treating it as normal .

This is one of the biggest reasons negatives help break plateaus.

3) Increases Muscle Hypertrophy Through Mechanical Tension

Eccentric contractions create:

More muscle fiber damage

Longer time under tension

Greater anabolic signaling

Research consistently shows eccentrics stimulate:

Higher muscle protein synthesis

Greater hypertrophy signaling

Key research:

Schoenfeld, 2010–2017 body of work on hypertrophy

Douglas et al., 2017 Sports Medicine review on eccentric training

For bench press:

More upper-body muscle = larger strength ceiling.

4) Strengthens the “Sticking Point”

Most bench failures happen:

Off the chest

Mid-range of the press

Heavy negatives specifically strengthen:

Bottom position control

Transition out of the chest

Bar path stability

This is why many powerlifting programs include eccentrics before max testing.

5) Improves Tendon & Connective Tissue Strength

Heavy eccentrics create strong adaptations in:

Tendons

Connective tissue

Joint stability

Research shows eccentric loading is highly effective for:

Tendon stiffness

Injury resilience

This matters for long-term pressing health.

Why This Works Specifically for Bench Press

Heavy negatives improve:

Confidence under heavy load

Upper-back tension control

Stability in the bottom position

Motor unit recruitment

Hypertrophy potential

All of these are major limiters in pressing strength.

The Practical Takeaway

Heavy bench negatives help athletes:

Break plateaus

Handle heavier weights confidently

Build more muscle

Improve tendon durability

Increase future 1RM potential

That’s why they show up in:

Powerlifting programs

Olympic lifting accessory work

Advanced strength cycles

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

Bench Press (Negatives)

3 – 3 – 3 – 3 – 3

3 second decent, followed by spotter pulling the bar back up.

Spotter, ensure you don’t pull so hard that the lifter losing their upper back engagement on the bench.

Set 1: 90 – 95% 1RM

Set 2: 95 – 100% 1RM

Set 3: 100 -105% 1 RM

Set 4: 105 – 110% 1RM

Set 5: 110% – 120% 1RM

Intended Stimulus

This is eccentric strength and positional control work.

The goal is to:

Build strength through the lowering phase

Reinforce upper-back tension under heavy load

Improve confidence handling heavier weights in the bench press

This is not a pressing workout. The work happens on the way down .

Lifter Notes

Same setup as normal bench: feet planted, upper back tight.

Lower the bar under full control for a full 3 seconds .

Maintain tension through the chest, lats, and upper back.

Do not relax at the bottom.

Spotter Notes

Assist just enough to return the bar to the top.

Do not yank the bar off the athlete’s chest.

Help smoothly so the lifter maintains tension and position.

Rest

Take 2–3+ minutes between sets. These should feel heavy and intentional.

Rule of Thumb

If the descent speeds up or you lose upper-back tension, the load is too heavy.

Control matters more than numbers today.

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Daily Bodybuilding Bro Sesh – 15 Minutes (5 Rounds for weight)

Every 3 Minutes on the 3 Minutes for 5 Rounds Complete…

12 – 15 Double Dumbbell Lateral Raises

12 – 15 Double Dumbbell Front Raises

12 – 15 Double Dumbbell Upright Rows

Same dumbbells across the entire round. Stay at the same weight or build as you go.

Intended Stimulus

This is shoulder health and structural strength work , not conditioning.

The goal is to build the smaller muscles of the shoulder so they can support the bigger lifts and high-volume overhead work we do regularly.

Expect a controlled pace and a strong burn in the shoulders by the end of each round.

Why This Matters for CrossFit & Strength Training

CrossFit athletes spend a lot of time:

Overhead (snatches, jerks, presses, handstand work)

Hanging (pull-ups, toes to bar, muscle-ups)

Catching load dynamically (cleans and snatches)

All of that relies heavily on the rotator cuff and smaller shoulder stabilizers .

These muscles don’t produce big force, but they keep the shoulder joint stable while the larger muscles do the work.

Without targeted work like this:

Overhead positions become less stable

Pressing strength plateaus sooner

Injury risk increases as training volume rises

This type of training helps:

Improve shoulder stability and control

Support long-term pressing and overhead strength

Increase durability for high-volume gymnastics and barbell work

Balance the large amount of pushing and pulling we do in training

Think of this as maintenance and reinforcement so the bigger lifts can keep progressing.

Execution Notes

Light to moderate dumbbells.

Controlled tempo.

No swinging or torso movement.

If you have to use momentum, the weight is too heavy.

If this feels like conditioning, you chose weights that are too heavy.

This is about quality shoulder work , not intensity.

Endurance W.O.D. – 30 Minutes (Time)

2 Rounds For Time (One Time Through What you See Written Below is a Round)…

30/24 Calorie Row

30 Burpees

30/24 Calorie Echo Bike

Rest 3 Minutes

30/24 Calorie Echo Bike

30 Burpees

30/24 Calorie Row

Rest 3 Minutes

Burpee Standard: You must stand to full extension and clap your hands above your head. See video below. Disregard the “push up.” You do not have to slowly lower and raise yourself from the floor; however, you will stand up all the way. Coaches, hold the line even if it results in some sad faces.

Step 1 — Beginner

2 Rounds For Time

18/14 Calorie Row

20 Burpees

18/14 Calorie Bike

Rest 3:00

18/14 Calorie Bike

20 Burpees

18/14 Calorie Row

Rest 3:00

Intent:

Simple, sustainable engine work. Lower volume so athletes can keep moving without extended rest.

Step 2 — Scaled

2 Rounds For Time

24/20 Calorie Row

25 Burpees

24/20 Calorie Bike

Rest 3:00

24/20 Calorie Bike

25 Burpees

24/20 Calorie Row

Rest 3:00

Intent:

Slightly more volume, still manageable pacing. Athletes should finish each round without redlining.

Step 3 — Intermediate

2 Rounds For Time

27/21 Calorie Row

30 Burpees

27/21 Calorie Bike

Rest 3:00

27/21 Calorie Bike

30 Burpees

27/21 Calorie Row

Rest 3:00

Intent:

Matches the full structure and flow. Fatigue is noticeable but controllable. This should feel challenging without chaos.

Big Picture (Across All Steps)

This is an engine-first workout

Burpees are the limiter, not strength

The rest periods are there to allow two hard, honest efforts, not survival pacing

If round two falls apart completely, the step was too aggressive.

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