Rest Day 3/9/14: Who wants to Row, Run, WOD, Run, Row? – Check the RRL1k!

Rowing on the Water!  Can't wait for the ice to melt!

Rowing on the Water! Can’t wait for the ice to melt!

Want to Row, Run, Race a 1k on the Concept2, Run, and Row again?

Renegade Rowing is going to kick off the Summer Masters Rowing season by hosting a Renegade Rowing League 1k Race at CrossFit Boston.  Masters crews from across the Northeast are invited to join us for a friendly event that involves Rowing 2k on the water from Community Rowing Inc., Running a mile to CrossFit Boston, Competing to PR your 1k on the Concept2 Ergometer, Running a mile back to the Charles River, and Rowing 2k back to CRI.  If you’d like to join us please sign up here and Coach Pat will get you all of the details!  The date of the 2014 RRL 1k is Saturday, May 31st.

Do you have what it takes?

It will look something like this …

Conditioning WOD 1/27/14: 6RFT – 250m Row, 10 Burpees, 2 Snatch – Post Time

Rowing WOD:

The Gentlemen of the Renegade Rowing League tearing it up on Saturday!

The Gentlemen of the Renegade Rowing League tearing it up on Saturday!

10 x 10 Strokes

  • First 10 Strokes of Start (1/2, 3/4, Full, 7 High)
  • After each set pause at 1/2 slide and let the fan come to a stop and Reset Monitor
  • Post Lowest Average Split to Comments.

Conditioning WOD:

6RFT

250m Row

10 Burpees

2 Snatch (135/95 lbs.)

  • Post Time to Comments.

Strength WOD:

EMOM10

2 Snatch

  • Heavier than last week.

Superset:

5×4 Pull Ups

5×4 Dips

  • As Heavy As Possible
  • Post Loads to Comments

Start the week of strong with some focused start work and then attack the Conditioning WOD.  Be sure to focus on your setup and execution of the snatches.  On Thursday we’ll be testing Games WOD 13.1 and today is a chance to dial in your snatches for that.

Have fun and tear it up!

Rest Day 12/5/13: Connection and Speed – Skill Transfer between Olympic Lifting and Rowing

Olympic Lifting and Rowing?RR Snatch Setup

What do you think about using Olympic Lifting in training to be a Rower or using Rowing to be a better Olympic Lifter?  Both require speed and power and incorporate similar movement patterns.  However, in rowing you sit down and are in contact with three surfaces.  In Olympic Lifting you are only in contact with two.  In Olympic lifting the goal is to transfer forces vertically and in rowing the goal is to transfer forces horizontally.  Where do you see the most benefit in training with both?  Are there downfalls?

One skill, concept, and idea that I keep coming back to is Connection.  Coaching people in the gym and on the water allows me to see many different movement patterns and levels of ability.  Athletes that grasp this idea of connection from one joint to another and one external object to another are able to learn faster, create more power, and transfer skills to other movements.  Learning to connect the hips to the hands as you initiate a movement or connect your feet to your hands at the catch, both in rowing and snatching, is invaluable.  Once this skill is perfected the possibilities are endless.

Yesterday morning I introduced the snatch to the BC Men’s Crew Team.  While we only worked with PVC pipes to begin with and 45# bars in the workout, the importance of generating speed through the middle of the drive and being turned on at the catch became apparent.  Those that had explosive hip extension from rowing and knew how to create speed on the oar through the middle of the drive in the boat had a lot more success transferring that skill to the barbell.

Using the Clean and the Snatch to generate speed on the drive through good connection is a lot of fun.  Rowers become athletes and are empowered to push harder by learning new movements and finding power they never knew they had.  It’s also a lot of fun seeing olympic lifters and other athletes learn to row because it helps them to find more connection and speed in their lifts.

Post your thoughts to comments!  Any experience transferring skills from one sport to another?

Rowing WOD 11/15/13: “It’s all about the …” – 5RFT – 250m Row, 10 Goblet Squats – Post Time

Rowing WOD 11/15/13:

Break Parallel and Explode Up Through The Heels!

Break Parallel and Explode Up Through The Heels!

“It’s all about the …”

5 Rounds For Time

250m Row (@2k-2)

10 Goblet Squats to the Erg (25/15 lbs.)

Whether you want to win the Renegade Rowing Cup for your Box, take home the hammer from the CRASH-Bs, conquer the games, or just live a healthier life, you will need to be able to powerfully extend your hips.  In rowing specifically, we need to be able to turn on our glutes and hamstrings quickly in order to pick up the boat or flywheel before they die.  Getting our motor neurons to fire quickly in order to drive through the heels is the name of the game.  In today’s Rowing WOD use the erg seat, or the erg rail if the seat is to high, for goblet squats.  Focus on getting to the same depth every time, kissing the erg, and then exploding through the heels.  The weight is light, so focus on good foundational movement and generating speed with the legs and hips.  Cycle through the squats with good form as fast as possible.  If you think you have what it takes to go heavier, say 45/35 lbs., make sure you maintain the same explosive speed on the drive of the Goblet Squat that you have at lighter weight.  During the 250m pieces you can practice your 2k start and then fight to consistently hold a 500m Split that is 2 seconds faster than your current 2k average split.

Post your time and average splits to comments!  Also, would you wear a RR shirt that said that … “It’s all about the …”, strategically placed of course.  Let us know!

Rowing WOD 7/23/13: Max Pressure – 15 x :20 On, :40 Off – Post Fastest, Slowest, Avg Splits

Rowing WOD 7/23/13:

Rowing Warmup at CFB

Rowing Warmup at CFB

15 x :20 On, :40 Off

Max Pressure

Elite fitness is all about developing power through high intensity.  Today’s Rowing WOD is an opportunity to push your boundaries and test the limits of your speed.  Catch your breath and focus on the 40 seconds off so that you can put every ounce of energy into suspending from the oar and going low on the split.  Compare your results to your 500m race plan.  Do you last through the first 7, but die soon after?  Could you go faster at the start of your 500m?  What happens to your focus in the last couple?  Use your results to adjust your race plan and goal for our next 500m test which will be happening in two weeks.  The idea of suspension can be very powerful when you’re trying to pull low splits under fatigue.  Check it out below.

Post your fastest, slowest, and average splits to comments.

Try warming up with a couple of strap drills to feel and practice suspending from the oar.    Have Fun!