Video Review: How can Shadi help you? – Post your video/thoughts for feedback!

How’s it going Renegades?  Today we’re taking a look at Shadi mid race.  This is a video review that I put together to help her and you develop your stroke and find new areas to improve upon.  I’ll be posting regular video reviews about once a week, usually on Thursdays.  If you’d like feedback on your stroke or would like to see me talk about a certain area of the stroke, please let me know in  the comments.  If you’d like to be featured in the weekly Video Review please send me a 5 stroke video via email to pat@renegaderowing.com.

Today’s topic relates to how you sit on the erg.  Are you sitting on the back of the seat or the front of the seat?  Are you balanced on the back of your tail bones or the front?  How does your point of contact with the seat affect your posture and positioning throughout the stroke?  These are things to think about and an area where you can make a quick change to see big gains.  Let us know what you think and if you have any questions.

Also, if you’d like to join in the fun in person, the Renegade Rowing Club practices every Tuesday morning at 6am and Wednesday evening at 6pm.  Everyone is welcome, just let me know via email – pat@renegaderowing.com, and I can get you the details on how to get started and join the group.  Don’t forget to register for the next Renegade Rowing League on January 24th!

1/1/15: Happy New Year!

RR CRASH-B Coach PatI wish everyone the best and hope 2015 treats you well!  Take some of that into your own hands and commit to a certain number of Renegade Rowing Blocks per week.  Mixing in just 2 or 3 with your regular training can step up your game to a whole new level.  Comment with your results and let other Renegades know how you’re doing!

Also, get excited for some additional programming.  This Holiday Season I’ve been working on the Renegade Rowing Training Plan.  I’ll be adding in additional programming to the strength blocks so that if you are on your own or you’re looking to step up your performance you’ll have what you need to get the job done.

Enjoy your day and have some fun with Family and Friends!

All the Best!

Coach Pat

Renegade Rowing League #2! – Rowing WOD 12/20/14: Row 2k! – Post Results

It has arrived!  Renegade Rowing League Race #2 is here!  If you’re in the Boston area come compete and cheer everyone on at 114 Western Ave, Allston, MA.  It starts at 8:00am and there will be mobility demos and mobility toys to play with as well.  Let the games begin!

Rowing WOD:

Get After It!

2k Row

Today’s Rowing WOD is a 2k Row.  It’s a test of how much pain and glory you can endure over seven to eight minutes.  Grab some friends and get after it.  This is our second test of the winter season and will give us a baseline to work off of and use in pacing future workouts. Be in the moment, execute your splits, smile, have some fun, breath, and get after it!

Post your 2k results to comments!

Video Review: What do you think of your form? How about Erik’s?

The Men attacking their 2k in Heat 2 of the Renegade Rowing League on Saturday!

The Men attacking their 2k in Heat 2 of the Renegade Rowing League.  Register for the next one taking place on Saturday, December 20th @8am!

Video Review

From time to time it can be beneficial to look at yourself on camera.  No we don’t care about the aesthetics or the fashion.  We’re looking to gain feedback and a mental picture.  We’re looking for just one or two cues that might give us a smoother, more powerful stroke.  What’s going right?  What’s going wrong?  What can we do better?

You should be asking yourself, “What do I look like now?  How do I move now? What could use some extra focus and improvement next time?”  Don’t dwell on to many things at a time, just find one or two things that might make your life on the erg or in the boat a little better.  Go work on them.  Then reassess in a couple of weeks.

The Renegade Rowing Club has agreed to help everyone by taking a look at their strokes. If you’d like feedback similar to this, post a 20 second clip of you rowing to YouTube and share it with us in the comments of this post.  I’ll do my best to give you a couple of things to work on!  Here is a video of Erik and what he’s going to work on over the next couple of weeks.

Take a look and share what you might focus on next time you row!

Video Review: How can Stan help you? and Skill Transfer between Olympic Lifting and Rowing

Howdy Renegades!  I hope you all had a good start to the week and you’re getting fired up for the weekend.  Here is a little video review and feedback for Stan.  Take a look and see if there is something you can improve or think about in your rowing.  If you have questions or would like to join the Renegades let me know.  Right now we practice on Tuesday mornings at 6am and Wednesday evenings at 6pm.  If you’re interested in other times let me know and we’ll keep it growing!

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.

Last month 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?