********************************************************
VISIT OUR NEW SITE AT WWW.CROSSFITBOLTON.COM
********************************************************

77 PILLSWORTH ROAD, UNIT #2, BOLTON,ON

Email: crossfitbolton@gmail.com



Thursday, April 24, 2008

080424

"Ultimate Fight in the Garage"

In this workout you move from each of five stations after a minute. This is a five-minute round from which a one-minute break is allowed before repeating three times.

The stations are:
Wall-ball: 14 pound ball, 10 ft target. (Reps)
Sumo deadlift high-pull: 75 pounds (Reps)
Burpees (Reps)
Push-press: 75 pounds (Reps)
Row: calories (Calories)


The clock does not reset or stop between exercises. On call of "rotate," the athlete must move to next station immediately for good score. One point is given for each rep, except on the rower where each calorie is one point.



Fight Gone Bad Demo & Explanation...[wmv]




Killer Workouts, by Eugene Allen - May 05 CFJ

Rhabdomyolysis was first described in the victims of crush injury during the 1940- 1941 London, England, bombing raids of World War II - and more recently in Eugene’s garage.
A rugby player performs intense sets of squat jumps on a hot day, collapses, and is rushed to the hospital, where he spends two days in intensive care. Doctors notice that his heart is beating abnormally and that he has unusually high levels of potassium in his blood. A soccer player runs a series of 100- meter sprints at near maximum intensity. After his eighth sprint he collapses to the ground; when he gets to the hospital he is found to have high levels of potassium and myoglobin in his bloodstream. He spends several days in the hospital and is unable to train for several weeks. A highly fit marathoner holds a 6:30 pace for 26 miles but collapses only a few feet short of the finish line. Blood tests reveal a potassium concentration three or four times the normal level and he dies.


Read the full article in PDF

1 comment:

Alex said...

KP w/ 55# - 175
JP w/ 65# - 181