Finally some overhead work for this guy. For some reason I've taken less weight overhead lately. No specific reason, just haven't done them that much. I took 'em as emom training and then hit a pure cardio blast workout: rowing, old school push-ups and knees-to-elbows. It was a tight package session and tomorrow I'm getting outdoors with 95% probability so it's gonna be a different type of workout again with some friends.
Strength.
- Every minute on the minute for 12 minutes
- 1 power clean + 3 split jerk
- All sets @ 70kg
My 1RM is 105kg and I've regularly jerked 90kg bars up in the air. However, I thought going too heavy in the beginning might bring troubles so I stayed lower and this was emom-workout after all. Obviously I couldn't go as high if I had to complete reps every min. I'll probably redo a jerk workout later in the week and that time forget about the time and just go heavier.
This was a very good stuff for me. I felt confident and the bar path felt natural all the time. I didn't pay attention there would have been any deviations from normal lifts. I was steady, solid and tight throughout the body, from legs to core, to shoulders and elbows. Felt like I dominated the barbell.
Metcon. Time 14.29
- 500m row
- 25 push-ups
- 12 knees-to-elbows
Those push-ups caught my attention couple of days ago from somewhere. I realized it's such a basic movement, and I really don't do them that often. Very rarely to say the truth. Those would definitely be a good add-in at the end of a training session as a cashout, 50-100 reps for "fun".
As core movements t2b's and k2e's are great. I've been doing toes-to-bar quite a lot so I figured changing it to knees-to-elbow for a while. They were so much lighter than t2b's! That caught me by surprise. I nailed them unbroken each round. Okay, my grip strength was a little shaky towards the end but the movement itself was the easiest for me.
Good and simple workout! It took me 3-4 minutes per round to get the work done. I took the push-ups in mostly in sets of 12-7-6 except for the first round where I did them in 2 sets (18-7). Didn't want to burn my upper body in the first round. No excuses, they felt a lot tougher than they should. Even though I at least tried to keep the recovery short between sets, there must have slipped away valuable seconds. Lesson learned: do more push-ups.
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