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  1. #1
    Live Laugh Love
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    arrow Are You a Strong Man?

    One more good read....(love to hear some feedback)


    We’ve all seen strongman competitions on television. Picking up Atlas Stones, pressing Logs overhead, carrying huge Oxygen cylinders, pulling semi-trucks – all events that are commonplace in strongman competitions.

    In many ways, professional strongman resembles MMA – especially MMA’s beginnings. It’s a small, lesser-known sport with little media coverage. Though its participants are “professionals” (in that they are paid to compete) and are the best in the world at what they do, it pays very little in comparison to other professional athletic endeavors around the world (though MMAists are now being paid more and more). Very few (if any) strength athletes earn enough (between prize money and sponsorships) to train full-time – most have to work a full-time job and train in their spare time. There used to be one major organization/competition, and that was the World’s Strongest Man (the contests you see sponsored by Met-Rx on ESPN). However, a few years ago, the IFSA was formed and holds its own contest. While the WSM contest features athletes from all over the world, this is the contest that American professional strongmen primarily compete in. IFSA, on the other hand, has a more international influence.

    Another striking similarity between strongman and MMA is development in its athletes. When MMA (primarily the UFC) first started, it was a contest between styles – karate vs. boxing vs. wrestling vs. judo vs. jiu-jitsu vs. muay thai, etc. Strongman, on the other hand, started back in the mid-1970s with the WSM. This contest brought athletes from all different arenas to include Olympic lifters, professional football players, bodybuilders, martial artists, track and field throwers, and more. Since their beginnings, athletes from both sports have drifted away from their specific influence(s) to be well-rounded athletes that, while they may have their own specializations within their given sport, can do well at anything.

    All that aside, let’s take a look at strongman itself. The idea of strongman is to try and test strength (as well as strength-based conditioning) in “odd” ways that not only don’t tend to show up in regular, everyday life, but neither are they in the gym.

    For example, instead of pressing a barbell, press giant log that gets in your way, a bar with two giant weights hanging from it (making momentum a giant issue), or a giant block of aluminum. Instead of picking up a barbell or set of dumbbells, pick up a giant round stone with no handles and that is hard to hold onto. Instead of doing squats with a barbell, do squats at the end of a giant lever that barrels (additional weight) are dropped into between reps.

    This sort of training is not only good for strongman contests, though. It’s a perfect fit for MMA. Getting good at holding, moving, carrying, or manipulating big, heavy objects at odd angles, in bad positions, and with little to no leverage, grip, or assistance. Think that sort of thing wouldn’t be good for MMA? Damn right it would.

    Now, doing strongman training isn’t exactly easy to pull off – especially if you work out in a commercial gym. Not too many gyms I know of (at least the major gym chains, anyway) have a set of Atlas Stones, a steel log, or giant oxygen cylinders for you to carry around.

    However, that doesn’t mean you can’t improvise and do some of this training on your own, anyway.

    Sandbags are a PERFECT fit for strongman training and conditioning. I’ve written about the benefits of sandbags numerous times, so I won’t repeat myself again. Just know that you can do a ton of exercises with them, they’re cheap and easy to make, shift and move to make lifting it harder, and have been the result of many-a-trainee cussing at the end of my workouts. Hehehe

    Still need examples for the sandbag? Ok. You might not have a set of Atlas Stones available (though they’re not as hard to make as you might think), but you can bear hug your sandbag and carry it around. Replicate the event of loading barrels with your sandbag. If nothing else, shoulder the sandbag, sprint 20 yards, and drop. Shoulder it again, and sprint back. Repeat until you die or pass out (whichever comes first).

    How about the oxygen cylinders that these guys pick up and carry? This is called a Farmer’s Walk. You probably don’t have the tanks sitting around, but you can pick up a pair of heavy DBs at the gym and take them for a walk.

    If you live in or near the woods, you can easily replicate the Fingal Fingers event. Fingal Fingers is the one with the giant steel cylinders that are hinged at one end to the ground. The athlete stands at one end, picks it up to his shoulders, and than levers it up hand-over-hand until the “finger” gets upright and eventually topples over the other direction. Want to replicate this? Cut a decent sized tree down (something maybe 1-2 feet in diameter) and cut it into a good 10-15 foot section. Flip back and forth.

    How about the event where they’re wearing the harness and towing a giant bus or train? This one is easy – head to an empty parking lot or street with little traffic and push your car around.

    I think if you can find a way to work some of this style of training into your workouts, you’ll be amazed at the benefits you’ll get.

  2. #2
    THE VIGORATOR
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frankie Spano View Post
    One more good read....(love to hear some feedback)


    We’ve all seen strongman competitions on television. Picking up Atlas Stones, pressing Logs overhead, carrying huge Oxygen cylinders, pulling semi-trucks – all events that are commonplace in strongman competitions.

    In many ways, professional strongman resembles MMA – especially MMA’s beginnings. It’s a small, lesser-known sport with little media coverage. Though its participants are “professionals” (in that they are paid to compete) and are the best in the world at what they do, it pays very little in comparison to other professional athletic endeavors around the world (though MMAists are now being paid more and more). Very few (if any) strength athletes earn enough (between prize money and sponsorships) to train full-time – most have to work a full-time job and train in their spare time. There used to be one major organization/competition, and that was the World’s Strongest Man (the contests you see sponsored by Met-Rx on ESPN). However, a few years ago, the IFSA was formed and holds its own contest. While the WSM contest features athletes from all over the world, this is the contest that American professional strongmen primarily compete in. IFSA, on the other hand, has a more international influence.

    Another striking similarity between strongman and MMA is development in its athletes. When MMA (primarily the UFC) first started, it was a contest between styles – karate vs. boxing vs. wrestling vs. judo vs. jiu-jitsu vs. muay thai, etc. Strongman, on the other hand, started back in the mid-1970s with the WSM. This contest brought athletes from all different arenas to include Olympic lifters, professional football players, bodybuilders, martial artists, track and field throwers, and more. Since their beginnings, athletes from both sports have drifted away from their specific influence(s) to be well-rounded athletes that, while they may have their own specializations within their given sport, can do well at anything.

    All that aside, let’s take a look at strongman itself. The idea of strongman is to try and test strength (as well as strength-based conditioning) in “odd” ways that not only don’t tend to show up in regular, everyday life, but neither are they in the gym.

    For example, instead of pressing a barbell, press giant log that gets in your way, a bar with two giant weights hanging from it (making momentum a giant issue), or a giant block of aluminum. Instead of picking up a barbell or set of dumbbells, pick up a giant round stone with no handles and that is hard to hold onto. Instead of doing squats with a barbell, do squats at the end of a giant lever that barrels (additional weight) are dropped into between reps.

    This sort of training is not only good for strongman contests, though. It’s a perfect fit for MMA. Getting good at holding, moving, carrying, or manipulating big, heavy objects at odd angles, in bad positions, and with little to no leverage, grip, or assistance. Think that sort of thing wouldn’t be good for MMA? Damn right it would.

    Now, doing strongman training isn’t exactly easy to pull off – especially if you work out in a commercial gym. Not too many gyms I know of (at least the major gym chains, anyway) have a set of Atlas Stones, a steel log, or giant oxygen cylinders for you to carry around.

    However, that doesn’t mean you can’t improvise and do some of this training on your own, anyway.

    Sandbags are a PERFECT fit for strongman training and conditioning. I’ve written about the benefits of sandbags numerous times, so I won’t repeat myself again. Just know that you can do a ton of exercises with them, they’re cheap and easy to make, shift and move to make lifting it harder, and have been the result of many-a-trainee cussing at the end of my workouts. Hehehe

    Still need examples for the sandbag? Ok. You might not have a set of Atlas Stones available (though they’re not as hard to make as you might think), but you can bear hug your sandbag and carry it around. Replicate the event of loading barrels with your sandbag. If nothing else, shoulder the sandbag, sprint 20 yards, and drop. Shoulder it again, and sprint back. Repeat until you die or pass out (whichever comes first).

    How about the oxygen cylinders that these guys pick up and carry? This is called a Farmer’s Walk. You probably don’t have the tanks sitting around, but you can pick up a pair of heavy DBs at the gym and take them for a walk.

    If you live in or near the woods, you can easily replicate the Fingal Fingers event. Fingal Fingers is the one with the giant steel cylinders that are hinged at one end to the ground. The athlete stands at one end, picks it up to his shoulders, and than levers it up hand-over-hand until the “finger” gets upright and eventually topples over the other direction. Want to replicate this? Cut a decent sized tree down (something maybe 1-2 feet in diameter) and cut it into a good 10-15 foot section. Flip back and forth.

    How about the event where they’re wearing the harness and towing a giant bus or train? This one is easy – head to an empty parking lot or street with little traffic and push your car around.

    I think if you can find a way to work some of this style of training into your workouts, you’ll be amazed at the benefits you’ll get.
    SHIT IM ALL IN FOR THIS WAS READING 1 OF MY OLDER FLEX MAGS THEY HAD 1 OF THE STRONGMEN WORKOUTS VERY VIGOROUS I GOTTA LOOK ILL POST
    WARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR
    “The human potential is limited by the human mind, and it takes a very strong special person to break that barrier.”~~~ Dave Tate

  3. #3
    THE VIGORATOR
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    “The human potential is limited by the human mind, and it takes a very strong special person to break that barrier.”~~~ Dave Tate

  4. #4
    Jive ASS ni$$a
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    good read... sandbags are the shiiiit
    The world needs people like me to remind them of their collective stupidity. If you look at this objectively, I'm actually doing the world a favor by exposing flaws they otherwise might just let roll past, perpetuating a cycle of stupidity.

  5. #5
    THE VIGORATOR
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    Tire Flip Im Ready I Got A Place To Get Them Just Where To Do It In Brooklyn Is Rough Yessssssssssssss
    “The human potential is limited by the human mind, and it takes a very strong special person to break that barrier.”~~~ Dave Tate

  6. #6
    Reimagine Everything
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    Quote Originally Posted by VIGOROUSJONESY View Post
    Tire Flip Im Ready I Got A Place To Get Them Just Where To Do It In Brooklyn Is Rough Yessssssssssssss
    marine park....... but how do you get the tire there and back! ha.

  7. #7
    passionate for breakfast.
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    i think strong man training is cool shit. atlas stones are bad ass!
    It is incumbent on you, yes You, to educate yourself to a sufficient extent that you are in a position to evaluate information issued from a position of authority. You are supposed to be able to recognize silly bullshit when you hear it.

    Rippetoe

  8. #8
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    We did it Sat. morning. Pics are on my site. I have the molds for atlas stones and I have 2 O2 tanks with handles welded on for farmer walks. Badass.
    Everything Else is CounterFit!
    www.sectcrossfit.com

  9. #9
    passionate for breakfast.
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    holy shit bro. where did you get finkle fingers
    It is incumbent on you, yes You, to educate yourself to a sufficient extent that you are in a position to evaluate information issued from a position of authority. You are supposed to be able to recognize silly bullshit when you hear it.

    Rippetoe

  10. #10
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    This dude makes all his own shit and hosts a strongman contest in his BACKYARD! All the money goes for charity. Hopefully I can do it this year. Shit was serious!! I've never came that close to puking, ever. The last finger was fierce!!
    Everything Else is CounterFit!
    www.sectcrossfit.com

  11. #11
    passionate for breakfast.
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    Quote Originally Posted by toprockcantbstoppd View Post
    This dude makes all his own shit and hosts a strongman contest in his BACKYARD! All the money goes for charity. Hopefully I can do it this year. Shit was serious!! I've never came that close to puking, ever. The last finger was fierce!!
    thats awesome bro.

    im impressed with how far you have come from not even knowing what CrossFit was, to actually owning and teaching it on your own with all the amenities.

    good shit

    (still waiting for my shirt! lol)
    It is incumbent on you, yes You, to educate yourself to a sufficient extent that you are in a position to evaluate information issued from a position of authority. You are supposed to be able to recognize silly bullshit when you hear it.

    Rippetoe

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by DEEPER KEMICAL View Post
    thats awesome bro.

    im impressed with how far you have come from not even knowing what CrossFit was, to actually owning and teaching it on your own with all the amenities.

    good shit

    (still waiting for my shirt! lol)
    Thank you very much DK. I'm still not satisfied with where I'm at though. I just signed up my first three monthly members though, all in one week! I still haven't been able to make it economically feasible to do the shirts yet either. Although, everyone keeps harassing me about and telling me to do it. ou'refirst in line my man!
    Everything Else is CounterFit!
    www.sectcrossfit.com

  13. #13
    passionate for breakfast.
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    Quote Originally Posted by toprockcantbstoppd View Post
    Thank you very much DK. I'm still not satisfied with where I'm at though. I just signed up my first three monthly members though, all in one week! I still haven't been able to make it economically feasible to do the shirts yet either. Although, everyone keeps harassing me about and telling me to do it. ou'refirst in line my man!
    cant wait to rock it in my gym!
    It is incumbent on you, yes You, to educate yourself to a sufficient extent that you are in a position to evaluate information issued from a position of authority. You are supposed to be able to recognize silly bullshit when you hear it.

    Rippetoe

  14. #14
    THE VIGORATOR
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    Quote Originally Posted by Chris View Post
    marine park....... but how do you get the tire there and back! ha.
    OK IM ON OCEAN AND R I CAN FLIP IT TO THE PARK
    YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
    IM READY
    “The human potential is limited by the human mind, and it takes a very strong special person to break that barrier.”~~~ Dave Tate

  15. #15
    THE VIGORATOR
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    im in for TURD TOSSING AND FLOOZY FLINGING
    YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
    SUPERPUMP TIME I LOVE THAT STUFF
    WARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR
    “The human potential is limited by the human mind, and it takes a very strong special person to break that barrier.”~~~ Dave Tate


 

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