What Is CrossFit?
CrossFit is a strength and conditioning program developed by Coach Greg Glassman. It is the accumulation of almost 30 years of experience training. Crossfit simply takes what works best from the sports and movements that create the most versatile athletes, and throws the rest out. Actually, the system really created itself. If it works and produces measurable repeatable results we use it, if not, then – well, you get the picture. CrossFit is broad, general, and inclusive fitness. It is our belief that fitness should prepare you for life. Fitness gives you the ability to do what you want to do whether it be sport, or any physical task imaginable. Like our friends at CrossFit One World say- “Train not to suck at life.” One of the things that makes CrossFit unique is that it addresses the fact that the fitness needs of an "Average Joe" are identical to that of a top athlete – the only difference being intensity (speed & weight) and volume. CrossFit workouts are easily scalable to fit the needs on nearly anyone.
The CrossFit prescription is, “constantly varied, high intensity,
functional movement”. Functional movements are natural, effective, and
efficient locomotors of body and external objects. We take functional
movements like pushing, pulling, lifting, throwing, etc. (Olympic
lifting, power lifting, gymnastics, and sprinting) combine them in an
endless variety of combinations, and do them at high intensity.
Functional movements have the capacity to move large loads relatively
long distances quickly making them unique in their ability to produce
power, or intensity (force x distance / time). Intensity is the
independent variable most commonly associated with maximizing favorable
adaptation to exercise. The prescription of functionality, intensity,
and varied create a program that delivers measurable, observable, and
repeatable facts as evidence to its efficacy.
CrossFit is unique in that our workouts, by definition are sport – the “sport of fitness.” The natural camaraderie, competition, and fun of sport that is found in the CrossFit community yields an intensity that cannot be matched. Every workout is measured or scored. We use whiteboards and timers to keep score and accurate records. This precisely defines rules and standards for performance and has re-introduced personal athletic achievement and performance to training.
We
call all this evidence based fitness. There are records and standards
that show improvement in all areas of training. This has allowed us to
not only to measure our performance, but learn from it as well. What we
have found is that CrossFit increases work capacity across broad time
and modal domain. Increase work capacity is the cornerstone of our
broad general and inclusive fitness program. Increased work capacity is
the holy grail of performance improvement and all other common metrics
like VO2 max, lactate threshold, and even strength and flexibility as
being correlates—derivatives, even. The fitness community from trainers
to the magazines has the exercising public believing that lateral
raises, curls, leg extensions, sit-ups and the like combined with 20-40
minute stints on the stationary bike or treadmill are going to lead to
some kind of great fitness. Training using compound or functional
movements and high intensity or anaerobic cardio is radically more
effective at eliciting nearly any desired fitness result. Startlingly,
this is not a matter of opinion but solid irrefutable scientific fact
and yet the
marginally effective old ways persist and are nearly universal.
Since
its start in 2000 CrossFit has evolved into a community where human
performance is measured and publicly recorded against multiple,
diverse, and fixed workloads. CrossFit is an open-source engine where
inputs from any quarter can be publicly given to demonstrate fitness
and fitness programming, and where coaches, trainer, and athletes can
collectively advance the art and science of optimizing human
performance.
CrossFit’s 10 standards of fitness
1. Cardiovascular/respiratory endurance- The ability of body systems to gather, process, and deliver oxygen.
2. Stamina - The ability of body systems to process, deliver, store, and utilize energy.
3. Strength - The ability of a muscular unit, or combination of muscular units, to apply force.
4. Flexibility - The ability to maximize the range of motion at a given joint.
5. Power - The ability of a muscular unit, or combination of muscular units, to apply maximum force in minimum time.
6. Speed - The ability to minimize the time cycle of a repeated movement.
7. Coordination - The ability to combine several distinct movement patterns into a singular distinct movement.
8. Agility - The ability to minimize transition time from one movement pattern to another.
9. Balance - The ability to control the placement of the body's center of gravity in relation to its support base.
10. Accuracy - The ability to control movement in a given direction or at a given intensity.
