Results matching “Bird”

Focus - Test articles

FocusLose not yourself in a far off time, seize the moment that is thine.

- Johann Friedrich Von Schiller

This is the second part of this month's series on the mind; a collaboration with Run to Win's Blaine Moore.

focus [n] : a centre of interest or activity.

David Hinchliffe
recently wrote a great piece on the subject of focus (as it applies to athletes) over at Harrow Drive. He gave a couple of examples that clearly demonstrate just how effective focus can be in our everyday lives :

Look around the room you are in now for anything that is the colour bright red. I guarantee you will be able to pick out even the tiniest speck now you are looking for it, even if there is hardly any red at all.

and

Maybe you have bought a brand new car sometime in your life. How many of those cars do you suddenly see on the road once you start driving around?

Wouldn't it be great to have this level of attention whilst lifting weights? Running a marathon? Playing football in the park?

Achieving focus, essentially just a form of heightened awareness, requires 3 things :

  • goals to have been set
  • visualisation
  • freedom from distractions

Once these three are in place you will find it much simpler to focus on the task at hand. In many cases it will be automatic.

Goal setting

The concepts of goal setting seem to be often misunderstood, or simply ignored. Essentially, select something which is slightly out of your current reach, and aim to reach it via regular improvement. This may be a particular weight for a given lift, a time for running a certain distance or a pulserate following a chosen activity. Whatever it is, stretch yourself toward it.

Once you're almost there, set a new goal; a little further away. Stretch toward that one, and repeat the process.

If you're not quite sure what your goal should be, pick something. Work toward it, and you'll soon discover whether it feels right to you or not. If it does, keep going. If not, pick something else. Rinse and repeat.

NB : for a slightly more in-depth look at motivation and goal-setting - particularly for fitness goals - take a look at Dan John's 2004 piece on T-Nation,
Goal setting for hard asses. A great read.

Visualisation and freedom from distractions

Both of these subjects will be covered in more detail later in this series, but briefly :

Visualisation : imagine yourself achieving your goal, and reaching it becomes a little easier.

Freedom from distractions : this doesn't just mean throwing out the people who talk constantly whilst in the gym (although that would probably help), it's a matter of constructing a mental 'cone of silence'.

Now the fun begins.

The core also gets a good runVia Physical Strategies : some great kettlebell back exercises, courtesy Dogtown's Robert McKee. Very cool indeed.

Training Syndicate - Test articles

Training SyndicateTraining Syndicate - the brainchild of Mike Amos - is a feed aggregator containing the output of the ever-growing list of lifting blogs. Superb.

Car pushing - Test articles

Pitching - Test articles

Münsterland Grip ChallengeThe Münsterland Grip Challenge is one of the big ones on the grip contest calendar. Although Münsterland is the area around Münster, Germany, the Challenge regularly attracts the top gripmeisters from around the world. This year the lineup includes many big names from the grip world, such as top US athletes Chad Woodall and Scott George (you can help them cover costs over on the Diesel Crew site). Should be a big one.

The great milk debate - Test articles

Coach Mike's Corner - Test articles

Mike DemeterCoach Mike's Corner is the blog of personal trainer Mike Demeter. Well worth checking out.

This is a guest article by freakishly strong gripster Jedd 'Napalm' Johnson - Straight to the Grip Contest: Pt II.

Enjoy.


Thank you all for your interest in this series. Again, the idea behind this series is to give you information that will help you get ready for the next Grip Strength Contest in your area. Since Grippers are usually the first event in a Grip Contest, I am starting off with information on Grippers with this segment.

When I started, I didn't completely understand why Grippers were appearing first in every contest I was reading about, but now it makes sense. Grip contest events often require multiple trips to the platform and multiple attempts per trip, so your hands get tired out fast and the skin gets sensitive quickly. Because of this, it gets more and more difficult to close a top level Gripper. As you get deeper into the contest, your Max Gripper potential can get drained.

Those who follow the day-to-day happenings in the Grip world know who is closing big Grippers like the #3 IronMind Captains of Crush, Beef Builder Elite, Super Elite and the #4 C.O.C. When these types of Grippers get smashed at the contest, it looks a lot better on the score sheet. If Grippers get shifted backwards to a later spot in the contest, you can bet on most of the athletes' performances dropping. Promoters like to be able to show off the score card with monster Grippers getting closed and the fans enjoy reading about it. Plus, when you consider how far athletes must travel to get to the contest and the financial investment they make in registering for the contest, as well as paying for food travel and hotel stay, they want to go to the contest and murder that big Gripper they have been working on. All of these factors add up to Grippers being the first event, usually.

I only know of one promoter that consistently sets the contest order up so that Grippers are not first, and that is Dave Memont from Total Performance Sports. You might remember from the last installment that I just made a trip up that way last weekend. Luckily, he placed Grippers second in the order this year, but two years ago, at the 2005 Grip Assault contest, Grippers were LAST and not a single competitor, including myself, was able to close a #3 Gripper. We were all too wasted from the rest of the prior events! I anticipated him doing it again this year, so I shifted Grippers last in each workout that I trained them. I did this in an effort to develop the endurance to still have high performance in the grippers at the end of the contest, even after several efforts on the Hub, Rolling Thunder, Vertical Bar, and Thick Bar lifts. This year, with Grippers being second, my hands felt great going into the event, and I closed the #3 no problem.

Besides the order of events, the biggest factor in how difficult it will be to excel in the Gripper event is the kind of set that is being used in the contest. A set is the technique used in partially closing the Gripper with two hands in order to optimally position the Gripper in the gripping hand in preparation for the close.
SettingThere are several types of sets that are used in Grip Strength Contests. I will cover each one so that you will become familiar with all of them. Let's start off at the beginning with the Original IronMind Set.

Original IronMind Set

Since IronMind is the manufacturer of the most famous hand strength grippers on the market, all contests used to employ the original IronMind Set. For certification on IronMind's #3 and #4 Captains of Crush Grippers, you used to be able to set the gripper with your off hand up until the point where the handles were one inch apart.
Old IronMind SetThe witness had to be able to clearly see the last inch of Range of Motion (R.O.M.) and the contact of the handles for the athlete to qualify as officially closing the gripper.

The beauty of this technique was that it took hand size out of the picture for the certification process. Since you were permitted to set the Gripper, it didn't matter if your hands were 7 inches, or 9 inches, because everybody could get their fingers into a good position on the gripper handles. Essentially, everyone had an equal shot at certifying on the #3 and the #4 as long as they were willing to put the work in. With the beginning of the R.O.M. taken out of the equation, the toughest part of the Gripper R.O.M., the close, was still there for everyone to conquer.

This setting method was the easy choice for Grip contests. After all, IronMind was the gold standard in Gripper product quality, so why not use their setting technique in contests? My first Grip Contest was the Battle for Grip Supremacy, promoted by Rick Walker in Punxsutawney, PA. There, Grippers were held first, and the athlete could set to parallel and squeeze. If there was a tie, and two or more athletes closed the same Gripper, then they had to go back and do a tie-breaker by performing a timed hold with that gripper. I remember I closed a very tough, wide-spread, single-stamped #3 Gripper along with Rob F. Vigeant. On the next turn, we both missed the Beef Builder Elite, so we were tied. The Gripper attempts lasted 2 minutes, so we were both so wasted from double digit attempts at getting that Elite closed. Thankfully, Rick let us split the points.

Eventually, the Gripboard started its own certification system, the Gripboard Mash Monster Elite, which spawned the Mash Monster set. In the next installment of Straight to the Grip Contest, we'll see how the advent of the Mash Monster eventually led to the demise of the Original IronMind Set.

Again, I welcome any comments, questions, or suggestions in regards to this series. Please feel free to email me at jedd.diesel@gmail.com. Also, please check out DieselCrew.com for more articles and products related to Grip Strength.

Atlas StoneIf you enjoy a little DIY work when it comes to training equipment, take a look at this tutorial on Darren's Diatribe - How to make an Atlas Stone (part 1, part 2). Good fun.

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