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-   -   Over 50 Crossfitters Sign In (https://board.crossfit.com/showthread.php?t=39289)

Ted Zink, Jr. 01-28-2010 06:44 AM

Re: Over 50 Crossfitters Sign In
 
1/27/10

Deck of cards

Black - squats
Red - pushups
(Keep it simple, reduce transtion time, expel the Jokers)

20:33

1/28/10

24 min. bike 6.51 miles
Barbell complex times 6
5 minutes of 15 sec. on, 15 sec. off 35 lb. kettlebell swings

Tomorrow? Pullupalooza (I absolutely suck at pullups)

55/68/219/3664

Terry Dickman 01-28-2010 09:52 AM

Re: Over 50 Crossfitters Sign In
 
Way to kill FF Diane!!

[QUOTE=John Scott Rezendes;731302] but where the heck is my main man [B]Charlie[/B]?[/QUOTE]

No kidding I cold have sure used some of that broccoli last night.
Was supposed to do Nasty girls, got stuck on the 2nd round of muscle ups (only got 10 total) and after 30 minutes called it a workout. Just couldn't get the kip to click and was really unmotivated working out by myself. The 2nd time in my short CF history I did not finish a WOD. I could of scaled the MU's but I did 21 in a WOD last week so I don't have an excuse. Thats definitely one exercise where you need motivation, like maybe doing it over a pool of alligators.

John Jaeckel 01-28-2010 11:12 AM

Re: Over 50 Crossfitters Sign In
 
[QUOTE=Ted Zink, Jr.;731328]1/27/10


Tomorrow? Pullupalooza (I absolutely suck at pullups)

55/68/219/3664[/QUOTE]

Ted,

Go back a couple of weeks and find a workout I posted called "pullup focus." It's basically engineered to strengthen your pullups. So far it's worked for me.

John Jaeckel 01-28-2010 04:46 PM

Re: Over 50 Crossfitters Sign In
 
1/28/10:

WARMUP—
Bike
25 squats
20 pushups
20 k-bell swings (53 lb)
30 flutter kicks (4 ct.)
20 PVC rollovers

STRENGTH—
Front Squat
5x135, 5x155, 3x170, 2x185, 1x[B]210 p.r.[/B]

WOD—
Tabata, 8 rounds ea. :20/:10
Ball Slams (25 lb)
Sit-ups
Suitcase Dead Lifts (alternating arms, 53 lb. k-bell)

John Burch 01-28-2010 06:29 PM

Re: Over 50 Crossfitters Sign In
 
That was good work on the filthy Diane, way ta go :super:

CFC WU
3:00 plank hold

WOD three rounds
25 PP @ 75#
25 SDLHP @ 75#
15 GHD situps
15 Pullup
21:12 my Son made this one up, and he beat my time

m/55/180 CrossFit Chesterton

John Scott Rezendes 01-28-2010 07:23 PM

Re: Over 50 Crossfitters Sign In
 
[B]1-28-10[/B]
[B]John[/B], Congrats on the FS PR.
[B]Ted[/B], Rocking the DoC!

WU: 1910m C2, ring dips, pullups
WOD: OHS
#45x5
#65x3
#75x3
#85x3
#95 [COLOR="Red"]F,[/COLOR] then 1 rep
#95x3
#105x1, then [COLOR="red"]F[/COLOR]
#65x6
#45x10
My first real OHS effort. Interesting. Nonetheless I have established a baseline (and a PR!)

About an hour later I rode the Blue Bomberoo for 10 miles.

Jeff Kilinski 01-28-2010 07:43 PM

Re: Over 50 Crossfitters Sign In
 
Diane, That F50 is pretty impressive.

JJ and JSR, Not a fan of FS or OHS either. Still impressive PR JJ.

A new center opened just down the road. Since it's basically across the street and 1/2 the price of the Globo the wife and are members of, we switched. Hardly anybody there but it's got all new stuff. Don't like the floor in the weight room. Some kind of rubber making Oly lifts kind of hard.

Rest, Tues and Wed

Today

Jerk, 3-3-3-3 135, 135, 145, 155

Wod
3 rounds for time
30 Overhead walking lunges 45lb
15 Knees to elbows

9:32

Jeff

Jeff Kilinski 01-29-2010 06:00 AM

Re: Over 50 Crossfitters Sign In
 
I think we can all relate to this. I didn't know there was a name "Generation b" for us. I thought we were "late boomers".

[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/31/fashion/31genb.html[/url] (wfs)

(copied entirely below. not sure if that's kosher for this board)


The New York Times


January 28, 2010
Where Brett Favre Is a Youngster
By MICHAEL WINERIP

PRINCETON JUNCTION, N.J.

On Wednesday mornings, Andy Lupo, 51, sends out his weekly chain e-mail message to the guys: “How we looking for Sunday?”

Mr. Lupo is counting heads for the regular Sunday 10 a.m. touch football game. And if there’s one thing he has learned about keeping a pickup game going from September to April, 30 Sundays a year for 20 years — through rain, sleet, snow, ice as well his own torn rotator cuff, Abrey Light’s four broken fingers, Jim Dennehy’s two fractured ribs and Glenn Christie’s career-ending ligament tear — it’s to leave zero to chance.

“If you e-mail Andy at 1 a.m., he answers back at 1:05,” said Jack Hayon, 54, an Educational Testing Service vice president who has been playing “just seven years.”

On Thursday of that week, Mr. Lupo reported, “Still early, but looks like a good turnout.”

By Saturday, he was telling everyone that despite Nelson Obus’s torn meniscus, “We should have 21.” And they did.

Mr. Lupo, an executive at an investment bank, and Mr. Light, 51, a general manager for a software company — both present at the first game in 1990 — arrive early to lay out orange cones marking the field.

Lyle Girandola, 50, soon appears out of the woods at the back of the field, a misty figure pushing a wheelbarrow with a wrought-iron firepot to keep the subs warm on the sideline.

Anthony Costa, 54, arrives on his bike after Mass at St. David the King, which makes Mr. Lupo look bad because he tells his wife, Carolyn, that he has to miss church because of the game. H. Fenster, 47, drives the farthest, about 35 minutes from Hillsborough. Everyone brings both their red and blue jerseys since Mr. Lupo keeps it a secret what team they’ll be on until game time.

“Andy has his black-box formula for picking teams,” said Karl Dentino, 53, a marketing executive. His goal is to make teams that are so balanced each week, the game ends in a tie. About half of them do.

The league is called 12 Again, because for two sweet hours each Sunday morning that’s how these middle-aged men feel. “By Sunday afternoon I’m limping around the house pretty good,” Mr. Lupo said.

“I play Sunday, I can’t lift my arm until Thursday,” said Steve Tosches, 53, a quarterback, who coached Princeton’s football team for many years.

“We’re afraid the game will end when someone drops dead,” Mr. Light said.

“That’s why I have this,” said Mr. Lupo, throwing open his trunk, and waving a defibrillator high in the air.

The game’s longevity is in part because of subtle concessions to age. They used to count three Mississippis before rushing. “Then four, then five, now six,” Mr. Light said. “We need more time to get places.”

In their 30s, they’d argue about players rushing the quarterback too soon. But in their 50s they don’t need the aggravation, so Mr. Hayon brings a stopwatch that buzzes when it’s O.K. to rush.

Mr. Obus, 63, an investment manager, says as they age the game gets more like chess. “You don’t just say, ‘Go long.’ We can’t do that anymore. You have to flood a zone. You come up with more complex plays, more paths.”

It makes huddles interminable. “People say, ‘Why do you spend so much time in the huddle?’ ” Mr. Lupo said. “By the time you tell the seventh guy what to do, the first guy forgot what he’s supposed to do.”

There’s no blocking, no tagging hard (“everyone’s got back problems,” Mr. Lupo said), and fumbles are dead balls.

“Our motto is, ‘Monday morning we all need to go to work,’ ” Mr. Lupo said.

When the game started in 1990, they were lucky to have six players. Mr. Lupo and Alan Slepman, the league’s first commissioner, went through backyards, shouting, “Lyle, is this your house, can you play today?”

“It got easier with cellphones,” Mr. Lupo said.

Mr. Dentino, who jogged by one day and joined the game, brought in his neighbor Mr. Girandola, who brought in his neighbor Jerry Fields, 53, who brought in Jonathan Sabin, 42. By the mid-1990s, they had the opposite problem, too many wanting to play, and some not understanding the thin line between worthy competitor and inglourious basterd. “A lot of people claim they’re good guys and they’re really not,” Mr. Lupo said.

They needed men who were athletic, but not too. Scott Brunner, the former Giants quarterback, played for a few weeks. “Oh, my God, he threw too hard,” Mr. Lupo said. “The ball kept bouncing off guys’ chests. People kept running out of the way.

“We’re not looking for the great triathlete. If your wife is saying: ‘What, are you crazy? At your age?’ That’s the guy we want.”

Those wives. In the early years when the kids were young, it was harder. The men were working all week, then gone Sunday morning, too?

“My wife was a little bit on my back,” Mr. Light said. “I was taking away our Sundays. She didn’t get it.” But after 10 or 15 years, he wore her down.

“I know nothing about football,” Susan Light said. “After the game, he gives me the play by play. I say that’s great or that’s too bad — I can just tell if it’s positive or negative. The big thing — he’s happy and calmer after he plays, so I’m happy.”

There’s a final element every sports classic needs, a legend, a Gipper, a Bambino. For the 12 Again league, it’s Mr. Slepman, the first commissioner, and by all accounts, a quippy, civic-minded, big-hearted guy who taught Mr. Lupo everything he knows about running a Sunday touch football league for slow old men. In October 2001, Mr. Slepman, a banker, collapsed on the commuter train home from Manhattan. He had a brain tumor, and on Jan. 13, 2003, he died. Every 12 Again player attended his funeral. Mr. Slepman was buried in his blue jersey and today the town field they play on is named for him.

But that’s only half the legend. Nine months later, a single dad from Boston moved next door to the Slepman home. Shortly after, Mr. Lupo recruited him to the game.

“He seemed to have the right personality,” Mr. Lupo said, “a friendly, mild temperament.” When Mr. Lupo asked the man from Boston if he’d ever played organized football, the man answered no, and Mr. Lupo said, “You’re perfect for us.”

That was Mr. Hayon, the educational testing executive. And two years after replacing Mr. Slepman on the field — not that anyone could truly replace Mr. Slepman, of course — Mr. Hayon married Mr. Slepman’s widow, Holly. When she is asked if her second husband’s love for the same Sunday morning football game had anything to do with it, she said, “It didn’t hurt.”

On a recent Sunday at Alan Slepman Football Field, Mr. Hayon, playing for the red team, caught two passes, made two interceptions and wore the stopwatch around his neck to monitor the pass rush.

Once again, Mr. Lupo’s black-box formulas worked — with one play left in the game and the blue team 20 yards from the goal line, the score was tied, 2-2. An icy rain fell as Mr. Fenster, an accounts manager who puts in 60-hour weeks when he’s not quarterbacking the blues, dropped back to pass. He thought of tossing the ball blindly to the back of the end zone. “Sometimes they bat it around and you might get lucky,” he’d say later.

Instead, he saw his teammate Mr. Light cutting across the front of the end zone and threw. Steve Honig, floating on pass defense for the reds, raced in front of Mr. Light, intercepted the ball and streaked downfield with no one near him. Asked later what he was thinking as he ran toward the end zone, Mr. Honig, 50, the president of an insurance third-party administrator, said: “Wow! That’s all I was thinking. Wow!”

E-mail: [email]generationb@nytimes.com[/email]

Diane Dennis 01-29-2010 08:58 AM

Re: Over 50 Crossfitters Sign In
 
Fun article, [B]Jeff![/B]

Today - 01/29/10
7AM workout at CrossFit Confluence

:brrr::brrr: 6 degrees :brrr::brrr:

WU: 3X CFC warm-up without pull-ups or sit-ups

WOD:
5 Rounds
*For Time

10 Rage Ball
10 Pull-ups
10 Burpee-Med Ball Cleans
10 Sit-ups

13:03 or 13:30 - I took a photo of the white board but I can't read it. And I can't remember because my brain was frozen.

Post-WOD:
Work on KTEs and ring-dips. Never did either before so it was fun to learn. Of course, now Patrick will expect me to do ring-dips instead of box-dips and KTEs instead of sit-ups, so I expect my times to skyrocket. Oh well, it will give me something to practice!

John Burch 01-29-2010 07:44 PM

Re: Over 50 Crossfitters Sign In
 
J.J thums up on the front squat

1/29 CFC WU

DL
225X 3
250X 3
275X 3
300X 3
330X 3
WOD 5 rounds
20 DU (60 singles)
20 65# thrusters

17:52 - 3:00 Rest 6 rounds 1:00 row :45 rest Damper @ 10

267m
266m
262m
254m
264m
264m

m/55/180 CrossFit Chesterton


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