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Barbell Strategy Podcast

Barbell Strategy Podcast
Author: Luke Holmes
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Coaches Luke and Sam bring decades of combined experience, including coaching athletes at the CrossFit Games level. They've tested a wide range of training methods, both with their athletes and in their own competitive journeys. Now, they're sharing those insights on the Barbell Strategy podcast to help you level up your coaching and training in the sport of CrossFit.
7 Episodes
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Competing in CrossFit is very challenging. It is something that causes your average everyday athlete to knuckle down and start approaching their training, nutrition and lifestyle in a way similar to a professional athlete. But what kind of preparation goes into this and how do you select the right competitions at the right time? As a beginner it pays to compete often and develop a hunger and love for the sport, but then it can be wise to reduce the frequency of competition in order to put in the time to develop your fitness and skills as an intermediate athlete. You can then return to competing at a higher frequency when you are more advanced, to practice the skill of competing and use it to direct your training focus. In this episode we look into everything about competitions, from planning them out, to qualifiers, the preparation right before a competition and then the competition itself and debrief. We discuss what lessons we have learnt from our own experience competing, as well as from helping countless athletes in competition at all levels from local events to the Games. Check out Luke on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/lj.holmes/) Check out Sam on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/tailormadecoaching/) Check out Matt Harvey on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/mattharvvey/) Email Matt Harvey for content production! (mattharvey93@gmail.com) Show Notes: [1:30] Creating a plan for competitions and having short term and long term goals [3:30] Focusing on the next competition versus detailed long term plans [6:00] Picking the right competitions when you’re a beginner [9:15] Learning how to take competitions less seriously [15:00] How to manage qualifiers and how much should you strategise [20:30] Using a weekly throwdown workout to practice competing [22:15] Practicing the logistics of doing a qualifier and higher stakes workouts [26:50] Having to repeat very difficult workouts [29:45] Preparing for a competition once you’re qualified [38:30] How to support different types of athletes during a competition [43:30] Using competitions to direct the next phases of training
Athletes are often focused on the skills they need to unlock, the next competition result, and what they should be doing now to perform in a year’s time. But what happens after next season? Is there a better way to develop their skills for the long term, rather than simply acquiring them as quickly as possible? And what do training goals look like further down the line? This kind of long-term thinking and planning is something coaches need to support athletes with. You have to consider the athlete’s current level, how to progress them, and whether training can be structured now to maximise long-term benefits. In this week’s episode we explore long-term development, what it means, and how we approach it in our coaching to guide athletes not just towards their next competition, but over the next few years. Listen to hear more about athletes skipping steps in their development, the true level of commitment required for semi-finals athletes, and Sam’s latest experience in a spin class. Check out Luke on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/lj.holmes/) Check out Sam on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/tailormadecoaching/) Check out Matt Harvey on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/mattharvvey/) Email Matt Harvey for content production! (mattharvey93@gmail.com) Show Notes: [0:30] Sam’s spin dance class [3:30] Creating long term development with athletes [7:00] Individual variation amongst athletes and rate of progress [9:00] Athletes overestimating their level [11:00] Skipping steps, doing too much too soon [13:00] When the metric becomes the goal [15:30] Holding back an athlete's progress [18:00] Getting caught in a cycle of too many competitions [20:00] When some athletes work on their weaknesses too much [26:00] Taking time not to work on your weaknesses [27:00] The work it takes to compete at a high level [30:00] Having a compartmentalised approach to training for CrossFit [39:00] The benefit of coaches competing and doing the work [48:00] Wrapping up and final points
Athletes often seek remote coaching to achieve very specific goals. It might be mastering a certain skill, qualifying for a competition, or taking on a new challenge. What usually happens, though, is that through the process of remote coaching, athletes discover unexpected benefits that keep them engaged longer than they anticipated. Having experienced coaching from both sides—as athletes and as coaches—we’ve identified the top three things athletes truly need and ultimately gain through coaching. In this episode, we dive into the bridge between training and rehab, what a prioritised plan really looks like, and the key areas that often need strengthening for intermediate athletes. Be sure to share this with your coaching and training buddies, and don’t forget to follow us on Instagram and YouTube. Check out Luke on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/lj.holmes/) Check out Sam on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/tailormadecoaching/) Check out Matt Harvey on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/mattharvvey/) Email Matt Harvey for content production! (mattharvey93@gmail.com) Show Notes: [00:00] Physiotherapy for dogs [5:00] New clients coming with small little injuries [12:00] Prioritising your training as a CrossFit athlete [14:30] Understanding different priorities [18:35] When athletes don’t want to work on their weaknesses [23:20] Skill development with newer athletes [28:30] Basic strength and endurance development with beginners [33:50] Female athletes needing more upper body strength work [38:30] Getting coaching feedback on conditioning [44:00] Creating constrained conditioning pieces to encourage pacing and skill development
CrossFit is a sport that demands a wide range of skills and physical qualities. You could argue that strength forms the foundation of all of these, but does that mean it’s often overemphasised in people’s training and coaching? One of the biggest things we’d both change, looking back on our younger years of competing and coaching, is how much focus we placed on strength.. In this week’s episode, we share the two biggest things we’ve changed our minds about over the years – and, as it happens, our approach to strength training is one of them. Tune in to hear more about the mental impact of stress on training, how strength should be viewed within CrossFit, and much more. Show Notes: [1:00] Sam's shoulder injury and training catch up [5:30] How much impact does a programme actually have [7:00] How day to day affects adaptation to training [13:20] The impact of coaching [18:00] Clients coming up with their own ideas [19:00] Stress affecting training [21:30] Developing things in isolation [22:45] Big monkey little monkey [24:00] Balancing structure with integrating training [31:45] Overemphasis of strength work and strength development for CrossFit athletes [34:00] The type of strength that is required in CrossFit [38:00] How strong do you need to be for the level you want to compete at [43:00] Balancing absolute strength versus strength endurance [48:50] CrossFit being your first sport [55:45] Stupid coaching analogies
We all have a pretty clear picture of what remote coaching looks like day to day, but what are the processes that make it so effective beyond individualised training and regular feedback? What is it that creates the individualised training programme in the first place? This week we take a look at how we start out with a new athlete and what the onboarding and initial training might look like in different situations. Do we need to collect a lot of data or is it better to just let the training guide the process? In this episode we cover different strategies that we use ranging from traditional testing weeks, intake forms and data gathering, to a more emergent process where the focus is on the training and making big wins by refining the execution of daily training. Check out this episode to discover how we start off with a new athlete and how that has developed over the years Show Notes: [0:00] Knowing how often to compete [5:00] Starting out with a new athlete [10:00] What stats should you collect [13:00] Setting goals with a new athlete [20:00] When goals are not aligned [25:00] What the first programme looks like [36:30] QUESTION: Getting a mental block in weightlifting [45:00] QUESTION: Is Zone 2 helpful for CrossFit athletes [49:00] QUESTION: Does posture and sitting all day affect mobility [54:00] QUESTION: Is the “unknown” in CrossFit bad for beginners Check out Luke on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/lj.holmes/) Check out Sam on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/tailormadecoaching/) Check out Matt Harvey on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/mattharvvey/)
Welcome to our first introductory episode of the Barbell Strategy Podcast. In this episode, we (Luke and Sam) share our stories on how we found CrossFit and got into coaching. We finish off the episode by answering some of your questions on training masters athletes and structuring a deload. Check out the episode for tales of CrossFit “back in the day”, university stories, and some nuggets on coaching and training. Show Notes: [1:00] Sam’s secret training programme [2:30] Podcast introduction [4:00] Sam’s coaching story [12:00] Luke’s coaching story [27:00] Barbell Strategy [31:00] Programming for masters athletes [36:30] How to structure a deload phase [47:50] Not another rant about the Whoop Check out Luke on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/lj.holmes/) Check out Sam on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/tailormadecoaching/) Check out Matt Harvey on instagram! (https://www.instagram.com/mattharvvey/) Email Matt Harvey for content production! (mattharvey93@gmail.com)
episode 1