WEBVTT
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We're all misfits, alright, you big, big bunch of misfits.
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You're a scrappy little misfit, just like me.
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Biggest bunch of misfits I ever said either.
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Good morning misfits.
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You are tuning into yet another special edition Misfit podcast.
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The Misfit affiliate Arkham phase.
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Phase one of what we refer to internally as the 2026 season is live now.
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Before you listen to the podcast, if you were not a subscriber to the programming yet, you can head to teammisfitcom, click on sign up now and then you have your choice of a two-week free trial on SugarWad, streamfit or PushPress.
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On SugarWad, streamfit or PushPress, if you would like a PDF version, I've got the new Arkham 2 week with the engine program added to it.
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If you would like that version, the PDF version, feel free to email me, coach, at misfitathleticscom, and I can get that over to you.
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This podcast, basically, if you're new to the program, if you're new to listening to these, the idea is to get people excited about the new phase, whether that's yourself, your coaches, your athletes.
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Dig into the nitty gritty for those who are interested in it.
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Talk to you a little bit about how the progressions work from phase to phase, maybe some coaching tips built in the way that we would think about it out on the floor, and then I am the one who writes the competitor extra on the floor, and then I am the one who writes the competitor extra.
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So one of the things that I have for this podcast is maybe some extra kind of competitors in your class, the nuggets that you can give them on this stuff to help them improve.
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As always, we will start the podcast with housekeeping and life chat.
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Housekeeping is very straightforward.
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Just told you guys how to get started on Misfit Affiliate.
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We also have phase one of Misfit Athletics individual programming for professionals, for your open athletes, age group athletes all that good stuff For all of our programs.
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Honestly, head to the link in bio on our Instagram.
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They're kind of broken out so you can decide where you want to go and get them, which program you want to do.
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All that good stuff.
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All right, hunter, what's up?
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My car door broke.
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Your car door broke and you had to run 800s.
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Yeah, on the same fucking day.
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No, my like.
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I went to.
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I like I got in my car this morning, drove over to the dumpster to throw out my trash and I go to open my car door from the inside driver's side and the handle, just like there's no tension, there's no like slack.
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So either the cable that connects from the door handle to like the door locking door opening mechanism like yep, came off or broke off.
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And I called the local repair shop, the new one right down riverside street I take it to like the scarborough, the Scarborough VIP usually yeah, and they just opened this one and I called them asking about it and I was like, hey, like this is like I'm almost certain this is what's wrong.
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Like is this something that is like a relatively quick fix?
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Like can you do that like quickly?
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And the dude was like yeah, like we can bring it in.
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It'll be $ and seventy dollars to like diagnose the problem and then we'll see what we can do to like fix it.
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I'm like like what the fuck did you say to me?
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Like a hundred, like hundred?
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I'm telling you what the problem is like like right, here's the problem.
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And it's like, and he's just like yeah, well, you know I gotta pay my guys and stuff and I'm like I like.
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Thank you for explaining any of like how labor works.
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Have shit like that.
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Well, I've taken it to like the one near me and I've had like small shit like that.
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They'll look at it and be like, yeah, this is what it is.
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And then I'm like like I'll pay for the repair Motherfucker, $170 to diagnose, like the handle it's going to take.
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You like Send a video of you pulling on it.
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Yeah, it's gonna take you, like you pulling on it.
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Yeah, diagnosed chicken fucker, god damn it like yeah reconnect that bitch, like get a new cable.
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Yep yeah.
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The short story long is that I'm now about to determine how good of a mechanic I would have been yeah, dude fix that shit myself, so get fucked.
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Oh yeah, let's rip that baby open I love this.
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It'll be just my luck.
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I will not be able to put that door back on.
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I'll be riding a mazda jeep for the next fucking six months.
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Luckily, someone in the gym someone in the gym will know how to put that baby back on.
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My pride is too big to ask somebody else before that, because I can also think of like three or four people who are like I could figure it out like three or four people who are like I could figure it out like motherfucker.
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I could figure it out like I'm asking for someone who knows what they're doing but yeah, unfortunately I'm in the.
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I'm in the former category yeah, me too do I know how absolutely not I got.
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I got youtube and a brain housing unit that works 50 of the time every time.
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So yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah yeah, yeah, that's uh.
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I still suck at golf.
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That's all Huh.
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Yeah, I got back last night from Phoenix, went to world fitness project with page and then Elena from from CrossFit raid, who follows the programming, did the challenger division as well.
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She had a really, really good time there, which was cool.
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Kind of the type of thing where you go to that level of competition to see if you belong and then you feel like you belong so you get that extra level of motivation coming out of it.
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So that was really cool to see.
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I had probably the smoothest travel in like years.
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There were absolutely nothing was annoying or went wrong at any point.
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Like overhead space was like right in front of my seat.
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Every single time I rented, I prepaid for a rental car from the wrong airport and I called chase and they were like we'll call budget and like fix this for you.
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And within minutes they were like, yeah, just go pick one up at Phoenixoenix airport instead of mesa.
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And I was like hell, yeah, this is just just way too easy yeah, you're fucked
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yeah, I don't know what's about to happen to me?
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but yeah, so that was that was.
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Uh, that was a good trip.
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It was fun.
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Ryan was with us, did the did the media felt a little bit like getting the, getting the band back together nice good hang with with ryan and page, and then, whether we talk about it at length or have page on, she looked like herself again, which was really cool to see, and I'll give the only anecdote that I'll give before the longer version is the attitude of holy shit, these girls are so fast, like who she's competing against, and the response to that realization was I just need to go faster instead of no these girls are so fast.
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Like she's just got that little bit of that like kind of competitor's grin of like all right, here we go, like especially machines on the machines you're looking at, 10 seconds faster per 500 that you'd go in training you're looking at you know that five round workout with that five round workout with 24 cows on the biker glotta, 1200, 1300 cows per hour on the women's side and a you know, not a long workout like medium to long type of workout, um, and I know there's a lot of you're probably not privy to any of it but there's a lot of drama, just the like crossfit versus wfp stuff, which is probably predictable.
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And the one thing that I'll say kind of unequivocally, because I don't really care to pick sides is the level of competition there is crazy.
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Yeah, I was just looking at the names on the leaderboard.
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Yeah, I mean so many athletes are used to.
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Okay, I do the Open, I do quarterfinals, I do semifinals, and each step of the way it's a little bit more challenging.
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Yeah, but a games athlete going to semifinals, something would have to go really wrong for them to fall out of the top 10, let alone the top five, and then there it's basically the games for the most part.
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Yeah, there's like three names on this list that I don't know and then you see, like bkg and yonakoski in like the bottom five, five places.
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It's like yeah there's a, there's a like, there's a passing of the torch currently taking place in the sport.
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That's for damn sure so for me in terms of progression of everything, having them compete against each other more often, I think, would create faster progressions and adaptations.
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One of the things that was kind of the talk of the like, like warm-up area and with the coaches, was there was one athlete on the men's side and one athlete on the women's side that could pirouette while moving forward.
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And the video of victor hoffer in slow-mo is fucking insane.
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He's doing a 180 forward, so he turns and he's his.
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Where his hand goes is whatever, however many feet apart forward, and then his body rotates another 180 degrees and he puts his hand there, so he's literally rotating forward through space.
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He does not stop and do a pirouette.
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He spins on his hand basically would be a good way to put it while moving forward and it's just like okay, not only that's not really just a parlor trick, because his time under tension was like a quarter of the other people, so like it really is like actual fatigue and you know muscle fatigue and breathing and all that.
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So that was pretty crazy to watch and I just think things like that, where you see an athlete that can blast through a particular movement or set or do something at a certain pace, has the you know sort of progresses, everything faster.
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So I thought that was pretty cool some good, good events, yeah, the my only complaint would be it was a bit of a kitchen sink, it was a bit of like there was every machine.
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Yeah, there were two five-rounders.
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There was a lot of workouts that had.
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You know it didn't have like a.
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There wasn't much of the like couplet, triplet, vibe like that kind of thing.
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A lot of chippers.
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Five movements or four movements per event, exactly, yeah, so there was a lot of that.
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So there was a lot of that.
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It definitely favored.
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One thing that was funny was it definitely favored a aerobically inclined athlete because the top heats were worse in the heavy events.
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Like the top heat of one or a max clean was like like interesting, like very low.
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And then the what was the other one towards the end, some of the athletes moving the power, snatching 155 on the women's side and then clean and jerking 155.
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It was clear that they had positioned themselves over the course of the weekend a little bit better because of their like, more like GPP that kind of thing.
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Crazy two mile run times.
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I saw 1206 and I was like, oh, like, that's not crazy.
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And then it was like Laura Horvath, respectfully, respectfully to Laura, but like Jesus Christ, she's a great runner, fucking fast women.
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Yes correct.
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Do you see the men?
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Yeah, yeah.
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Then I toggled over, I was like 1101.
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The difference with the?
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men was not only obviously the times, but how close they were together.
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The women weren't as close together.
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There were really big gaps in the women one through 10.
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1048, Ricky.
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That's nuts.
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So the men's was cool.
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Ricky and Yella ran together basically.
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And.
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Yella did his.
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He got like double crossed.
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Basically he did his final kick, which Ricky was waiting for.
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On purpose.
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And then Ricky ran on his hip when he tried to pass him and then, when they got really close, he knows he's a faster sprinter and he just fucking blasted by him.
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Wow.
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So he led, knowing that at some point yellow was going to sprint.
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And then he just stayed on his hip and ran past him and I don't know like.
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I think he won.
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I think they're probably like one and one a in terms of what they could do, but I think he won based on tactic and strategy smarter.
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Yep, I mean.
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Only four seconds is hardly about 20 strategy, 80 fitness right and the the only thing that I heard from the athletes that were like roughly 10th place that they were pissed about is they got too far behind and couldn't catch up so they didn't feel like they felt like they should have started hotter, even though, like you, shouldn't basically.
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But it complains like not about the event, just like about how?
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No, no, no, no, no yeah.
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Yeah, they, they just felt like I had a little bit more in the tank.
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But when you look and see someone 200 meters away, like what the fuck are you gonna do about that, like that kind of thing, so it's like okay, how much do you ride the fucking lightning?
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But then, in the other sense, like laura was one of the ones who started towards the back and literally passed almost everyone.
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So it's, you know, it's possible, but like spreading out your final kick over a mile was this, outdoor, on a track, on a runner?
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No, so it started on the road and then went on to turf and then came back through the complex which I think is like maybe concrete or something like that.
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The athletes did say the turf was weird.
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It felt more like the air runner, like they had to like pull with their hamstring more.
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And then quite a few of them said their calves were really sore because it's like bouncy.
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It's the stuff with the like, the like crumb rubber in it.
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Yeah, what was the?
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What was the drama with the?
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What fucking happened to all the equipment?
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Her ghd's fucking snapped in half bikes, the ghd foot pad slid off the end.
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It wasn't.
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It wasn't tightened all the way, and they supposedly walk around and check all of the knobs.
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Yeah, it was tight but it wasn't tightened all the way, and they supposedly walk around and check all of the knobs yeah, it was tight but it hadn't clicked into the hole, so he fell off that and hurt his beanbag and then, when he won the clean, grabbed his beanbag also.
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I think go to the clean.
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Is it eight guys that cleaned 400?
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don't say that one, two, three, four, five, five, and then the next three were 392.
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Fuck, you took eighth.
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Some of them were in challenger, that's right.
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Yeah, I think there were seven potentially eighth plate.
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I mean this says pro.
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But yeah, 407, 407, 405, 400, 400, 395, jesus christ, no, that's not because because hatfield was 422, so there's, there's more than that.
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Did you sort by the event?
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yeah, hatfield, oh oh holy fuck yeah.
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4.30, 4.22, 4.07, 4.07, 4.05.
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Just eight with Tolo from Challenge.
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One, two, three, four, five, six, seven.
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Wow, how fucking crazy is that.
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And we were talking about bridges, not being able to pick up 4.05 at regionals.
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Oh my god, that's Talk about progression.
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That's insane.
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I did not know.
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Hatfield could do that.
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He's like a classic CrossFit guy Like blasts the couplets and triplets.
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That's pretty fucking crazy Any 300 pound female cleans.
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That's not a 280, something.
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282.
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Kyra Milligan and Annika Greer, yeah, and a 270.
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Good fucking Lord, they out-cleaned me from this week.
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I would have taken like 10th place.
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Yeah, Paige was like 15th with 247.
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That's insane 14th.
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All right.
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Well, got out of fitness at the right time, yeah, 2014.
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So, all right, well, good experience though, yep, yeah.
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Yep, good experience though.
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Yep, yeah, yep, good experience.
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All right, arkham.
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So we started naming if you didn't know, from the last few phases we started naming the Misfit Affiliate phases.
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I love a narrative.
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I like the idea of people rallying around an idea.
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This is technically phase one and there is the scene from I think it's Dark Knight, the not Dark Knight Rises, I don't know when the Joker says here we go.
00:15:48.682 --> 00:16:04.873
And the Joker, if you are familiar with, like the actual comic book and stuff, has definitely spent some, some time, uh, probably intentionally, inside of Arkham insane asylums, um, cool imagery again, the idea of of restarting, digging into things, um, and there's definitely, as we talk through this stuff, some pieces of what the movements are that will connect.
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So the way that we'll do this is we'll go through each bias for the phase and we almost always bury the lead on this.
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What we are talking about makes up about 20% of the programming, whereas the other 80% is couplets and triplets and heavy lifts and all the you know, monostructural conditioning, all the good stuff.
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But again, talking about liking a narrative, I do, like you know.
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Okay, this is the phase where we're going to work on these things, not only because it gets buy-in, but it also helps you wrap your mind around how powerful GPP is Like if I go into this phase and 80% of the work is just kind of putting my head down lifting weights, running, rowing, you know pull-ups, this, you know this weighted movement, that weighted movement, and I only do the bias you know, sort of once a week as I'm working through this, and those things increase at the level that they do, you can understand how GPP works, whereas if you did all of the biases on their own and then did nothing else on those other say four days, three days you wouldn't see the same thing.
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You wouldn't see anywhere near that.
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And I love the idea of selling GPP to affiliate owners, coaches, members, understanding that the thing that we do that moves the needle is the stuff that fills in the cracks.
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That you might not notice if you're not kind of obsessed with programming and nerding out on that stuff, but it's really what moves the needle and all of these categories that we're talking about are just sort of pieces of foundation that we use yeah, and I think, like one of the I would say a conversation that a coach and owner myself like I've had had these conversations with members a lot of times One you have to as a coach especially if you're not writing your own programming have to be able to speak to the program, and not even to the program necessarily, but kind of understand where an athlete's coming from.
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A lot of times I get questions from an athlete.
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It's like well, like hey, we're focusing on X, y or Z.
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Why don't we do it more?
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We're focusing on the squat clean.
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Why aren't we doing a squat clean?
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Why aren't we doing squat clean twice a week?
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Or why isn't the lifting day every week the squat clean?
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And it's a fair question.
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And my usual answer to something like that is I.
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Then I'll turn it around and be like how many times were you in the gym in the last three weeks?
00:18:27.271 --> 00:18:28.501
It's like, well, I was.
00:18:28.501 --> 00:18:44.516
You know, usually I'm like a four day a week kind of guy, but then I was on vacation, it was Labor Day, so I was out of town with the family, and the week before that I missed a day because my kid you know, my kid got sick so I had to take him to school and I couldn't come into the gym and it's like that.
00:18:44.759 --> 00:18:54.174
That's why part of the reason that the program works so well is because, like you alluded to, like, these biases and whatnot only account for about 20 percent of the program.
00:18:54.359 --> 00:19:02.741
Because, unless you are, you know we have to remember the program is for the average everyday person, the general physical preparedness.
00:19:02.862 --> 00:19:09.909
I don't need you to be cleaning squat cleaning three days a week as if you're preparing for a weightlifting meet because you're not, um.
00:19:09.909 --> 00:19:14.363
So, having the bias where, like, we can focus on something once a week.
00:19:14.363 --> 00:19:28.392
And for those athletes who do, who are able to be super consistent with their attendance, they're going to be able to see, at least maybe connect the dots between from week to week and see where the progressions are, and you, as the coach, can obviously explain that to the members.
00:19:28.392 --> 00:19:46.962
But for everybody else, who maybe doesn't have the luxury of a ultra consistent schedule, like just getting in the gym, those three to five hopefully three to five days a week is going to move the needle on your fitness, assuming that you come in here and put your head down and work.
00:19:46.962 --> 00:19:54.671
So I think being able to answer those questions to your members about, like you know, the progressions and stuff like that, and hearing these podcasts can really help get that buy in from the athletes.
00:19:55.039 --> 00:19:57.425
And another sort of peek behind the curtain here.
00:19:57.425 --> 00:20:10.433
I come from more of the world where we would be doing, say, squat cleans twice every week with a competitor and there is an expectation of like six days a week of work.
00:20:11.101 --> 00:20:13.005
And it's on you if it doesn't work that way.
00:20:13.205 --> 00:20:33.665
So what's cool is Hunter and I will have these conversations about what we've learned from certain things, how we're going to make the program better, and I would be more on the side of let's squat clean every week, and Hunter would be on the more on the side of like, really making sure the GPP is there, and where we come back together in the middle is what actually works.
00:20:33.665 --> 00:20:35.348
That wins for sure.
00:20:35.348 --> 00:20:52.736
So if I have the idea in my head that it's not going to work as well and then it works even better, that again brings us all the way back around to GPP, and I would say that this style which we're about to explain, if you're new, is it literally just works better Aside from your schedule.
00:20:52.736 --> 00:21:04.482
If we are trying to move the needle in all of these different areas, each thing that you're doing that's either a bias or not is borrowing like some of your energy to.
00:21:04.482 --> 00:21:08.779
You know, help you potentially lose weight so that you can get into a better position.
00:21:09.162 --> 00:21:11.574
We're working on your midline so that you can actually brace.
00:21:11.574 --> 00:21:14.586
We're working on your shoulder mobility so you can get in the front rack.
00:21:14.586 --> 00:21:20.765
You know you might have leg endurance and not power, so we're going to develop power in different ways you might have.
00:21:20.765 --> 00:21:23.169
You know, it's just vice versa, all this different stuff.
00:21:23.169 --> 00:21:52.792
So it's not just that we have to figure out this world where someone's going to come three or four times a week and we have a 60 minute class, it's also what actually works right Like we get these you know screenshots from from gyms of their whiteboard and their PRS, and like they're getting more PRs on their back squat than we would in a competitor program where the person's doing it two or three times a week, and that's because we can make everything kind of rise up together.
00:21:52.792 --> 00:22:08.141
So our heavy days, as we refer to them in the program, is front squat and squat clean, and the retest at the end of the seven weeks, which I believe is like maybe beginning or middle of October roughly, will be the front squat.
00:22:08.161 --> 00:22:11.489
The 13th is the one rep max front squat day.
00:22:11.689 --> 00:22:28.192
And the progression that we've taken you through is we started off summer one with the deadlift and then we went into biasing the back squat and now we are combining a pull from the floor and a squat to give you the clean, while also working on the front squat.
00:22:28.420 --> 00:22:36.826
Yeah, and I mean like I don't know, I'm not so, I'm not naive enough to think that, like all this, like that looks really good on paper.
00:22:36.826 --> 00:22:46.826
It's like we're going to pull from the floor, we're going to get really strong pullers, and then we're going to from the floor, we're gonna get really strong pullers and then we're gonna squat and then we're gonna get really strong legs and then, like you pull from the floor and you squat, so it's like a better squat clean.
00:22:46.826 --> 00:22:48.872
It's like it kind of works that way.
00:22:48.872 --> 00:22:52.887
But like, not not like perfectly right, it looks great on paper.
00:22:53.148 --> 00:22:58.204
I think that, like the what we saw at the end of last phase, we saw a lot of one.
00:22:58.204 --> 00:23:34.163
We saw a lot of back squat PRs at our gym here and then we saw come like this past Monday, labor Day, we had a lot of folks come in and do their squat clean and either hit a PR, more likely just hit numbers that they haven't hit in a long time, and I think more like what this does is like it's not so much that it's like this perfect progression into peaking a squat clean, it's just these like this type of progression makes sense for again maintaining like gpp all year round it's like okay, we haven't done a super heavy squat clean in a couple months yeah, exactly so.
00:23:34.202 --> 00:23:36.627
It's like we're not necessarily like in this.
00:23:36.627 --> 00:23:43.391
You know this wasn't a 2015 plus 7, 22 week progression to PR your squat clean.