Showing posts with label kettlebell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kettlebell. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

High Rep Snatch - First Steps

If we decide that none of the aforementioned obstacles are going to stop you; ie you've secured a coach, a good kettlebell, practice time and a goal, where should you begin?

No one wants to hear this, but with the swing. Maybe the press.

You need two highly developed skills:
The ability to do A LOT of one handed swings
The ability to press a moderate weight for moderate reps, and to comfortably hold it overhead in the lock out position

The one handed swing is essential for several reasons, not the least of which is that the grip is specific to later work with the clean and snatch. Additionally, any swing variation will aid in the development of the anaerobic endurance necessary for your 10 minute set. You get to practice the specific posture and specific source of power (fast extension of the hips) relevant to the clean and snatch.
The goal with the one handed swing should be to mimic or exceed the reps that are currently being developed in the GS snatch, but NOT the time. If you can do 20 reps on each hand in the snatch, you should strive to complete 30 on each hand with the swing. This, like the 40 snatches, would be a max effort. You don't normally do max efforts in regular training. You do 3 sets at 75% or something like that. So a sensible training plan for our example might be 4-5 sets of 12-15 reps(on each hand) of the snatch, and the 2-3 sets of 22(each hand) of the one hand swing.

For the press, you should begin working with the snatch weight as early as possible. For men, that means 24kgs and 32kgs. You need to be able to complete 4-8 reps with these weights in order to comfortably lock them out for 20+ reps on each arm.

Work on these two elements first as you refine your technique. As your snatch gets better, and you get stronger on these two lifts, your snatch reps will go up very fast. You will not need to do anything special beyond this to get to the 'intermediate' level, where you are completing 12+ reps on each hand with a serious weight (16kg for women, 24kg for men). These numbers will vary some by bodyweight and overall size and strength.

When I began training for the RKC certification a few years ago, I realized I had to complete 24 reps on each hand without stopping. A straight set of 48 reps. With the 24kgs bell. This was the rep total assigned to someone that weighed 160lbs or less. Not having trained high rep snatches before this point (2006) I was sure that it was impossible. I found it easy enough to achieve about 10 reps, especially on my good arm. After that I was stuck. It was at that point that an RKC from Australia came to my aid. He forwarded to me an excel program that trained the snatch 3 times a week, always with the 24kg bell, simply periodizing the volumes. It took me from 10 reps to about 27 reps in about 6 weeks.
My second big break through was reading the AKC materials for the first time. Valery was obviously well versed in how to do long sets of snatches, cleans and jerks, and so I gave it a try. While I credit Valery (his systems) it was actually Catherine Imes who exposed me to the programs. With this info, I started doing sets of 40-50 reps on each hand with the 16-20 Kg bell 3-5 times a week. 1-3 sets of 80-120 reps, 2-3 times a week. At least 500 snatches a week. In order to do so, you'll need a quality bell. If price is no object, the RKC bell is a good general product. The AKC bells are competition bells, and the MuscleDriverUSA bells are cheap versions of the RKC.

We'll look at both of these basic concepts in the coming days.


Thursday, February 21, 2008

Coming Soon!

Kettlebell basics!

Another six week course covering the following, in excruciating (you'll love it, or love to hate it) detail:

the Swing

the Clean

the Jerk

the Snatch

the Front Squat

The Windmill and the Turkish Get up!

Come in a total beginner, and walk out a stud. I promise!

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Testing out this 'BLOG THING'

So, what follows is me trying to figure out how all of this works... I'll be seeing if I can successfully post videos, pictures and other fun goodies!

Let's have a go, shall we?




So, what you are watching is the end of one of my kettlebell classes. The students you see in the video are Aaron B, a local BJJ blue belt, and James S, a professor. Aaron has obviously done sit throughs before, and is doing just fine cruising through to the end of this circuit. James has just learned them last week, and is finding it much harder to get to the end!
This is an excellent example of how it easy it is to mix Kettlebells with other protocols for sport specific conditioning, in this case, we hit windmills, then crunches, supermen and finally the travelling sit throughs to get some very mean metabolic conditioning for the core!