Webster and Tiler Selected for British Olympic Weightlifting Team

Team GB announced this British weightlifters Rebekah Tiler and Sonny Webster make their Olympic debut in Rio de Janeiro. Teen sensation Rebekah Tiler will compete in the women's -69kg category, while Sonny Webster, 22, will fly the flag for Great Britain in the men's -94kg category.

Tiler, 17, from Keighley, West Yorkshire, will be one of the youngest athletes for Team GB in the Summer Olympics. She will be the reigning British Champion after setting two British records in the last British Championships. She is also a gold medalist at the Youth Commonwealth Games. Sonny Webster is also the current British champion and finished fifth in the 2014 Commonwealth Games as well as being the British U23 record holder.

Commenting on her selection for Rio, Tiler said:

“I'm so excited and honored to represent Team GB in Rio this summer. It's a dream come true and something I've always wanted since I started playing. The next few weeks of preparation are so important and … I concentrate 100% on getting to Rio in the best possible shape. "

Bristolian Webster also commented:

“The Olympic Games are undoubtedly the greatest stage for sport. I've trained well and my recent performance in the British Championships gave me a fantastic platform to build on. the next few weeks of preparation are absolutely crucial. "

Former favorite Zoe Smith was taken out of the race with a dislocated shoulder at the British Championships last month. Smith expressed disappointment in not representing Team GB at the Games in an Instagram post today, but wished Tiler the best of luck at the Summer Games.

Tommy Yule, the Performance Director at British Weightlifting, has expressed pride in the selection of Tiler and Webster. In a statement, Yule commended her recent progress and personal bests in recent national and international competitions, stating that The focus of all coaches is now on giving the best chance of a good performance in Rio.

Great Britain has won seven medals in Olympic weightlifting – one gold, three silver and three bronze. The youngest was won by David Mercer in Los Angeles in 1984.

The 2016 Olympic Games will take place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from August 5th to 21st.

The Post Webster and Tiler Selected for British Olympic Weightlifting Team first appeared on Breaking Muscle.

1, 2, 3 World Records for Lasha Talakhadze and Olympic Gold Dominance

Georgia's Walking Mountain clears the field at the Tokyo Olympics and takes gold in the men's over 109kg category.

Georgia-based Lasha Talakhadze is the most dominant weightlifter of his generation and he's well on his way to becoming the first man to break the 500kg total in weightlifting.

Continue reading

1, 2, 3 World Records for Lasha Talakhadze and Olympic Gold Dominance

Georgia's Walking Mountain clears the field at the Tokyo Olympics and takes gold in the men's over 109kg category.

Georgia-born Lasha Talakhadze is the most dominant weightlifter of his generation, and he's well on his way to becoming the first man to break the 500kg total in weightlifting.

Continue reading

Lasha Talakhadze Owns the Olympic Weightlifting Platform in Tokyo

On the exercise platform, the world's best weightlifter pulls 220 kg, cleanly and jerks 255 kg with ease.

Giorgi Tchintcharauli, the doctor of the Georgian national weightlifting team, posted a video of Lasha Talakhadze's training sessions at the Tokyo Olympics and it should be enough to send any of his competitors home.

Continue reading

CrossFit and MMA Should Be Olympic Events

You have sport climbing and boxing so why not?

Let's face it, CrossFit and MMA are more popular than sport climbing and boxing these days. So why are we looking at the latter rather than the former at the Tokyo Olympics?

It could be that the process of reporting to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) is lengthy and a minefield of politics and deliberation.

Continue reading

Lasha Talakhadze Owns the Olympic Weightlifting Platform in Tokyo

The world's largest weightlifter pulls 220 kg and 255 kg clean and jerky on the exercise platform.

Giorgi Tchintcharauli, the doctor of the Georgian national weightlifting team, posted a video of Lasha Talakhadze's training sessions at the Tokyo Olympics and it should be enough to send any of his competitors home.

Continue reading

CrossFit and MMA Should Be Olympic Events

You have sport climbing and boxing so why not?

Let's face it, CrossFit and MMA are more popular than sport climbing and boxing these days. So why are we looking at the latter rather than the former at the Tokyo Olympics? It could be that the process of reporting to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) is lengthy and a minefield of politics and deliberation.

Continue reading

Swing to Win – Kettlebell Swings Better Than Olympic Lifts?

Olympic weightlifting derivatives have long been celebrated as top exercises for strength training in strength and condition. There is evidence now that is probably wrong. For most people, a simple kettlebell swing is usually a better power move than any Olympic lift derivative.

Sport happens with full hip extension

The sprinting, hitting, throwing and swinging of a racket or racket is driven by your hips with full, powerful hip extension. The full hip extension is the part of the movements of the lower body in which you stand up fully and approach and reach fully stretched.

You have to catch the bar in Olympic lifts. Beginners and advanced users almost never achieve a full hip extension because they are already preparing to dive back in to catch the pole. With a kettlebell swing, it's easy for even beginners to get a full, snappy, and powerful expansion.

If you look at the end position of each repetition in the video, you will see that the body position also mimics the drive phase of a clean wood or stone load in Strongman, in which you vigorously drive your pelvis forward under the device.

In the swing you "catch" the weight with your hamstrings

One of the biggest risk of injury in sports is tearing an Achilles tendon. Recent research has shown that developing stronger and longer hamstrings is one way to minimize this risk of injury. 1

In the swing video above you can see the kettlebell coming back and I brake it, which ends the catching phase in a position where the hamstrings are on a stretch.

This strains the Achilles tendon when it is stretched, while strengthening and lengthening the muscle, just what has been shown to reduce the risk of hamstring rupture. It is also a movement that strengthens the inner Achilles tendon more than the outer hamstring2, which could also reduce the risk of hamstring. 3

No Olympic lift derivative has this weighted advantage of hamstring stretching. Therefore, no Olympic lifting variant helps to reduce the risk of hamstring injuries and at the same time train strength like the kettlebell swing.

Horizontal work

Swings have an obvious horizontal drive aspect that Olympic lifts don't. In a swing you drive the kettlebell forward powerfully, away from you, as you cannot with the pole in Oly lifts. If you did, you would not be able to catch the bar and exit the elevator.

This horizontal aspect is important for sports because the hips work the same way when sprinting, hitting, swinging, throwing, etc. There is evidence that training horizontal strength movements rather than vertical strength movements is more effective to improve sprinting. 4

This study compared barbell engines to barbell squats and the engines were more effective. It was suspected that the horizontal nature and the larger hip extension area of ​​the engines could be the reasons why the engine was more effective.

The effect of the kettlebell swing, unlike the Olympic lifts, is that kettlebell swings have these horizontal and larger hip extension features in an explosive lift, suggesting that they are more applicable to sprint and horizontal sport movements than a vertical power lift like the Olympic lifts.

Kettlebells are easier to learn

Anyone who has ever tried to teach beginners the Olympic lifts can tell you how difficult it is. Those of us who have tried Olympic lifting can all testify to how technically demanding it is.

This can be very fun and rewarding as a separate sport, but unfortunately it massively reduces the value of the Olympic lifts for strength and fitness. A kettlebell swing is fairly simple and easy to learn until you unlock the benefits.

When compared directly in a study with participants with more than a year of lifting experience, kettlebell swings performed well compared to power cleaning and high pulling forces. 5

Although the kettlebell group used much lighter loads, their vertical jump and power clean improved at the end of the study, as did the group that trained the power clean!

Not only that, the barbell group squatted and the chalice of the kettlebell group squatted, so that the barbell group became stronger through a stronger force movement.

This raises the question of whether the barbell group squatted heavier and became stronger, but the kettlebell group still improved in vertical jumping and power clean, although it was weaker and did not practice power clean. How much more effective was the kettlebell for power development? Swing as the Power Clean and the High Pull ?! The Kettlebell group has more power from less power, so that's relatively more power!

I think the relatively greater performance advantages of the kettlebell group were due to how much easier it is to learn and train the kettlebell swing to achieve physiological benefits while the barbell group was still trying the technical aspects of the Oly-Lift – Master derivatives.

The overall conclusion from the study is that a heavy barbell movement in combination with a kettlebell movement could be the optimal combination for strength and conditioning purposes.

The reduced risk of injury

When you prepare yourself or a team to perform better in a sport, it is your focus and not the tools you use for strength and conditioning. Nobody cares how well you clean and jerk off when you're a boxer who gets knocked out in every fight.

A major disadvantage of Olympic lifts is the risk of injury that they themselves have. Even the simpler fluctuations in performance disturb the wrists of many athletes, if nothing else.

Sometimes the risk of injury that we have from working in the gym is intentionally risked to protect the athlete from injury in sports. Unfortunately, some of the risks of Olympic lifting don't go over to much else, so they only affect their value as a strength and conditioning tool.

Kettlebell swings have no such problems. As mentioned earlier, the stretched strain they create from the hamstrings is beneficial for most sports and they don't put a lot of strain on your wrists.

A lower risk of injury from the lifts themselves, a higher injury potential and a higher return through less time invested make it child's play to choose kettlebell turns as strength and fitness training.

Program kettlebells

When it comes to integrating the kettlebell swing into your workout, I have a few preferred options. Explosive exercises can have a PAP effect 6, which means that they “wake up” your nervous system and facilitate the recruitment of muscle fibers.

This makes kettlebell swings a good choice to switch between general warm-up exercises and your first main lift. If you do, go to low volume. Work through the weights with sets of 5 or 6 reps as quickly and snappily as possible. When you get to a weight that slows you down and no longer feels snappy, stop there and ride your primary lift for the day.

The other way I particularly like is to take a kettlebell with you wherever you take your primary lower body lift. Whether it's squats, deadlifts, engines, or trap bar lifts, once your set is ready, hit a series of kettlebell swings without a break.

The weight does not have to be massively heavy as long as it is heavy enough that you feel like you have to work to move it quickly. Then rest as usual before the next sentence. This is contrast training.

However, if you incorporate kettlebell swings, this combination of research should clearly show that they are not a fad. A simple and effective movement that can help your hard-earned strength to transform into powerful sports movements cannot be ignored. Swing to win!

References

1. Short bicep femoral fascicles and weakness in the eccentric knee flexor increase the risk of thigh injury in elite football: a prospective cohort study

2. Kettlebell Swing Targets Semitendinosus and Supine Leg Curl Targets Biceps Femoris: An EMG study with effects on rehabilitation

3. Biceps femoris and semitendinosus – teammates or competitors? New insights into mechanisms of thigh injury in male soccer players: a muscle-functional MRI study

4. Effects of a 7-week hip push compared to squat resistance training on youth football performance

5. Effects of weight lifting vs. Kettlebell training on vertical jump, strength and body composition

6. Ballistic exercise as a stimulus before activation: An overview of the literature and practical applications

Swing to Win – Kettlebell Swings Better Than Olympic Lifts?

Olympic weightlifting derivatives have long been celebrated as top exercises for strength training in strength and condition. There is evidence now that is probably wrong. For most people, a simple kettlebell swing is usually a better power move than any Olympic lift derivative.

Sport happens with full hip extension

The sprinting, hitting, throwing and swinging of a racket or racket is driven by your hips with full, powerful hip extension. The full hip extension is the part of the movements of the lower body in which you stand up fully and approach and reach fully stretched.

You have to catch the bar in Olympic lifts. Beginners and advanced users almost never achieve a full hip extension because they are already preparing to dive back in to catch the pole. With a kettlebell swing, it's easy for even beginners to get a full, snappy, and powerful expansion.

If you look at the end position of each repetition in the video, you can see that the body position also mimics the drive phase of a clean wood or stone load in Strongman, in which you powerfully drive your pelvis forward under the device.

In the swing you "catch" the weight with your hamstrings

One of the biggest risk of injury in sports is tearing an Achilles tendon. Recent research has shown that developing stronger and longer hamstrings is one way to minimize this risk of injury.1

In the swing video above you can see the kettlebell coming back and I brake it, which ends the catching phase in a position where the hamstrings are on a stretch. This strains the Achilles tendon when it is stretched while strengthening and lengthening the muscle, just what has been shown to reduce the risk of hamstring rupture. It is also a movement that strengthens the inner hamstring more than the outer hamstring2, which could also reduce the risk of hamstring. 3

No Olympic lift derivative has this weighted advantage for hamstring stretching. Therefore, no Olympic lifting variant helps to reduce the risk of hamstring injuries and at the same time train strength such as the kettlebell swing.

Horizontal work

Swings have an obvious horizontal drive aspect that Olympic lifts don't. In a swing you drive the kettlebell forward powerfully, away from you, as you cannot with the pole in Oly lifts. If you did, you would not be able to catch the bar and end the lift.

This horizontal aspect is important for sports because the hips work the same way when sprinting, hitting, swinging, throwing, etc. There is evidence that training horizontal strength movements rather than vertical strength movements is more effective to improve sprinting. 4

This study compared barbell engines to barbell squats and the engines were more effective. It was suspected that the horizontal nature and the larger hip extension area of ​​the engines could be the reasons why the engine was more effective.

The impact of the kettlebell swing, unlike the Olympic lifts, is that kettlebell swings have these horizontal and larger hip extension features in an explosive lift, suggesting that they can be better translated to sprint and horizontal sport movements than a vertical power lift like the Olympic lifts.

Kettlebells are easier to learn

Anyone who has ever tried to teach beginners the Olympic lifts can tell you how difficult it is. Those of us who have tried Olympic lifting can all testify to how technically demanding it is. This can be very fun and rewarding as a separate sport, but unfortunately it massively reduces the value of the Olympic lifts for strength and fitness. A kettlebell swing is fairly simple and easy to learn until you unlock the benefits.

When compared directly in a study with participants with more than a year of lifting experience, kettlebell turns performed well compared to power cleaning and high traction.5 Although the kettlebell group used much lighter loads, their vertical jump and power cleaning improved at the end of the study as much as the group that trains the strength cleanly! Not only that, the barbell group squatted and the cup of the kettlebell group squatted, so that the barbell group became stronger through a stronger force movement.

This raises the question of whether the barbell group squatted heavier and became stronger, but the kettlebell group still improved in vertical jumping and power clean, although it was weaker and did not practice power clean. How much more effective was the kettlebell for power development? Swing as the Power Clean and the High Pull ?! The Kettlebell group has more power from less power, so that's relatively more power!

I think the relatively greater performance advantages of the kettlebell group were due to how much easier it is to learn and train the kettlebell swing to achieve physiological benefits while the barbell group was still trying the technical aspects of the Oly-Lift – Master derivatives.

The overall conclusion from the study is that a heavy barbell movement in combination with a kettlebell movement could be the optimal combination for strength and conditioning purposes.

The reduced risk of injury

When you prepare yourself or a team to perform better in a sport, it is your focus and not the tools you use for strength and conditioning. Nobody cares how well you clean and jerk off when you're a boxer who gets knocked out in every fight.

A major disadvantage of Olympic lifts is the risk of injury that they themselves have. Even the simpler fluctuations in performance disrupt the wrists of many athletes, if nothing else. Sometimes the risk of injury that we have from working in the gym is intentionally risked to protect the athlete from injury in sports. Unfortunately, some of the risks of Olympic lifting don't go over to much else, so they only affect their value as a strength and conditioning tool.

Kettlebell swings have no such problems. As mentioned earlier, the stretched strain they create from the hamstrings is beneficial for most sports and they do not strain the wrists very much.

A lower risk of injury from the lifts themselves, a higher injury potential and a higher return through less time invested make it child's play to choose kettlebell turns as strength and fitness training.

Program kettlebells

When it comes to integrating the kettlebell swing into your workout, I have a few preferred options. Explosive exercises can have a PAP effect 6, which means that they “wake up” your nervous system and facilitate the recruitment of muscle fibers. This makes kettlebell swings a good choice to switch between general warm-up exercises and your first main lift. If you do, go to low volume. Work through the sets with sets of 5 or 6 repetitions as quickly and snappily as possible. When you get to a weight that slows you down and no longer feels snappy, stop there and ride your primary lift for the day.

The other way I particularly like is to take a kettlebell with you wherever you take your primary lower body lift. Whether it's squats, deadlifts, engines, or trap bar lifts, once your set is ready, knock out a series of kettlebell swings without a break. The weight does not have to be massively heavy as long as it is heavy enough that you feel like you have to work to move it quickly. Then rest as usual before the next sentence. This is contrast training.

However, if you incorporate kettlebell swings, this combination of research should clearly show that they are not a fad. A simple and effective movement that can help your hard-earned strength to transform into powerful sports movements cannot be ignored. Swing to win!

Discovering Escapability in Olympic Weightlifting

This is one of the issues that rarely come up in weight lifting discussions, but it can turn out to be a cause of problems. One is that it can prevent a lifter from making the best effort to complete a lifelong PR. I unwittingly developed my ability to escape when my parents enrolled me in judo classes as a teenager.

In judo sport there is a constant double to get into a more favorable position and to overcome the opponent. An athlete can be thrown by the opponent, but can position the body so that a full point is not scored.

This can ultimately result in the mat reversing. This ceaseless jockeying for position and leverage continues throughout the game until a fighter is declared the winner or the timer ends the game. A key skill acquired in judo is the ability to flee – the ability to get out of a dangerous situation, often in a very short space of time.

Rediscover escape

So I knew I had this ability when I started lifting weights. I haven't given much thought to it, put any emphasis on it, and until recently never thought about coaching it. However, I discovered the value of it one day when I got into a situation that could be dangerous.

It was a normal training session in the old downtown LA YMCA. There were about 6 or 7 of the regular lifters there with coach Bob Hise II, and we worked in Clean & Jerk singles.

My legs were always behind my clean one, but everything I could get up with was jerky with an excellent elbow lock. This special opportunity was intense training at the end of a week and we were probably more tired than we thought.

I came to 110, which corresponds to a weight of 90%. I cleaned it with some difficulty and brought a typical mill to a standstill. At that point, I thought I had nailed the jerk. I pushed the weight straight over my head and, to my surprise, my elbows could not block and the weight started to fall from above.

In many cases it would have been normal to lose weight forward or backward and just step out from under it, but this time it could only come straight down. And it did! It actually hit my head. In a flash I realized that if I did nothing I could be seriously injured.

Adrenaline hit and it was a lifesaver. I immediately pancake and went to spread out. I knocked the bar down to make sure I wasn't holding the bar anymore so I wouldn't risk wrist injury.

On the way down, I found my head was deeper than it was wide and turned my head to the side instead of planting on the face when I fell to the floor. It's amazing what goes through your head at a time of extreme danger.

The bar landed on the floor, hurt nothing and just rolled forward, barely turning my head. The whole incident was more embarrassing than an indicator of failure.

I walked away relieved, but still more certain of my ability to escape the danger.

encounter

I haven't thought about it at all during much of my coaching career. Most of the time, most of the lifters I trained were juniors and seniors. Most of them had started their athletic careers at a young age and learned many general athletic skills. I've seen a series of harrowing escapes made possible by the escape ability of some exceptional athletes.

I have recently worked with more master athletes, many of whom started their athletic careers after the age of 40. They were not involved in grappling or physical contact sports because escape skills were developed.

As a result, they hesitate to descend to the lower position of the zipper and are less likely to split the jerk. In the case of the Snatch, conventional thinking was that there was a mobility problem, but since then we have all found that many who are reluctant to get into the Snatch can do a real squat overhead. So it's not a mobility problem.

I assume that some of my top athletes who are reluctant to get into the full snap position will be hampered by a lack of confidence in their escape skills.

I have no strategy to deal with this problem. My first observation is that escape is achieved during a certain time window in younger years. I suppose someone could find a way to acquire these skills, but I'm not sure if many of our traditional practice protocols would be very effective.

I only identify one situation here. I think that coaches who work with inexperienced master athletes should take this into account when dealing with this population. Some of them may never be able to descend to a lower position without leaving an escape route for themselves.

This also applies to athletes with good shoulder mobility, who prefer not to put their head directly under the bar in the back. Ah great. Another dilemma to think about!

If you would like to learn more about Takano weight lifting or would like my help with your weight lifting programs, please contact me on the gym's Facebook page or website.

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