Darren Best
WKR
His book is 15 years old and predates his Crossfit and his hybrid version of Crossfit. If you read his essay or the book mentioned above, he states Crossfit and his attempt to make a hybrid of it were mistakes. He spent two years trying to prove that Crossfit could work, he failed, this in his own words. His hybrid version of it also failed.
Here is a small piece of TINSTAAFL by Mark Twight.
Periodically people ask me specific questions about training for endurance and specifically my experience with using short, high-intensity cross- and circuit-training to improve it. My answer is based on the twenty year period I spent climbing mountains, as well as more recent experiences with ski-mountaineering racing, bike racing and decades of experience training others for similar events.
Folks usually don't like what I have to tell them.
When someone asks about what I now refer to as the free lunch method of improving endurance performance, or any intervention of whereby a time-crunched athlete tries to achieve a particular result by means of a shortcut, I first refer them to an article I wrote about my two-year test of this concept. The article is archived on the Gym Jones website, but I'll summarize it here.
No top-performing endurance athletes achieve their results on a diet of short, hard intervals and circuit training in the gym. Instead they build hours and hours of baseline fitness and then temper the foundation in races, and with a very small percentage of high-intensity interval training. Do you imagine that a bicycle racer who rides 20,000 miles per year isn't looking for a way to achieve the same results without having to spend so much time in the saddle? Or that someone has invented a shortcut, a method to end-run all the effort and time and suffering, and that no one else had previously tried it? I thought had found the shortcut. I was wrong. Others think they have found it, Some are even selling it. The true professionals are not convinced. And they are not being beaten by anyone taking shortcuts.
When I was drunk on CrossFit punch I kept trying to force the square peg of high-intensity circuit training and heavy lifting into the round hole of endurance performance simply because I liked training in the gym. I was addicted to the endogenous opiates produced by hard effort and wanted to continue getting high.
There is more to his excerpt in the book, but you get the idea.
Read the book bye Steve House, it will enlighten you a great deal.
Here is a small piece of TINSTAAFL by Mark Twight.
Periodically people ask me specific questions about training for endurance and specifically my experience with using short, high-intensity cross- and circuit-training to improve it. My answer is based on the twenty year period I spent climbing mountains, as well as more recent experiences with ski-mountaineering racing, bike racing and decades of experience training others for similar events.
Folks usually don't like what I have to tell them.
When someone asks about what I now refer to as the free lunch method of improving endurance performance, or any intervention of whereby a time-crunched athlete tries to achieve a particular result by means of a shortcut, I first refer them to an article I wrote about my two-year test of this concept. The article is archived on the Gym Jones website, but I'll summarize it here.
No top-performing endurance athletes achieve their results on a diet of short, hard intervals and circuit training in the gym. Instead they build hours and hours of baseline fitness and then temper the foundation in races, and with a very small percentage of high-intensity interval training. Do you imagine that a bicycle racer who rides 20,000 miles per year isn't looking for a way to achieve the same results without having to spend so much time in the saddle? Or that someone has invented a shortcut, a method to end-run all the effort and time and suffering, and that no one else had previously tried it? I thought had found the shortcut. I was wrong. Others think they have found it, Some are even selling it. The true professionals are not convinced. And they are not being beaten by anyone taking shortcuts.
When I was drunk on CrossFit punch I kept trying to force the square peg of high-intensity circuit training and heavy lifting into the round hole of endurance performance simply because I liked training in the gym. I was addicted to the endogenous opiates produced by hard effort and wanted to continue getting high.
There is more to his excerpt in the book, but you get the idea.
Read the book bye Steve House, it will enlighten you a great deal.