Teaming with Beasts
By:
Andréa Maria Cecil
High-profile stars draw attention to all the amazing athletes in the Affiliate Cup.
In the CrossFit
Games’ inaugural year, CrossFit Santa Cruz won the Affiliate Cup by
virtue of its members’ placings in individual events.
Antes de seguir con el campeón habría que definir lo que es el crossfit. Sin entrar en detalles, se podría decir que es una combinación de ejercicios físicos variados muy exigentes ejecutados a alta intensidad: gimnasia, halterofilia, carrera, natación... Smith habla del crossfit con una devoción ausente de impostura. Estamos ante casi una religión. "Para practicarlo la familia es tan importante o más que la alimentación: cuanto más abundante y carente de hidratos de carbono mejor. Sin trabajo en equipo no hay resultados. Es una de las primeras normas que tienes que memorizar cuando le entregas al crossfit la hegemonía de tu cuerpo", señaló a crossfit.com Smith, que entrena siempre con su hermano Ben, su primo Brock y su amigo Ryan.
In 2015, the fittest man in history was competing on a
team. The same year, another former Games champion joined him in team
competition.
What a difference nine years make.
“Two CrossFit Games champions, one the fittest man who
ever walked the Earth—it makes going team cool,” said Chase Ingraham, a
Games commentator and CrossFit Seminar Staff member who himself
qualified for the Games in 2010.
During Saturday-morning’s Clean and Jerk event, the crowd
in the StubHub Center’s soccer stadium erupted as the announcer
highlighted the fact that four-time Games champion Rich Froning and 2008
winner Jason Khalipa were approaching their platforms.
Froning, of CrossFit Mayhem Freedom, made 345 lb. and fans
screamed. He hit 365 lb. and the crowd erupted much as it did during
his years as an Individual competitor.
“Ladies and gentlemen, make some noise for Rich Froning!” the announcer commanded as the event concluded.
“When you know the individual background on an athlete,
it’s funner to watch,” noted Austin Begiebing, who is coaching the
NorCal CrossFit team that includes Khalipa.
“(The team competition) is getting more competitive, and it will continue to grow in popularity, for sure.”
While the competition is not about Froning or Khalipa, the
two men have brought more attention to the team competition, Ingraham
said.
“The
team competition has always been great. It’s always been exciting. But
it has always played second fiddle to the Individual competition.”
With Froning and Khalipa in the team competition, they’ve
brought the attention that followed them as individual competitors, said
team coaches and athletes at this year’s Games.
“It’s specifically Jason and Rich that have drawn the
spotlight,” said Tommy Hackenbruck, a member of the Ute CrossFit team
that won the Affiliate Cup in 2012 and 2013. Ute was the first team to
win the cup two consecutive years.
After finishing sixth at last year’s Games as an individual competitor, Hackenbruck is back on Ute’s team this year.
Over the years, the team competition has “evolved under the radar,” he said.
“Everyone here is capable of going to regionals and
holding their own,” Hackenbruck said Saturday morning, gesturing to
fellow athletes in the warm-up area.
That’s because team competition requires six well-rounded
athletes rather than individual specialists on one squad, noted CrossFit
New England coach Ben Bergeron.
“These guys would have been on the (individual) podium in
2009,” he said, glancing over at his team as it warmed up for the
clean-and-jerk event.
Two former Games champions competing on teams does not make the team competition better, Ingraham said.
“It just makes people aware of how great team competition is.”
And, several said, it highlights the caliber of athletes now needed to win the team competition at the Games.
“In order to win the Affiliate Cup, you need Games-level
athletes. It’s the Rich Froning effect in the Central East (Region),
where he made all the guys better,” Ingraham continued. “It’s forcing
teams around the world to make the team better. If you want to go team
now, it is year-round training.”
Hackenbruck expressed a similar sentiment.
“It’s not like a weekend off. It’s a legit test of fitness for all six people.”
In 2014,
Games organizers added a fourth day of competition for teams:
Wednesday. Last year the day featured one event: a 1,000-yard swim with a
rescue sled. This year, it included two tests—one that required a total
of 1,000 yards of ocean swimming with a rescue sled and 150 deadlifts
with the 435-lb. Worm, and another that called for all six team members
to run 1 mile in relay fashion. It was a far cry from 2009, when teams
had three events on Friday and one on Sunday.
That was highlighted on Friday, Bergeron noted.
“It was the hardest day of programming ever.”
The
day’s first event had teams running a total of 1,800 m over the
soccer-stadium berm and doing 150 squats, again with the Worm. Later in
the day, all three of the teams’ male-female pairs were required to do
21 deadlifts at 545 lb. and 21 synchronized bar muscle-ups; the rep
scheme was different for each pair.
“Nobody feels close to prime,” Bergeron said Saturday morning.
And, he added, that’s what the Games should be.
“The Games should be a brutal test—not to beat people up, but it should be the ultimate test (to find the fittest).”
Bergeron added: “If the Zombie apocalypse hit, the CrossFit Games champion should be the last man standing. Or woman. Or team.”Antes de seguir con el campeón habría que definir lo que es el crossfit. Sin entrar en detalles, se podría decir que es una combinación de ejercicios físicos variados muy exigentes ejecutados a alta intensidad: gimnasia, halterofilia, carrera, natación... Smith habla del crossfit con una devoción ausente de impostura. Estamos ante casi una religión. "Para practicarlo la familia es tan importante o más que la alimentación: cuanto más abundante y carente de hidratos de carbono mejor. Sin trabajo en equipo no hay resultados. Es una de las primeras normas que tienes que memorizar cuando le entregas al crossfit la hegemonía de tu cuerpo", señaló a crossfit.com Smith, que entrena siempre con su hermano Ben, su primo Brock y su amigo Ryan.