Category: Competition

500lb Squat Reps PARTY! - Guinness & Tom Platz Records

April 25, 2015 Chris Duffin Competition, Just For Fun, Kabuki Classics, Strength Training, Video Tags: , , , , , , , , 3 Comments

 

I have recently decided to exit my career of 18 years advancing from engineering to executive level leadership the last 8 years. This move has been in the works a long time but its taken a lot of work to be prepared for the transition. It is a scary move leaving the comfort of a career I have excelled at and am known for my success. However I’ve reached a point in my life that I need to follow my passion and my dreams full time. I now have the opportunity to spend more time collaborating, learning, distilling, and sharing that knowledge.

My goal is to add value while continuously improving my relationship with the Strength and Conditioning Community by providing proprietary tools and knowledge designed to optimize physical and psychological human potential.

I am excited about that and making this change is worthy of an epic party to celebrate.

Of course my idea of a party is different than what most people would imagine. So before engaging in beer, booze, and food I’m going to push myself to my physical and mental limits while attempting to set records.

I’m going to be doing a 500lb squat for reps challenge. If I hit 19 reps in 60 seconds it will break the Guinness World record for best squat in a minute. If I hit 24 reps it beats an unlisted record form the 80’s when Tom Platz and Fred Hatfield went head to head for reps with 500lbs.

This will be done walked out and with only knee sleeves and belt.

Here is the link and embedded page for the live stream event!!! Please share this post around!

May 6th @ 3:30 pm PST

https://youtu.be/uONcEvbIwfI

 

 

In the interim here is a video to get you pumped up about the event.

Missed lifts (916 meet squat) and Serious Introspection/Reflection

April 21, 2015 Chris Duffin Competition, Training, Training Log Tags: , , , , 0 Comments

I had big goals going into the meet this last weekend. I was feeling really good for retaking the 220 squat record and making a run and bumping up the total record significantly. My weight was the lowest it had been in years going into the meet so I wasn’t worried about the weight cut and new I would be in better shape than I was used to.

However I was also pumped about helping my partner at EPC pull off a 97 person meet in record time. I pride myself in well run meets and was also looking to step up the ‘stage presence’ for our lifters. The week was busy and stressful at work and I took all my deload days and then some working late at the gym prepping for the meet. Building a steel framed 16×14 platform, automating my monolift, setting up software to manage the timing.

Thursday night I picked up Amit Sapir from the airport who had talked me into letting him do the meet despite not being fully prepped. I took Amit with me on Friday after weigh ins as I ran around town all day doing prep errands for the meet and listening to him say, “what are you doing! Your supposed to be relaxing!”.

I ended up passing out on the carpet in my sons room that evening and then waking up later and staying up till past midnight finalizing the flights and meet, results sheet, and meet software. Then instead of sleeping in I was up early running to the meet to finalize a bunch of prep and help train the table help. I tried to get a nap on the floor of my office but didn’t fall asleep but after the rest was feeling refreshed. It wasn’t till warm-ups I realized just how little prep work I had done for myself.

I didn’t have my deadlift socks, my whiskey, meet day supps, or my knee wrap pliers to name just a few things. I started warming up to late trying to sort out some of the details and then just a few lifters out pulled my knee wrap roller apart with one wrap rolled and the other one stuck on the broken machine. In a mad rush after getting my wrap rolled I sprinted to a chair and did the fasted knee wrap job on myself I’ve ever done…. And I may have pushed (thrown) an EPC teammate 20ft who was sitting in said chair. Then sprinted up the platform and to the bar. I unracked the weight still breathing hard and realizing there was no way in hell I could go down and back up with it.

My head was still messed up when I came up again and still wasn’t physically recovered. I squatted it but cut it high. At this point there was either go for it or not so I had 916 loaded on the bar for my third attempt which I didn’t come out of the hole with.

All in all it was an experience I needed. I like to think I can do everything and still keep going. And I keep talking about how I have to much going on in life. But the simple fact is its not sustainable the rate I’m going at. I have to make some dramatic changes in my life to simplify it. I will never realize what I am capable of nor share the gift and knowledge I have with the strength training community the way I want to unless I make some dramatic changes in my life. I’ve been running with my hair on fire for way to long.

It’s time for change…And change is coming.

The Role Of A Team In Individual Sports

February 11, 2015 Chris Duffin Competition, Elitefts, Training Tags: , , , , , , , , 0 Comments

People often under value the role of a team in individual sports. That statement is not an oxymoron as team and individual performance are not diametrically opposed. While it is true that lifting can, and is, done by some individuals entirely by themselves there are substantially more strength athletes who gain from relying on their team.

The role of a team in an individual sports such as powerlifting, olympic lifting and even to some degree bodybuilding is:

  • Encouragement – That encouragement or support to dig deeper and push harder
  • Reality Checks - Calling out your depth isn’t good or that you didn’t lock that out. Or you just being flat out stupid with your training
  • Remove Obstacles – Assisting lifters at meets, reminders to stay hydrated or just keeping the focus on a big training day.
  • Physical Support – Spotting, loading, lifting off, or helping with gear

We are social beings and we simply perform better in supportive groups than when we do alone. I am a big proponent of training in teams. Even without a team physically present we can see people using social media to seek out and fill those same team roles noted above.

It’s not just powerlifting or strength training that operates this way. Many ‘individual sports’ you see today require teams to succeed. Look closely and you will see them. MMA, NASCAR, Golf you name it and there will be at least a small team supporting them.

Do you want to realize your peak potential? Then find a group of like-minded individuals that have those needed skills and create a team. This is what we have done at Elite Performance Center building numerous world Champions and All-Time record holders and what you can see with my online team at EliteFTS.

Spotters in my other hobby - saving my ass

Wide Stance Groin Health - Passive Compression | Hip Airplane | Targeted Volume

February 3, 2015 Chris Duffin Competition, Strength Training, Strong Core, Training Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 3 Comments

In December of 2012 I tore my right adductor in a meet. I had actually had some minor tearing early in the year and had been managing it to keep training but with a 782 competition squat it let go on me.

 

After rehabbing the area I determined a need to reduce my injury risk. With squatting wide and pulling sumo it simply puts a lot of strain on this area that is sometimes slow to recover. It is also a faily common injury point with lifters.

One of the ways I have reduced this risk is with ensuring proper recruitment patterns are firing before this heavy eccentric load. This is done with a specific warmup routine and test-retest methodology before jumping under squats. I reviewed this warmup routine on Breaking Muscle.

That write up only covered that specific warmup and also skipped the hip-airplane that I often employ as part of it.

In this video piece I go into depth on the hip-aiprlane that is used before I squat and pull but also passive compression and some targeted volume work. The passive compression can make an instantaneous improvement if you have some issues in this area and also seems to improve recovery as well as reduce injury risk. I employ passive compression in training on pretty much every heavy set for this reason. A hammy band or a compression band work great. In addition to the passive compression it’s great to work in some volume work to stimulate flushing of this low blood flow area. An example of this is provided in the video as well.

This is not the be all and end all of groin health, but just the methods I have employed with success. It has allowed me to successfully move from that failed squat at the beginning to the standing world record 881 squat 2 years later with no aggravation of this injury.

Week in Training - Diet Getting Close - Hosting APF Meet

January 13, 2015 Cody Competition, Training Log Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , 0 Comments

As always make sure to check out my friends over at Elite FTS!

MONDAY
Getting kicked around by a nasty virus

Bench Press
135×8
225×5
315×5
405×2
455×1
425×2
315×19

Machine Military Press
Stack x15,12,12

Overhead Tricep Extension
Stack +band x 2 sets

WEDNESDAY

Wasn’t exactly sure what I was going to do but know I need to work back into squatting…. Just scarred to find out how much I’ve lost with my weight loss.

Squat
265×5
375×5
485×3
595×3,3
705×3

1 leg Press w/adductor focus
200×16,16,16

Band Bad Girls
X20,20,20

THURSDAY

Lunch Break Training

Dips x 50
Machine Rows stack x20
Assisted Pullup lockouts x12
Curls 45×12
Machine OH press .75 stack x 25
Shoulderok x20

Repeated 3 times

Deadlift
155×5
265×5
375×3
485×3
595×3
705×6

Machine Rows
Stack x20,20, 16

Rear Delt Flys
55×16,16

Pullups – Neutral Grip
X16,8,8,7

SATURDAY

Ran an APF/AAPF meet with 45 lifters

Rehabilitation - Pec Reattachment Surgery

January 12, 2015 Chris Duffin Competition, Life Stories, Strength Training, Training, Video 0 Comments

This post isn’t just about the rehab process. It also gives you a view into the mindset that it takes to never give up and not only overcome a major setup back. And to do so coming back stronger and more motivated than before.

In October of 2010 I tore BOTH the Sternal and Clavicular head of my left pec off their attachment to the humerus. This required surgery and installation of 3 titanium studs followed by rehab. Since that time I have continued to receive multiple emails, Facebook messages, and YouTube questions due to my rapid recovery prompting me to put this piece together. The typical recovery takes 12 months before getting a full release to train heavy, along with the caveat that you will never be 100% again. In the process I’m sharing with you here I had regained mobility within a matter of weeks and had progressed enough that I was training to compete at a powerlifting meet at 6 months. At 9 months I was in competition setting not only a personal record for a total but also landing a Top10 All-Time Powerlifting total. Given the standard rehab process and the experiences of other lifters this was a significant achievement.

The primary content of this article is the video series itself. It is important to note that there is significant risk of re-injury if you pursue these aggressive methods without the proper knowledge or supervision. If you choose to take that risk you can significantly reduce your overall recovery time, yield greater long term recovery, and develop a cascade of other injury due to overcompensation patterns.

With my current knowledge and resources I would take a little bit different approach in regards to the specific details of my recovery. However the overall process would still center on the same core concepts:

Mobility and Range of Motion

  • Begin mobilizing the area and work on regaining your range of motion as soon as possible. But stay inside the pain threshold and listen to your body. Every day try to take it a little further. Find a great therapist or other practitioner that can assist you with mobility drills.

Work the Movement Patterns

  • Begin utilizing and working the muscle through the movement patterns it is used in. Find a great therapist or other practitioner that can assist you with proper movement patterns.

Recovery Methods

  • I spoke extensively about the use of Super Cissus in this video series.
  • Also incorporate other recover methods such as foam rolling, trigger point, active release, deep tissue, graston, or stecco fascial to name a few. (I used nearly all of them and then some)

Stay Active

  • Train what you can, you will be surprised how even training one side of the body will help you retain your strength and power overall.
  • Don’t go INTO pain but play on the edges and continually move that boundary.

Other key points include setting aside the time and potentially money to invest in this being a primary focus. You need to be working on recovery every single day and multiple times a day. You will be pushing the limits of potentially re-injuring the area so you MUST connect with and listen to your body.

Due to the extensive number of video’s I will only embed a few of them. The rest will be linked.

The original injury was done by just being stupid and playing around. After a 2 hour bench press workout I decided I would attempt and iron cross… after never having done one before.

Week 2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G9bOlcROYx8

Week 3 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6r_jdiAG1ho

Week 4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GEu4YRU2_8s

Week 5&6 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wrRrkg7ZklI

Week 20 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jl3uEoKfyOk

Week 26 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQN986InL4Y

Week 26 Bench pressing with Slingshot http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBw1bfG4mco

Here are some excerpts of how I trained just one side of body or didn’t let my arm being in a sling hold me back. Mind you these methods are bordering on the side of ‘stupid’ in on some occasions… but it does dive home the point of don’t let anything stand in your way. I was squatting and doing 1-arm deadlifts just days/weeks after surgery

500×6 No arm squat

One arm deadlifts in a sling

Tire flips only weeks out

And finally my meet at 9 months post surgery. That 1008lb squat took a significant toll on my pec otherwise I believe I would have benched in the low to mid 700’s at this meet.

Don’t every give in and thing your done. Giving up just means your taking the easy path out. Use your obstacle to overcome as motivation to dig even deeper.

Post CAPO, GPA World 2014 Meet Write-Up

December 4, 2014 Cody Competition, Kabuki Classics, Strength Training, Training, Video Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 2 Comments

FORETHOUGHTS

My initial goal was to come in and make a run at a 2100+ total for the All-Time record but my primary goal was to win the meet. I wasn’t planning on making a run for my 2204 (10kg) total at this meet yet as I had not been able to train the deadlift heavy. This was due to a recent elbow surgery and some bicep tearing when I tried to ramp up the weights to early at 6 weeks out form the meet. So the last 6 weeks I was letting my bicep and arm fully heal and was hoping on still getting a decent enough pull in for at least the All-time record.

It began as a challenging week. With being unable to sleep on the 20hr flight to Sydney then arriving and getting settled in I ended up going 2.5 days without sleep. After one fuller, but still incomplete, night of sleep I started my water cut to the 220lb class. Interestingly I was stuck in a hard place with making this cut. If I came up a 1lb short I wouldn’t be weighing in at 221 for the meet as the 242lb class was scheduled for the following day so it would leave me having to cut 2 days in a row or just recomping and competing in the 275’s. So missing by even .2lbs would essentially move me up two weight classes and change the day I competed, and require me to change my flight plans.

WEIGHT CUT

I ended up having put some weight on this last 8 weeks since my last cut to 220. While it was only about 5lbs it was 5lbs on top of an already hard cut. I cut out fluids at 8pm on Wednesday night and let the initial water drop begin. At 6pm on Thursday night I began hitting the sauna at 15min 15min off with Sam Byrd (going for 198’s) and Brantley Thorton (going for 181’s). Brantley got sick and was out somewhere around 10pm which is when Sam and I added Sauna Suits. Sam stuck with it till about 3-4am when he realized he wasn’t going to make it.

Shortly after making weight… What a relief!

I always find the weight cut to be a bit of a spiritual experience. Perhaps because they are so hard for me due to my inability to sweat due to my nervous system disorder. As a side note this is why I always have my shirt off in the gym to help control my body temperature due to this. Sitting there next to Brantley and Sam with sweat just pouring off them while I barely beaded up made a very visible contrast. I find it spiritual as you never really know who you are in the moment when the going gets tough and you choose to either push on or give in. It’s an opportunity to test yourself and know who you are and I find this a nice cleansing ritual before a meet. Unfortunately this cut ended up being very large and it took its toll on my performance. But I had been feeling lately that I had lost my mental edge, my mental toughness. And when it got towards the end of the cut I didn’t think I had it in me and thought I had given up. With the last sauna session at 7:45 after thinking I didn’t have it in me to finish I turned around and had the longest single session all night bringing my body temp up high enough that I kept sweating the entire drive to weigh ins.

I weighed in at 99.7kg (219.8lbs) after the all nighter. Then immediately went to eating, drinking, and then adding in training sessions for blood flow and fluid pulling once my weight was up. All I wanted to do was take a nap or go to bed early but I had to keep at it and got my weight all the way back up, but also meant getting to bed late after the 2 days of no sleep. Here is me training at an anytime fitness that day:

Meet Day

MEET DAY

Saturday I woke up feeling pretty good despite never having the chance to catch up on sleep. A full meet video will come out later but I’ll post up some video’s taken from the livefeed of the event for now.

Warmup ups felt solid going into squats. Judging was very strict on the lightweight day and several known lifters warned me as they came off the platform that I was going to have to sink the depth to get a squat in. I hit my first attempt deeper than normal but still got red lights to both myself and numerous top level competitors watching all thought was below. After that I decided to play it safe and repeat my opener and also just kill the depth on my squats to leave no doubt. My second attempt at 804lbs got 3 whites but I bent over coming out of the hole after going that deep and it scared me so I chose a small jump to 832 for my third attempt. My third attempt I finally hit my groove and it was a nice clean squat with plenty left in the tank.

On bench press warmups I could feel the toll the weight cut had taken on me. The bar was moving very fast but it felt heavy. My planned opener was 440lbs and I dropped it to 424lbs. I went 424 and then 460 for good lifts and missed 480lbs halfway up. If the press commands had been as fast as they were on the following heavyweight day I believe I would have still been good for 480+lbs.

I started warmups for deadlifts with my elbow mobility work for my left arm and it felt nice and mobile. Warmups progressed well with no elbow pain or grip issues. The weights felt light and barspeed was good, but I knew based on squats and bench that I wasn’t going to be at my best so I dropped my planned opener of 722 down to 705. At this point I was still hoping for 2100 if I could pull an 806+pull out for a third attempt. With my opener of 705 the I accidently pushed the bar out in front of me twice while setting up and the second time I couldn’t get it pulled back in. Instead of setting up again I went ahead and pulled it anyway. It went up fine and I was still feeling pretty optimistic at this point of hitting my goal. But my second attempt with 749 I missed locking it out, and on the third attempt I didn’t have anything left.

Despite missing these pulls I was really happy with deadlifts as I had no grip issues and no arm pain. My arm was still pushing the bar out in front of me but nowhere near what it was doing prior to my surgery a few months ago. I felt confident about being able to start training my deadlift properly again and getting my groove dialed in for a big pull in the future.

RESULTS

I finished with a 2000 total @ 220 for my 4th raw meet and my first international competition for an easy 1st place. Sam Byrd took 2nd with I believe a 1900 total. Out of all the heavy weight classes I think only a couple people out totaled or out squatted me.

POSITIVE AFTERTHOUGHTS

 

  • The biggest piece of the meet was getting to meet and spend time with a number of top level lifters that I have only had the opportunity to interact with online. These interactions and watching them lift helped bring back my competitive fire that has been lacking this last year.
  • I also had a great time interacting with my followers. Hearing first hand from so many people on the progress they have made from implementing the training and technique approaches I promote.
  • I can start training the deadlift again!

Me and Ed Coan

Photo Ops

LESSONS LEARNED

  • Don’t ever cut as much weight as I did again.
  • Don’t combine international travel with large weight cuts.
  • Make sure I’m competing on main show flight/day in the future.
  • I’ve still got it.

THANKS

Huge thanks to Sam Byrd and Andrie Miclea for seeing me through my overnight weight cut. There is no way I could have pulled it off without you. Zorahgail and Matt Murrin I can’t thank the two of you enough for all your support over the week. Jessica and Brandon Lilly for your assistance with the weight cut. Amit Sapir for your diet advice heading into the meet and support that week. Team EliteFTS and USPLabs for both of your ongoing support. And of course the EPC team back home in Portland!!!

Dan Green Winner of 242’s on Right, Zahir 275 Champ in Middle, and me taking the 220’s on the Left.

220-242 and 275 Winners