Tag: squat
Duffin Movement Systems (DMS) - Certification in NJ New York
The Duffin Movement Systems
A Complete Education on Coaching and Cueing Barbell Movements Based on Operational Mechanics vs Peripheral Observation while Learning to do a Full Movement Assessment and Corrections on the same principals
Background on this Approach
This is the only complete approach like this being taught. It is not only innovative but grounded in science pulling form multiple disciplines to create this unique system. Chris has been a competitive athlete for 25 years achieving multiple world records and 15 years of coaching. He has combined that experience with his engineering and continuous learning mindset. By seeking out and learning directly from some of the best rehab and sports clinicians around that set the course for the rest of the field, he has been able to collaborate, refine, and test this approach over the years.
In addition to his own records Chris is an even more successful coach having coached more All-Time Record setting Powerlifters than any other Coach in the world.
What you will learn
- How to coach and cue the core lifts based on operational mechanics vs peripheral observation
- How to use the core lifts as a full movement assessment
- How to then apply correction to:
- Scapular Stabilization
- Scapular to Core Integration
- Shoulder and Thoracic Mobility
- Core Stability (Proper IAP and Breathing Patterns)
- Glute & Adductor Balance and Core Integration
- Hip Mobility
- Bulletproofing the Back or Training with Disc Injuries Safely While Rehabbing
- Special exercises for developing weak areas or firing pattern issues.
- Mental preparation to achieve success as an athlete, coach, career, and life.
- Open Q&A on
- Program Organization
- Velocity Based Training
- Any other topics
DMS Certification has 2 Phases
- 2 days of intensive hands on training
- 90 day online course diving deeper than we could ever go in a 2 day weekend (Certification is not guaranteed)
The DMS Certification is for YOU, if…
- You’re finally ready to learn how to perform and coach the Power lifts the RIGHT way
- You’re tired of spinning your wheels and wasting your time
- You want a COMPLETE EDUCATION, not just another expensive piece of paper to show to your friends
- You LOVE learning and making yourself better
- You LOVE sharing what you’ve learned with others to help them become better versions of themselves, too!
Where and When?
September 26th & 27th
Potent CrossFit - 1731 Ginesi Drive, Freehold, New Jersey 07728
Register now as seating is limited!
Early Bird special is a $200 discount!
Be warned! - Discount pricing may quickly disappear once the event minimum is reached.
6 month zero interest financing available Finance via paypal bill pay (US customers only). Select Paypal Credit as your checkout option to qualify.
Using Your Body’s Mobility And Stability Mechanisms to Drive Performance
As a performance guy, I absolutely hate the ‘traction control’ button that they put in a number of vehicles today. If you aren’t aware of what this button does, it operates by detuning the engine and, in some cases, the transmission. By retarding the engine timing to reduce its output and slowing the shift patterns, it effectively improves the traction but really no more than if you purposely stepped on the gas pedal a little softer and with better control. With less power, the detuned powertrain has less chance of losing control on an unstable surface and causing you to crash and injure yourself.
Your body has the exact same mechanisms in place. When you lack stability, your body detunes its reaction to prevent you from injuring yourself. This is the primary reason why training with a Bosu ball or squatting in squishy tennis shoes is counterproductive. With a detuned body, you simply can’t work as hard as you want to or fire and engage your muscles properly. It’s also the reason why my coaching cues help people realize immediate improvements in their lifts when implemented properly.
If you don’t have a properly stabilized core with proper intra-abdominal pressurization (IAP), this down-regulation is in place. Your traction control button is on. Another button is proper joint centration. If your positioning or tight muscles are pulling the joint to one side of the socket, it will down-regulate your central nervous system firing as well. In practice, this looks like a movement pattern-based, warm-up drill. I have several examples on my YouTube channel and further examples will be covered in depth in the Duffin Movement Series (DMS).
If you’re training squats, you would do some movements that require transferring power through the hip joint with a stabilized core. You would do these with proper IAP as a warm up. You would focus on ensuring that the prime movers such as the glutes are firing properly, and you would practice the cues to engage properly such as ‘rooting’ to the floor, as discussed in many of my videos. The movement selection or cueing of the movement will help with achieving proper joint centration and connecting the muscles with the properly pressurized core. Some examples are goblet squats, rear leg elevated split squats, single leg deadlifts and hip side shifts performed before squatting, as shown in one of my videos.
This movement-based approach teaches the body to turn on properly and lets the central nervous system know that it doesn’t need to down-regulate—as long as you keep proper positioning and IAP while moving to the core, heavy lift. It also gets you warmed up and ready to begin training. It’s an efficient training approach because it takes 5–10 minutes, and when you’re finished, you’re already in the process of being warmed up physically and mentally.
Read the rest of article on EliteFTS.com
SuperTotal Certification - June 13 & 14
Super Total Certification
A Complete Barbell Education for Coaches & Athletes
Powerlifting + Olympic Weightlifting = Super Total
How To Coach & Perform the Barbell Movements Better & Safer
You will learn HOW TO COACH and HOW TO PERFORM all of these lifts:
- Snatch
- Squat
- Clean
- Deadlift
- Jerk
- Bench Press
You will learn:
- How to program for ALL of them
- How to avoid (far too common) injuries in the strength sports
- How to train the ATHLETE MINDSET for optimal performance
- and a ton more….
The Super Total Certification Is For YOU, If…
- You’re finally ready to learn how to perform and coach the Olympic lifts and the Power lifts the RIGHT way
- You’re tired of spinning your wheels and wasting your time
- You want a COMPLETE EDUCATION, not just another expensive piece of paper to show to your friends
- You LOVE learning and making yourself better
- You LOVE sharing what you’ve learned with others to help them become better versions of themselves, too!
The Super Total Certification will have TWO phases:
- LIVE — A classic 2-day (all day) in-person certification. Hands-on, intense, action-packed.
- PLUS 90-DAYS — of a dedicated online COURSE designed to dive DEEP into all of the material we covered during the live event, and go further than you could ever go in only a weekend.
By Autumn of this year, you can either be a substantially better Coach & Athlete… or not. It’s up to you.
Your Teachers
Chris Duffin is the real deal!… [he] is someone I can learn from.” — Dave Tate about Chris Duffin
Chris Duffin, aka The Kabuki Warrior — Multiple-time world champion Powerlifter, Guinness World Record Holder, coach/owner/founder of Elite Performance Center, engineer, artist, loves listening to Vivaldi while lifting. He’ll be coaching the LIVE and ONLINE portion.
“Nick is one of the most underrated weightlifting coaches in the USA” — Dan Bell about Nick Horton
Nick Horton, aka The Iron Samurai — Founder of Weightlifting Academy, Coach of the Weightlifting Academy National Team, co-owner of Asheville Strength, world-famous strength & fitness writer, life-long strength athlete, mathematician, musician, loves drinking coffee while doing everything. Will be coaching LIVE and ONLINE.
“You’re both near the very top of my list of favorite people!” — Jen Sinkler on Tamara Reynolds and Nick Horton
Tamara Reynolds, aka The Ninja Manatee — Founder of Asheville Strength, national-level Olympic weightlifter, Coach of the Weightlifting Academy National Team, physical education teacher, amateur astronomer, loves “burn-your-face-off” bourbon (not while lifting). Will be coaching the Online portion.
Combined, they have coached thousands of lifters, over 4 decades, from rank beginners to top-level athletes in multiple sports. Now, you’ll learn how to do the same.
The “When & Where”
- AT: CrossFit Downtown Winston in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
- LIVE COURSE: June 13th/14th
(The Online part of the course starts on June 22nd and goes until September 12th!)
How To Join
The Super Total Certification will eventually be OVER $1,000. But if you get in now, you save (at least) 30%!
- Tuition: One-time payment of
$1,000, Only $699 - 6-Month Payment Option: If you need a payment plan, contact Chris Duffin at [email protected]
- Scholarship: $499 — pay what you honestly can.
Click here to sign up and we’ll see you LIVE in North Carolina!
We also offer a 6 month Zero Interest financing plan
administered by Paypal Billpay
Email [email protected] get email an invoice containing a link with this option.
500lb Squat Reps PARTY! - Guinness & Tom Platz Records
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
In the interim here is a video to get you pumped up about the event.
Missed lifts (916 meet squat) and Serious Introspection/Reflection
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 ShouldeRök™ versus a Macebell or Gada
The Macebell or Gada is a classical training tool dating back centuries. Its original use was in the wrestling for fighting cultures of ancient Persia and India. My first experience using one was about 8 years ago when I attempted to incorporate it for shoulder development and conditioning. As a competitive powerlifter I quickly abandoned its use finding that combined with my powerlifting training it aggravated my wrist, elbows, and shoulders.
However 2 years ago I decided to make another run at using the macebell again. I had been making tremendous gains in shoulder health and mobility with my progression into Dynamic Neuromuscular Stabilization (DNS) and some associated kettlebell work. I decided to try the swing again but focus on some refinement in the movement based on the DNS methodologies. The goal was to simply realize some training efficiency as the swing was a very active warmup. If I could accomplish my rehab, prehab, and warmup all at the same time I would have more time to focus on my actual training.
With the new approach to the swing my shoulder pain that I had been experiencing daily for the last 8 years disappeared after the first 30 days. This is pain that had kept me from sleeping, interfered with my training, and I was only able to manage in the short term with mobilizing and re-seating drills. Gone! I couldn’t believe the change. Being surrounded by powerlifters and strongman I found several other test subjects similar to myself and quickly found that the same thing happened. That was when I decided to develop the tool into what we now are marketing to others as the ShouldeRök™. For further details on the value of the ShouldeRök™ and its impact on eliminating issues caused by open chain barbell movements today done with an open scissor you can watch this video of me presenting on the topic to a room full of clinical rehab specialist.
One of key differentiating features is the easy load ability combined with the length of the product. Most products of this type are shorter which allows for the same weight to be used across a broader spectrum. This approach compromises effectiveness effectiveness of their products but is required for those selling ‘fixed bells’. The length of the ShouldeRök™ is designed to maximize balance as well as the eccentric opening and the requirements for muscle engagement and stability. The ShouldeRök™ is simply a superior product for this reason.
A lot of people regard this as a mobility tool and they are really missing the boat as to the true value it provides. Mobility is an output but it is achieved through developing strength and stability with the proper integration of shoulder to core interactions. The strength and stability are achieved with the proper cueing patterns and core stabilization while applying dynamic load as the shoulder moves through its entire range of motion. In addition all the supporting muscles of the shoulder girdle are engaged and develop particularly as you add progressive load. The ShouldeRök™ and ShouldeRök™ method provide strength development, improve stability and shoulder to core integration, and increase mobility. These improvements are made all with the use of a fun and highly efficient warmup or cool down to any workout.
Over the next year and a half after realizing these changes in my shoulder health I continued to refine the DNS inspired cues and approach to the swing. I also put on my engineering hat and decided to improve the product itself. I lengthened the bell and improved the balance with proper material selection giving it a very unique swing characteristic compared to others on the market. We had some shot loadable bells in the gym but it was such a pain to change the weight that it was never done. With micro-loading progression and small weight differences making a big impact between one athlete to the next I felt that changing weights quickly was a critical piece. I chose to have it plate loadable with Olympic plates. This allowed for developing a loading method that would ensure the safety of the lifter and those around them. Having a weight fly off the end of a bell just wasn’t acceptable, or compromising the proper handle size to use 1” plates. For comfort and control I added knurling and flaring of the handle. The handle has 14″ of flaring so that shorter lifters can choke up on the handle and use it as a shorter device.
The ShouldeRök™ was branded as a separate product than just a macebell due to the unique nature of the specific coaching cues that are provided to customers and significant design refinement of the product. It is simply the best product of its type on the market and video series with it was developed by one of the best strength athletes and strength coaches in the world today.
It’s time to get strong! Its time to get your ShouldeRök™ today!
ADDENDUM - Recent Reviews
IMPROVE SHOULDER MOBILITY AND LOOK LIKE CONAN THE BARBARIAN
Craig Marker, Ph.D., CSCS, SFGII, is a fitness enthusiast who has spent his life trying to help people improve their lives. He is a professor at Mercer University teaching psychology and research methods.
GARAGE GYM REVIEWS – SHOULDEROK
I’ve created this site to provide honest reviews as well as instructions for DIY equipment. There is an absolutely absurd amount of equipment available for purchase today, and I will help guide you through what is worth using, and what is not.
Chris Duffin Q&A with Mark Bell and SuperTraining Gym visit
Last week I took a trip to visit my friend Mark Bell at his new facility. We had a great time shooting interviews, podcast, and some great instructional pieces I did with some of his athletes. I’m looking forward to these pieces coming available on the public domain for you to see in the coming weeks.
On the last day before catching a flight out of town we decided to do a quick Q&A from the social media following and posted up request to questions just before the final workout of the visit. Unfortunately there were so many questions that came in we were barely able to get to a fraction of them, but hope that you enjoy the ones we were able to get to.
Additionally here is the workout video for last week which covers the time at SuperTraining.
Powerlifting Legend Ed Coan and Chris Duffin Talk Shop
This weekend I had the opportunity to spend a couple full days working with Ed Coan. We had a great deal of success in working through some issues he has and establishing a path forward. During the time we also had a lot of back and forth knowledge sharing.
It was a tremendous honor for me to host Ed for the weekend at EPC in Portland and to have his trust for seeking me out. At the end of the period we filmed an incredible interview covering a number of great topics that I think are worth the watch. Make sure to check out the ShouldeRök™ Ed mentioned and subscribe to our newsletter for weekly insights.
Wide Stance Groin Health - Passive Compression | Hip Airplane | Targeted Volume
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
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
