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INTRODUCE SOMEONE
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THE FIRST CROSSFIT
STANDARD OF FITNESS
There are ten recognised general physical skills. They are cardiovascular/respiratory
endurance, stamina, strength, speed, flexibility, power, coordination,
agility, balance, and accuracy.
You are as fit as you are competent in each of these ten skills. A
regimen develops fitness to the extent that it improves each of these
ten skills.
Importantly, improvements in endurance, stamina, strength, and flexibility
come about through training.
THE SECOND CROSSFIT
STANDARD OF FITNESS
The essence of this model is the view that fitness is about performing
well at any and every task imaginable. This model suggests that your
fitness can be measured by your capacity to perform well at these tasks
in relation to other individuals.
The implication here is that fitness requires an ability to perform
well at all tasks, even unfamiliar tasks, tasks combined in infinitely
varying combinations. In practice this encourages the athlete to disinvest
in any set notions of sets, rest periods, reps, exercises, order of
exercises, routines, periodization, etc.
THE THIRD CROSSFIT
STANDARD OF FITNESS
There are three metabolic pathways that provide the energy for all
human action.
Total fitness, the fitness that CrossFit promotes and develops, requires
competency and training in each of these three pathways or engines.
Balancing the effects of these three pathways largely determines the
how and why of the metabolic conditioning or “cardio” that
we do at CrossFit.
Favoring one or two to the exclusion of the others and not recognising
the impact of excessive training in the oxidative pathway are arguably
the two most common faults in fitness training.

'300' is doing a good job of popularising CrossFit, the video links seem to be all over the net...
I did a scaled version of the '300 workout' last week and it felt great, although it took me 38mins - apparently one of the actors did it in 18mins, which was quite humbling :P
Folks, although the training workouts used are VERY similar to Crossfit, I would suggest you check your sources. The actors were trained by a bloke named Mark Twight from Gym Jones. Go to: http://www.gymjones.com/knowledge.php?id=35
for full verification. He did start out with Crossfit but decided to take it further and designed something even more hardcore. Best to give honest credit where it's due.
Gothmog, we could debate this point all day. If you listen to Twight's thoughts on fitness training you will see that his ideas are based on CrossFit. He was introduced to this method of training by CrossFit. His workouts are CrossFit. His pre-CrossFit training methods were the polar opposite of what he does now. All due credit, he did a great job with the training of the '300' actors.
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