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- 🇮🇹IT · Fitness#7410K to 30K
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Recent episodes
#171 - Speed & Power in CrossFit
Jun 17, 2026
Unknown duration
#170 - Health vs Longevity for Athletes
Jun 4, 2026
Unknown duration
#169 - Optimal Amount of Noise in Training
May 7, 2026
33m 17s
#168 - 2026 Open Programming
Apr 14, 2026
27m 25s
#167 - Using and Deciding on Fitness Standards
Mar 28, 2026
30m 01s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/17/26 | ![]() #171 - Speed & Power in CrossFit | Speed and power training is something that is gaining traction in the training world and trickling into the CrossFit world. Elite athletes are posting videos of the more "out there" training they are doing, some people in the community are calling out the testing body of the CrossFit Games, and GPP purists in CrossFit are getting involved. Should speed and power be tested at the CrossFit Games, and is it something appropriate to give to general population clients in classes? In short, yes and yes. In both cases this is a gap in the testing and training we typically see in CrossFit. Interestingly, this was something tested more often in earlier iterations of the CrossFit Games, and CrossFit originally targeted sports athletes, with the programme said to provide a more well rounded form of GPP than most strength and conditioning programmes out there. In this week's episode we discuss how CrossFit should start to use this in the testing of athletes, how it might be tested, and the additional benefits of training these qualities. Check out the episode to find out more, including how you can include this in group class programming at a CrossFit box If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [1:00] Is speed and power a big gap in CrossFit's GPP methodology [3:20] Speed and power tests that have been at the CrossFit Games [5:45] Slow strength being at odds with speed and power [7:30] Is Olympic weightlifting a good expression of speed and power [9:30] Manipulating strength training to target power [12:45] How much can an average CrossFitter improve on this [15:00] Not testing speed and power work properly in CrossFit [20:00] How can you build this type of work into CrossFit classes [26:30] The risk factor of programming this for general population | — | ||||||
| 6/4/26 | ![]() #170 - Health vs Longevity for Athletes | CrossFit's primary message has always centred around health, but how healthy is competing in CrossFit at a decent level, and how healthy is taking any sport to its highest level? The trade-off between performance and long term health can be a murky line. Many hobbyists who take the sport seriously push performance to a point where it starts to affect their short and long term health. The common trade-offs range from general aches and pains and reduced immune resilience through to more catastrophic injury. CrossFit training tends to build an extreme tolerance to training volume, which means the first two are far more common than serious injury. They also tend to creep up gradually, often to the point where you realise it is not worth it a little too late. In this episode we talk about where that line sits for some competitors, when high performance nutrition becomes unhealthy, and why basic lifestyle guidelines are probably not the marginal gain for elite level athletes. Check out the podcast to find out more and see what our longevity training split would look like. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [01:00] Longevity, health and the trade-offs with competing in CrossFit [02:30] Can you have both? [05:30] Aligning expectations with your level of competition [10:19] The main trade-offs with taking performance too far [14:00] Nutrition for high performance [19:00] Basic lifestyle guidelines for elite level athletes [21:00] What does our longevity training split look like? [25:30] Choosing a sport or activity for longevity | — | ||||||
| 5/7/26 | ![]() #169 - Optimal Amount of Noise in Training✨ | training structurechaotic training+4 | — | Legion Strength & ConditioningCrossFit+2 | — | training noisegroup classes+4 | — | 33m 17s | |
| 4/14/26 | ![]() #168 - 2026 Open Programming✨ | CrossFit Games Openworkout programming+3 | — | CrossFitLegion Strength & Conditioning | — | CrossFitOpen workouts+5 | — | 27m 25s | |
| 3/28/26 | ![]() #167 - Using and Deciding on Fitness Standards✨ | fitness standardsCrossFit+3 | — | South Loop Strength and Conditioning | — | fitness standardsCrossFit+3 | — | 30m 01s | |
| 3/3/26 | ![]() #166 - Right Amount of Legibility in Training✨ | training metricsperformance tracking+3 | — | Legion Strength & ConditioningYouTube+3 | CrossFit | training metricsCrossFit+5 | — | 29m 48s | |
| 1/29/26 | ![]() #165 - How to Write Programming Faster✨ | programmingcreativity+3 | — | Legion Strength & ConditioningCrossFit+1 | www.legionsc.comhttps://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops | programmingcreativity+3 | — | 27m 48s | |
| 1/13/26 | ![]() #164 - Templates for Group Programs✨ | programmingCrossFit+3 | — | CrossFitLegion Strength & Conditioning | — | CrossFit programminggroup class templates+3 | — | 30m 31s | |
| 12/19/25 | ![]() #163 - Staying Power of Fitness Racing✨ | fitness racingHyrox+3 | — | CrossFitHyrox+4 | — | fitness racingHyrox+6 | — | 31m 01s | |
| 12/3/25 | ![]() #162 - Learning How to Program✨ | programmingcoaching+3 | — | Legion Strength & ConditioningT-Nation | — | programmingfitness+5 | — | 29m 42s | |
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| 11/14/25 | ![]() #161 - Coaching Catnip✨ | coachingfitness+4 | — | Legion Strength & ConditioningCrossFit | www.legionsc.com | coaching catnipbreathing drills+4 | — | 18m 53s | |
| 10/27/25 | ![]() #160 - How does Coaching Competitors Benefit Coaching Gen Pop✨ | coaching competitorsgeneral population training+3 | — | Legion Strength & Conditioningwww.legionsc.com+1 | — | coachingcompetitors+4 | — | 28m 07s | |
| 10/20/25 | ![]() #159 - Getting Better for Stagnant Class Members✨ | class member stagnationperformance improvement+3 | — | Legion Strength & Conditioning | www.legionsc.comhttps://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops | class membersprogress+3 | — | 24m 37s | |
| 9/2/25 | ![]() #158 - Minimum Effective Dose for Former Competitors | Moving into a phase of lower training volume as a competitor taking things less seriously can be a difficult transition. CrossFit demands a great deal, and when you're accustomed to putting in the work to improve and progress, letting go of some of that progress, or even just slowing the rate of improvement, can feel like a big ask. Is it possible to improve at a lower volume than competitors typically maintain in such a high-volume sport? Keeping intensity and strength doesn't require much, but the ability to tolerate the demanding nature of competition and qualifiers can fade quickly. It really is a use-it-or-lose-it quality. In this episode, we explore the concept of a minimum effective programme, whether such an approach can actually work, and discuss the changes in goals and pursuits we often see among former CrossFit competitors. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [00:00] Former competitors struggling to take it easier [03:30] Can you improve if you reduce your training volume [05:00] The time and volume required to compete in CrossFit [07:00] The general pursuit of improvement in training [10:50] Having diverse training goals while doing CrossFit [14:15] Does competing in CrossFit allow you to do other things [19:00] Focusing on mastering skills after competing [22:00] What elements of CrossFit do you keep or omit when not competing [25:00] The classic CrossFit Football training template [27:00] The health benefits of training at a lower volume after competing | — | ||||||
| 8/18/25 | ![]() #157 - Overused Coaching Cues | Hang around a CrossFit gym for ten minutes and you'll probably hear some coaching of hip extension going on. It might be "popping the hips" during a kipping movement, "finish the pull" in a snatch or clean, or the old "squeeze your butt" at the top of a squat or deadlift. All coaching cues have a degree of truth behind them, but some are overused to the point where they are unhelpful or even misleading. An overemphasis on hip extension in movement is definitely one of those cues that are overused. In this week's episode we discuss the use of coaching cues, rant a little about the ones we find misleading and explore some of the reasons why these cues are overused. Check out the episode to hear what we find are better cues, and ways of thinking about and coaching movement. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [0:45] 'Popping the hips' on a ring muscle-up is misleading [3:00] What we actually need in the ring muscle-up [5:00] Overemphasis on hip extension in athleticism and movement [7:00] Triple extension in the weightlifting [8:30] Overpulling coming from overcueing the pull [12:00] Transitional phases in movement and the idea of 'contract and relax' [16:00] Cueing body parts versus cueing actions with an external focus [18:00] Just repeating coaching cues without understanding them [23:00] Overcoaching in coaching certifications [25:00] When people have the wrong idea about a movement | — | ||||||
| 7/30/25 | ![]() #156 - Bootcamp to CrossFit Funnel | With hybrid training and events like Hyrox on the rise, more gyms are adapting—some diversifying their class offerings, others going as far as de-affiliating from CrossFit entirely. In this episode, we explore how the functional fitness landscape is shifting and what that means for gym owners. Todd draws a brilliant analogy between the spectrum of fitness offerings and doom metal. On one end, you've got the aggressive intensity of CrossFit, on the other, the more polished, accessible experience of a Barry's Bootcamp-style class. We discuss what makes a gym successful, how onboarding (or the lack of it) shapes the experience, and how location can make or break a business model. From small-town boxes with no local competition to city gyms surrounded by ClassPass options, this episode looks at the changing dynamics of functional fitness, and why doom metal might explain more than you'd think. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [0:00] Introduction [3:30] Doom metal and the functional fitness [7:00] The spectrum of functional fitness classes [9:30] Appealing to market trends [12:30] The business model of a CrossFit gym in a small town versus a big city [15:30] What makes a good business model for a CrossFit gym [21:00] CrossFit and maximising the square footage of a gym [23:00] The marketing message from CrossFit | — | ||||||
| 7/7/25 | ![]() #155 - Standardisation with Competition Divisions | As a competitor moves up the ranks, the experience they get from different competitions can vary drastically. At some competitions, the standard of the division matches really well with prior expectations and the qualification process. Whereas in a different competition, divisions are named the same as others, but it's a notch or two up or down when comparing. This difference can be very frustrating as an athlete and coach. It means that some competitions don't provide useful information to help with training and improving. It's going to be impossible to make everyone happy–for some it will be too hard and for others it will be too easy. But having some consistency across competitions will make for a much more streamlined process in both competing and training for athletes. In this week's episode, we explore potential ways of having some level of guidance or standardization, as well as discuss the realities for athletes competing at different divisions and progressing throughout their training and competing. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [1:00] Difference amongst divisions in different competitions [3:10] Can you keep all participants happy? [5:00] The Open is not longer the measure it was [7:30] Finding common benchmarking amongst competitions [15:20] Should divisions be policed by competition organisers? [23:30] Standardization or guidance [26:00] Level systems from back in the day | — | ||||||
| 6/11/25 | ![]() #154 - Who's Cheating? | Cheating in CrossFit has been around since the early days of the Open and online qualifiers. From athletes looping videos to some competitors being exposed year after year at Regionals, it's a persistent undercurrent in the sport. But how widespread is cheating and does it always happen intentionally? At one end of the spectrum, you have blatant rule-breaking, like switching out a medicine ball for a lighter one. At the other, you see more subtle infractions, such as a judge giving a warning for a squat that is just shy of full depth. Both technically count as cheating, but they are worlds apart in intent and impact. In this episode, we dive into the kinds of cheating we've seen over the years, some being very entertaining, and examine how the current CrossFit Games season, with its heavy reliance on virtual competition, creates even more opportunities for rule-bending. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [1:00] Cheating in online qualifiers [3:00] How many athletes are cheating in the open? [8:00] Cale Layman in this years open [10:15] Having to verify scores when athletes judge each other [13:00] Qualifying athletes to the games without in person competitions [16:10] When an athlete or judge might accidentally cheat [19:30] Is the 2025 season going to be a good test? [21:00] Team athletes making it to the games without basic skills | — | ||||||
| 5/18/25 | ![]() #153 - How to Train? | One of the classic clichés often repeated by coaches is that the best programme in the world, executed poorly, is far less effective than the worst programme executed well. While it's true that a poorly designed programme can still be ineffective, there is merit in the idea that how you train matters more than what's on paper. Teaching athletes how to train effectively and execute a programme to the best of their ability is one of the best leverage points for a coach. Much of this comes down to observing and interpreting training outcomes. These results often reveal whether the athlete is approaching training with the right intent, understands what truly matters, and knows which outcomes will most help their progress. In this week's episode, we explore some of the common areas where athletes tend to need more guidance in their training. We discuss motivation, the athlete's relationship with the training process, and share a few stories of interesting results we've seen over the years. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [2:30] Teaching athletes how to train [5:00] Picking up helpful ideas from training with others [8:00] Navigating feedback with training [10:00] When an athlete doesn't care that much [14:30] Communicating and processing results [17:30] Recording the results for conditioning [21:30] Recognising what results are important | — | ||||||
| 5/7/25 | ![]() #152 - Are You Actually Getting Better? | One of the challenges in a highly varied sport like CrossFit is determining whether we're actually improving. Once an athlete has accumulated a significant amount of training volume, the classic test-retest approach on isolated elements of the sport becomes less effective. We can spend weeks or even months working on a particular movement, only to struggle with it again when the context shifts slightly. Coaches can use tools such as variation, psychological momentum, and developing complementary areas to support progress—but what happens when an athlete hits a ceiling with a specific movement or combination? In this week's episode, we explore strategies for programming that help athletes continue improving their weaknesses. We discuss when it's best to zoom out and focus on general adaptations, and when it's necessary to get tactical and hone in on the specifics. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [1:00] Test retest [3:20] Improvement through repetition [6:00] Using variation to help [10:00] Hitting your ceiling for progression [13:00] How do you actually measure physiological improvement [17:00] General versus specific adaptations [21:00] Working on major weaknesses longer term | — | ||||||
| 4/2/25 | ![]() #151 - Big Changes to Training | Have you ever felt the urge to flip the table and completely change your training or someone else's programme? Maybe a few small competition experiences have made you feel like your training is heading in the wrong direction. Perhaps you're getting tired of working on the same things. Or maybe you want to change your training goal entirely. Whether you're making big changes to your training goals and what you train for, or you're shifting the direction and focus of your training while keeping the same goal, some of these changes can be reactionary and driven by frustration—this is where you need to be careful. In this week's episode, we discuss where these changes may come from, whether from an athlete or a coach, and how to manage some of the unhelpful tendencies behind them. Tune in to hear more about general programming strategies that help you stay agile and pivot your programme, when the programme actually doesn't matter that much, and why naming a training cycle is an essential programming skill. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [0:30] Introduction [2:45] Making changes to overall training goals versus training focus [4:45] More options to compete in fitness [7:30] Changes stemming from frustration [10:00] Minimum Viable Programme [13:00] How to communicate programming to athletes [15:30] When coaches make big changes to programming [18:00] Does programming actually make that much difference [24:00] Doing conditioning before strength | — | ||||||
| 3/10/25 | ![]() #150 - Arguing About Book Learning | Having a formal education in sports science, kinesiology, or a similar field may seem beneficial for a CrossFit coach. However, you might end up learning a lot of technical information without any context or knowledge of how to apply it. Conversely, you may develop extensive coaching experience and navigate situations in the moment with ease but lack the technical knowledge or critical thinking skills to tackle more complex challenges. This week's episode is all about striking a balance between being book-smart and having the coaching experience to handle situations effectively. We discuss Jon's background with a sports science degree, the drawbacks of an overly mechanistic view on training, and the importance of knowing what to communicate to athletes—and how to do so effectively. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [1:00] Is book learning helpful in CrossFit [2:30] Jon's background doing a Sports Science degree [4:30] The gap between knowledge and a coaches eye [8:00] Being able to connect knowledge to context [10:00] Overly mechanistic view of biomechanics [12:30] Skepticism about biomechanical explanations [23:30] How to effectively filter your communication to athletes | — | ||||||
| 3/2/25 | ![]() #149 - Beyond MGW | When learning anything, it can be difficult to step back from the details, and this is especially true for CrossFit programming. Often, you'll find coaches who are highly focused on the means (the exercises, the sets and reps) rather than the methods (the programme, the desired stimulus, the weekly plan, etc.). As much as constructing a programme or workout based on the latest sports science information is considered the best approach, sometimes it doesn't hold up, and you need to rely on your own training or coaching experience to create something more contextual and effective. In this episode, we discuss some of our own self-reflection while programming, as well as other programme methods. We also explore how MGW and the programming information provided by CrossFit have their limitations. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [1:00] Being able to abstract workouts into bigger picture programming [2:00] Where CrossFit's programming methodology can lead you [3:30] Focusing on the details too much as an inexperienced coach [5:45] Writing programming in layers [8:45] Not seeing the higher order pattern when starting out programming [10:00] What is this workout going to feel like? [12:30] Programming more variance for experienced athletes [14:30] Using your own experience in training [17:00] Writing programming that is influenced only by the CrossFit world [20:00] Being self reflective in your programming [23:30] Treating all movements as equal through an energy system lens | — | ||||||
| 2/19/25 | ![]() #148 - World Fitness Project | In the past couple of months, a new type of fitness competition has been generating a lot of anticipation. Headed by multiple-time CrossFit Games athlete Will Moorad, the World Fitness Project is entering the competitive landscape in a year when the CrossFit Games is undergoing its biggest changes yet. The competition consists of two tour events and a finals event at the end of 2025. There are 20 professionally signed male and female athletes, along with 10 challengers at each event. Additionally, team and masters competitions will take place at these events. Overall, this competition appears to create a clear pathway for athletes to compete in the sport and make a living as professional fitness athletes. They have released a movement list for the season, already demonstrating standardisation we haven't seen in CrossFit. The WFP has signed many of the sport's top athletes, with several planning to compete in both the CrossFit Games and the WFP season. In this week's episode, we discuss what this could look like from a training perspective and whether it provides mid-tier competitors with a more structured and potentially rewarding outlet than what CrossFit has offered in the past. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [0:30] What is the WFP? [3:30] CrossFit lending itself to a tour-style sport [4:30] The challenge of making money from events [6:30] Streamlining competition for athletes [8:30] Frustrations with online competition [11:30] Getting structure in training through competition [14:30] Competing in person vs. focusing solely on qualifiers [18:00] Standardisation in competition [22:30] Will the WFP offer more structure than CrossFit? [24:30] The "no man's land" for many competitors [26:00] The importance of having direction from competition | — | ||||||
| 1/20/25 | ![]() #147 - Improving Moderate Weight Barbell Conditioning | There are a few qualities in CrossFit that can be quite difficult to improve for certain people. It's usually a mix of different problems that manifest in one or two specific styles of workouts in CrossFit. It's not quite this, but not quite that, either. One of those qualities is moderate-weight barbell conditioning pieces—typically something like a 135/95 barbell performed for high reps with a lot of other movements included in the workout. It's not a heavy barbell where strength is going to slow you down, but it's also not a lighter barbell where your breathing is going to be the main limiter. It is an endurance issue, but due to the movements this issue arises on, there is a strength element at play as well. The important thing with training this quality is not to let yourself blow up and reach that point of no return. You want to develop as much capacity and training volume below that point to try and push this further. Check out this episode to hear how we work on this issue, how we structure workouts for endurance limitations, and how this problem relates to other qualities required in the sport. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. We run online workshops for coaches as well. Find out when our next workshop is here: https://legionsc.com/program-design-workshops These podcasts are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [0:30] The issue at hand [2:00] Adjusting traditional CrossFit metcons first and then going deeper if needed [5:00] Structuring workouts to target more enduring qualities [9:40] Hard workouts are easy to programme [11:00] Not a clear-cut route to improving this quality [12:30] 80/20 rule with pulling and pushing your training [14:15] Breaking the movement down to keep the athlete moving [16:00] Interval Weight Training [17:30] Is this a movement-specific problem? [20:00] Difference between barbell battery work and moderate-weight conditioning [21:15] Squatters versus hingers | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.
Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.
