CrossFit Slayer

Strong People are Harder to Kill, and Generally More Useful! -Rippetoe

I wanted to ask everyone in here for some guidance on integrating new members. How do you usually start people up? Is there ageneral program you have preset? I remember the various ability level programming, but what factors are used to do the scaling for newbies/ prior injuries/ rhabdo risks (prior athletes, people who have specific training backgrounds, etc.)? Thanks, I want ot make this the best environment for new people to train here and keep it fun and challenging by not scaling too much, yet maintaining the efficacy.

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I got this off of the Crossfit Journal. Hope it helps.

Scaling is an important aspect of CrossFit, but one that’s often misunderstood. Correctly altering and customizing workouts can increase your work capacity, make training more gratifying and keep your Fran times well under 20 minutes—all good things.

The simple fact is that the WODs posted on crossfit. com are designed for elite athletes with CrossFit expe- rience, and almost all new CrossFitters will have to scale their workouts. But scaling properly isn’t easy. It requires careful consideration and testing. It isn’t as simple as picking a random weight and stripping a few bumpers off the bar before a WOD. Similarly, substitut- ing movements can be pretty tricky if you don’t know what you’re doing.
So how do you scale to achieve the best results?

Start Slow—Or Not
The Start Here page on crossfit.com suggests athletes without experience in weightlifting or gymnastics should spend a month or two learning the correct technique for exercises while substituting simplified workouts for the main-site WODs.
For example, a guy named Jason Khalipa posted a scaled Fran time of over 12 minutes his first time around back in late 2007. He was able to do the RX’d weight on the thrusters but had to substitute jumping pull-ups. A few years later he completed the thruster-pull-up WOD at the 2008 CrossFit Games in 3:56 on his way to the overall title.
Some elite athletes may realize they have to scale when starting out with CrossFit, but the message hasn’t always filtered down to everyone. How often do you see a comment like this posted after a brutal WOD: “This was my first CrossFit workout—awesome!” If jumping into doing the workouts full-tilt gets people started out happily, that may be preferable to not starting CrossFit at all. On the other hand, being overwhelmed early on will drive some athletes out of the box.
If you’re starting, it’s always best to work with a good coach. But not everyone has the money, and good coaches aren’t always available. Training yourself can also work and may be preferable to working with bad coaches. With enough patience, you can teach yourself all the exercises in CrossFit’s arsenal. If you’re a solitary CrossFitter, it’s worth making the drive to your closest affiliate every couple of months for refinements and improvements on exercises that you cannot teach yourself.
If you don’t work out at an affiliate, then you are ulti- mately the one responsible for learning to scale. It can take months to learn scaling and apply it to yourself. Expect to make mistakes. Everyone does.
Scaling: The Pursuit of Power
Some novice athletes will have to scale their entire program. For athletes just learning weightlifting movements, scaling may mean completing only body- weight movements in metabolic conditioning workouts. Once you’ve reached a level of proficiency with weight- lifting movements that allows you to complete them for time, you can begin to work them into your met-con workouts. The first month or so for a beginning athlete.

may lack variation, but developing competence and virtuosity in the basic movements is more important than doing complex movements as soon as possible.
There are various ways to scale. How to elicit the most effective response is both subtle and complex. You don’t always scale by reducing the duration of workouts, for instance. Scaling correctly will increase work capacity more efficiently than attempting to complete workouts as prescribed before you’re ready for them. Properly lowering the weight and achieving a faster time will actually yield a higher level of power.
The work and power output calculator on the Catalyst Athletics website shows that a 5-foot-10, 180-pound athlete who completes Fran with 95 pounds in nine minutes has a power output of 98.2 watts. If the same athlete scales the weight down to 75 pounds and completes the workout two minutes faster, his power output actually rises to 115.7 watts. So using less weight can sometimes be better.
Here’s another example of how using less weight can be the right thing to do: a five-foot-five athlete who weighs 130 pounds and completes Fran in nine minutes using
65 pounds has a power output of 64.3 watts. If the same athlete scales the weight down to 45 pounds and completes the workout two minutes faster, her power output rises to 72.9 watts.
Once again, reducing the weight and completing the workout faster increased average power. But that isn’t always the most important component in every workout, particularly for beginners. This brings us back to the basic question: how do you scale?

Lose the Ego, Lower the Weight
How low should you go when reducing the load? Probably lower than you think. If you’re female or just starting out and weigh significantly less than 175 pounds, the prescribed weight will be too much. While elite women can complete workouts with the weights prescribed for men, many consider two-thirds or three-quarters of the men’s weight to be the prescribed weight for women. Women commonly use 65 pounds for a 95-pound workout and 95 pounds for a 135-pound workout.
When you do a workout for the first time, pick a weight that ensures you will complete all the reps. Consider 50 percent of the prescribed weight, or even an empty bar. Take a look at your time. Was it as fast and easy as you thought it would be? If so, increase the weight the next time you do the workout. The increase could be just a few pounds or right up to the prescribed weight. It all depends on how you did. Many workouts appear infrequently. You might find you can increase weight on virtual shoveling because your deadlift has improved.
It’s also critical to scale weight on workouts that include Olympic lifts or high reps of weight that might be too heavy for you. You need to evaluate the point of the WOD. In CrossFit, one-rep max days exist for a reason: to build strength while struggling with a heavy load. If the WOD calls for 30 clean and jerks at 155 pounds, it’s clearly a met-con WOD. If you turn the workout into 30 single reps with a minute rest between them, you’ve missed the point. You want to scale the weight appropriately to preserve the metabolic challenge. Find something that’s heavy enough to challenge you but light enough to allow multiple reps at a reasonable pace.

Furthermore, jumping into a WOD that calls for a high number of technical lifts is a bad idea if you don’t know how to do the movement properly. There’s a reason most CrossFitters learn complex movements with a piece of PVC pipe, so don’t expect to perfect the snatch with a stopwatch going and 135 pounds on the bar.
Fewer Reps: Turning Filthy 50 into Terrible 10
Lowering the rep count is also an option. Consider cutting Murph in half or reducing Barbara to 10 pull-ups, 20 push-ups, 30 sit-ups and 40 squats. This keeps the same time frame and difficulty for athletes who quickly lose their stamina on body-weight exercises. While preserving the symmetry of a workout like Angie may be conceptually pleasing, don’t be afraid to scale only the pull-ups or push-ups.
How many reps should you cut out of a workout? One way is to consider how difficult the prescribed repeti- tions would be for an intermediate athlete. Beginner athletes should aim for a number of reps that will be as challenging for them as the prescribed workout would be for an intermediate athlete. Consider this tough workout from Jan. 16, 2009:
For time:
10 GHD sit-ups 10 hip & back extensions 30 95-pound thrusters 50 pull-ups
30 GHD sit-ups 30 hip & back extensions 20 95-pound thrusters 35 pull-ups
50 GHD sit-ups 50 hip & back extensions 10 95-pound thrusters 20 pull-ups
Few athletes will be able to complete the first set of 50 pull-ups in a row, so when scaling this workout you should pick a number that will take you at least three or four sets to complete, if not more. But if you find you have do the last 10 pull-ups as singles with rest in between each one on the first set, you’ve bitten off more than you can chew and you’re sacrificing your metabolic response.

As with the pull-ups, the other repetitions in this workout could be scaled to minimize recovery downtime. When scaling repetitions, one approach is to match your time to the time an intermediate athlete would get perform- ing the workout as prescribed.
Scale the Movement:
How to Manage Muscle-ups
Altering the movements themselves takes more thought. People who have difficulty doing pull-ups have a choice between assisted pull-ups, jumping pull-ups or ring rows. While one pull-up substitution shouldn’t be used to the exclusion of all others, some substitutions work better than others in specific workouts. Using assis- tance bands or Gravitron-type machines may develop strength efficiently, but jumping pull-ups will better preserve the metabolic stimulus of a workout. Consider using jumping pull-ups for a workout like Barbara. For lower-rep workouts like Fran, consider assisted pull-ups or ring rows for a pull-up ladder.
How should you program for athletes who can do some, but not all, of the pull-ups in a workout? If you haven’t planned to do so, having to switch to assisted pull-ups halfway through a workout can be discouraging.
You may want to do a one max set of unassisted pull-ups (even if this is a single pull-up) and then switch to the assisted version on every single set of pull-ups in the WOD. This may result in a larger overall number of unassisted pull-ups, but maybe not. Every athlete is different.
Additionally, don’t stop working on strict pull-ups after you learn to kip. Kipping pull-ups are great. Doing them exclusively would be unwise.
Some athletes can’t do muscle-ups, handstand push-ups or other excercises. Even replacing each muscle-up with four pull-ups may be too much some beginners. Start with one pull-up and one dip. Eventually you can increase to two, three or four pull-ups and dips for every muscle-up.
And don’t worry too much about doing the same number of reps for each exercise. If you’re substituting pull-ups and dips for the muscle-ups in Nasty Girls, for example, there’s no reason not to do 14 pull-ups and seven ring dips if you still struggle with ring dips but want to do more than 21 pull-ups in the entire workout. The idea is to challenge yourself with all the exercises, neither holding back on a strength nor pushing too hard on a weakness.
For handstand pushups, substituting push-ups with elevated feet is preferable to using a partial range of motion. Plyometric boxes work well, and athletes can place their knees on the box for additional assistance. GHD sit-ups are easily replaced with normal sit-ups. If you want to work GHD sit-ups into your workouts, you can split the set into half GHDs and half regular or Abmat sit-ups. Similarly, back extensions are easy to replace with supermans or good mornings. The Exercises and Demos section of the CrossFit website is rich in videos showing progressions for different movements. Spend time with these videos.
Scaling Rounds and Rest
Altering round and rep prescriptions is a particularly good strategy for slow runners and rowers who are develop- ing respiratory capacity. If three rounds of a five-round workout take more than 25 minutes to complete, some modification is required. You don’t want the workout to turn into a long, low-intensity effort of limited benefit. You can reduce the number of rounds, but you can also increase the length of rest.
Consider adding an extra minute to the rest periods in Fight Gone Bad, for example. For some athletes, the result will be higher output and intensity than when doing the workout as prescribed. Adding rest intervals to workouts can also increase output. Using the Catalyst Athletics work and power output calculator again, if a five-foot-eight, 150-pound athlete can perform 12 rounds of Cindy in 20 minutes, his power output is 72.82 watts. If that athlete takes a two-minute rest halfway through and completes 15 total rounds of Cindy in 22 minutes, his output rises to 82.75 watts.
You might also want to try a workout without the clock. It could really help you. Or you might feel lost, confused and purposeless. The first time you attempt a heavier weight or an RX’d workout, consider not timing yourself. You can still push yourself with intensity, but removing the stopwatch can take some of the pressure off. This is a good idea when completing exercises you are just learning—such as Olympic lifts—as part of met-con workouts. Without rushing, you can focus on perform- ing complex movement patterns, breathing and staying conscious.
Knowing When to Fold
Sometimes it’s OK not to scale. If you have consistency with the movements and you’re really dying to see what your Fran time is, go for it. If you have a solid founda- tion in body-weight movements and want to gut out a full Murph before you’re ready, it probably won’t kill you—but maybe skip the weight vest.
Taking on a little too much is totally humbling. It will probably remind you of one of your first workouts. It’s good fun to be reminded of your own limits every once in a while. But if you take on too much and feel your form is breaking down beyond a safe point, do the unthinkable: quit the WOD. It takes times to learn when quitting is prudent and when it’s just slacking. Knowing the difference is important.
If you’re just starting out and can’t judge whether to hold back or push harder, hold back. Once you’ve been doing CrossFit for a while and learn what your real limits are, push harder.
Skill practice is important for all athletes. If you have extra time, practice kicking up into a handstand 50 times. Practice kipping every day, even if no pull-ups appear in the WOD. Work on L-sits and skin-the-cats because basic gymnastics skills are incredibly useful.
Education is also important. For beginners, the three-on, one-off schedule itself may need to be scaled. If you find yourself too sore and exhausted to work out on the third day, dedicate your time to learning more. Read Mark Rippetoe’s Starting Strength or Greg Everett’s Olympic Weightlifting. Start learning about the Zone and Paleo diets, or spend some quality time in the archives of the CrossFit Journal.
Careful scaling works—but it takes planning and experi- ence. Track your progress, evaluate the results of your scaling and correct your mistakes. Talk to other coaches and athletes and ask for advice. Think, plan and educate yourself.
Most importantly, keep at it. While it may seem that you’re always scaling or just completing basic movements day-in and day-out, you’ll eventually start cranking out impressive CrossFit performances. The day will come. Just keep hitting the scaled workouts with all you have: blood, sweat, tears and patience.

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I've added the file off of crossfit journal as well. This will be much easier to read than my cluttered pasting.

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