Wednesday, March 30, 2011

KO Workout of the Week

Great job to everyone who participated in our workout last week! Did you feel the burn in those sit ups? Don't forget, Tonya Blank says if you want to do your sit ups legit, your hands touch the ground behind your head when you reach the ground and your hands touch your toes when you're up. You should be doing these with your legs in the butterfly position to center the workout on your stomach muscles and take the pressure off of your hip flexers! Here's our next Workout of the Week:

As Many Rounds As Possible (AMRAP) in 10 minutes:

5 pushups

10 jumping lunges

15 sit ups

The goal is to see how many rounds you can complete in 10 minutes...and no rounding up the count...you must complete all 3 exercises for it to count as 1 round. 10 jumping lunges breakdown to 5 on each leg. Start in a lunge position, jump up, and land in a lunge position with the opposite foot in front. Again, we encourage you to put the number of rounds you’ve completed in the comments. Good Luck and have fun!


#10 Krisztina Jozsef

Monday, March 28, 2011

What's your approach?

The upcoming season is a blank slate, just waiting to be written on. What are you going to write on it? Is there a deficiency in your game that you'd like to shore up? A new throw you want to work on? Pre-season is a great time to make goals and envision the kind of player you'd like to be. But what's your approach? It's great to have a goal in mind, especially to reflect on previous seasons and where you feel you could improve. It's also easy to come up with a goal. The hard part is putting in the work to achieve it, and that's where the "approach" comes in.

As an example, one off-season I was chatting about our disc movement with a couple of teammates, and how our around break-mark throws were not a significant part of the offense. We decided that having dominant around breaks would open up the field and make the offense flow better. Improving our individual break mark throws was the goal, but how would we achieve that? At the gym Kitt and I attended, there were 12" hurdles. We would often take a disc to the gym workouts as 10 mintues of throwing at the end of the workout (throwing when tired) was great mental practice. Eyeing the hurdles, we thought it would be great to throw under a target to really get the feel for stepping out and releasing low.


A quick trip to the sporting good store later yielded some tall plastic cones. Around the house we had some PVC pipe that we cut into 2' bars for the hurdles, then drilled out holes in the cones at 8", 6", and 4" high. Now we had adjustable height hurdles to throw under. The next weekend we were at the park, bag of discs in tow. There were 4 of us to practice the step-around breaks, and 2 hurdles. Having a hurdle to throw under really emphasised the need to step out and release low. We each threw 100 backhands (in 5 sets of 20), then switched to 100 flicks. It was awesome, and surprisingly difficult to throw under the hurdle, especially on the flick side.


The next day over email we had a good laugh over just how sore we all were. That didn't stop us from doing it all over again the following weekend. Then again. Then again. The soreness stopped happening. It was easier and easier to throw under the hurdle. When practices started up we stuck to our plan of breaking around the mark, often ignoring downfield cutters in order to center the disc if we were on (or near) the sideline. The work we put in during the winter was intended to form the muscle memory of stepping out and releasing low. The work we put in during the first half of the season was intended to form the habit of using the around break in game situations. That was our approach. I can't speak for the others who joined me on those days in the park, but personally I felt like I was going to break any mark that year. Having a goal is great, but having a plan to achieve the goal is even better. If you can get buy-in from other people on the plan, then together you will be more likely to stick to the plan an achieve the goal.


Some goals are measurable (e.g. breaking six minutes in the mile), and some less so (strong around break-mark throws). However, when you break the mark in a game, and it feels natural and easy and your mark was never going to stop it, then you know all the work has paid off. You know your plan was solid. Plans aren't just long term. When you line up across from someone on defense, what do you know about them? Do they like to run deep? Do they like to juke a lot? Do they huck? Do they love their inside-out flick? At the start of the point you can make a plan too. Use as much information as you have on your opponent, and decide what you are going to take away.


Ultimate is a fluid game full of reactions, improvisations, and adjustments, and by having an approach to each situation you will be better prepared to make those adjustments on the fly. You'll recognize situations quicker and react before your opponent has time to. Try it out at your next pickup game. Decide on a plan before the point and stick to it. See if your adjustments during the point are easier to make in the framework of your plan. Soon it'll be second nature to ask yourself... what's your approach?

Monday, March 21, 2011

Knock Out's pre-season work out of the week

Knock Out Ultimate is gearing up for the 2011 season and will be presenting a weekly dose of Tonya Blank's workouts to get you ready to rumble as well! Each of these workouts are crossfit-esque which means they are intense short trainings with no rest unless specified. The goal is to do these workouts as fast as possible while maintaining good form. What's great about these workouts is that you can easily squeeze them into your day and it makes you feel so good once you've finished them! A friend of ours once wrote, that
sometimes you need to flirt with pain in order for your body to know how to overcome it. There's no reason why we shouldn't be pushing ourselves in everything we do...why wait until tournaments to feel so sore...why wait until tournaments to have to dig deep to run hard those last few points. Similar to anything we do, our body needs to be trained on how to react to pain and exhaustion so when that time comes, we know what to do.
KO's 2011 season training begins now!
Workout #1 Warm up jog/bike ride: 5-10 minutes
5 burpees (see video in comments below)
10 push ups
15 squats
20 situps (see tonya sit ups described in comments below)
Repeat for 5 rounds, no rest and time how long it takes you to complete. Although the goal is to try to do this workout as fast as possible, please remember to ease your body back into exercising if you have not done much in the off season. At some points in this workout, it may take you 10 seconds to do 1 burpee correctly or you may drop to your knees during a set of push ups. That's okay as long as you keep moving the entire time. Also a great way to start running again is to do some Out-and-Backs. Run out to a fixed location and time the run, then try to get back faster than you got out! BOOM! We hope you enjoy these workouts and encourage you to post your results in our comment box!

Sunday, March 13, 2011

BAM, POW, WHAM, KA-BOOM: Knock Out! 2011 season info

DING DING!

Knock Out! Ultimate is happy to announce our 2011 leadership and try out series!

We are excited to present that Coach Kris McQueen will be returning with his vast knowledge and experience for our rock'em sock'em 2nd season. Since we didn't get a chance to write him a bio last season, but here are some highlights: he's a
2006 club nationals champion, Boston Marathon qualifier, and 3rd degree black belt in Tae Kwon Do...basically that coach you don't want to mess with when you're on the field!



Here's what's coming up for Knock Out's 2011 try out series:

San Diego Womens Mixer :
Sunday April 17th
Time and Location: TBD
Open to all levels of players. The goal is to build and promote women's ultimate in the San Diego area.

Open Tryouts :
April 30 (afternoon)
May 1 (morning)

May 14: (afternoon)
May 15: (morning)
**Times and Locations to be announced soon!

Invite Only Tournament:
June 4/5th Cal States in Santa Cruz
Let's Get Ready To Rumble! See you all on the fields soon!