SESSION NOTES: Olympic Lifting (586)

November 7, 2019

SESSION NOTES: Olympic Lifting (586)

A) Warm up with: 3x 3 posn snatch pull, 3x 3 posn power snatch, 4x 3 posn snatch. 3x 3 posn clean pull, 3x 3 posn power clean, 4x 3 posn clean. 3x jerk dip+jerk+tall jerk+jerk.

B) Complete the following ladders with one lift every two minutes. If you miss a lift, repeat that percentage in the next lift.

  • 9 x 1 power snatch@ 75%, 80%, 85%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 85%, 90%, 95%.
  • 9 x 1 clean (full squat) and jerk @ 75%, 80%, 85%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 85%, 90%, 95%.
Programming Science:

Part A addresses the most common faults in Olympic Weightlifting and allows you to practice them without intensity. Part A is the most powerful thing you can do to improve your overall technique.

In part B, with one of the movements being ‘squat’ and one being ‘power’, we’re minimising the interference between the two to maximise the benefit of each.

The nine reps follow a ‘double undulating wave’, increasing the weight for the first three lifts, before dropping back down. This reduction in weight before the next increase helps tio promote speed of movement. The body ‘expects’ the weight to feel heavier than it is, allowing you to move faster and generate more power.

The need to successfully lift each weight before increasing ensures consistency at lighter weights before graduating to heavier weights.

Health and Body Composition Benefits:

Resistance training (using your muscles to lift heavy weights, either external weights or yourself) makes you stronger. Strength is one of the greatest predictors of both your lifespan (how long you live) and your healthspan (how long you live in a healthy state).

Resistance training like this will also improve your flexibility (by going through a full range of motion), posture and coordination. It will also build stability around your joints and spine to give you a healthy musculo-skeletal system and reduce joint and back pain.

Functionally, Olympic lifting will teach you the safest and most efficient ways to move objects in your everyday life.

The session will minimise losses in bone mineral density and will improve your balance. The dynamic positions you encounter in Olympic lifting will improve your agility.

Strength and balance are the two strongest predictors of falls later in life. Add agility to the mix, and Olympic Lifting becomes an effective way to train fall prevention, and insure your independence into old age.

The complex nature of these movements, and the need for high levels of learning, will improve and preserve your cognitive function with age, and encourage neuroplasticity.

As a result of this style of session, you will experience changes in blood chemistry, including favourable effects on cholesterol, blood glucose, triglyceride and lipid levels.

Some of the more advanced positions (and extremes of joint positions) in the Olympic lifts can be excellent diagnostic tools to identify areas of the musculo-skeletal system that need addressing.

This session increases your lean muscle mass and muscle fibre size. Muscle is a metabolically active tissue, so increasing it will maximise how much energy your body burns at rest. This makes it an effective session to reach healthy levels of body fat, both visceral fat (around the organs) and subcutaneous fat (under your skin). After this session, your body will go through a prolonged state of ‘EPOC’ (excess post- exercise oxygen consumption), meaning you’ll continue burning energy long after you finish training – further aiding healthy body composition.

Performance Benefits:

The heavy levels of resistance in this session are designed to increase your strength – increasing both your one rep max, and your ability to lift submaximal weights. By being stronger, you can lift more weight, and you will be able to lift submaximal weights faster and for higher reps because they’ll be at a lower percentage of your max.

The high movement velocities in this session will train your ability to move fast, increasing speed. These speed benefits will not only improve your Olympic lifting, but will increase your explosiveness and agility in a range of explosive athletic movements, and will allow you to generate force at a higher rate in the slower power lifts (increasing your absolute strength).

This session will also improve the efficiency of your fast-twitch muscle fibres (those responsible for lifting heavy and fast), and will improve your neuromuscular efficiency (your ability to turn on a very high percentage of your muscle fibres).

Strategy:

Treat each lift with respect and full focus.

Only count technically proficient and legal lifts as successful lifts.

Pause in the receiving position of ‘power’ movements and the jerk for a second before recovering. This will build stability and familiarity in that position and will act as a ‘check’ of your technique. Your aim should be to complete the session with no misses.

How it Should Feel:

This session should feel heavy, but fast. Although the heaviness should challenge your technique, your technique shouldn’t break down.

Scaling Guidelines:

With the snatch and clean, begin the movement from the lowest position possible without technique being jeopardised. If you cannot lift with good technique from the ground, start the lift from the knee. If you cannot lift with good technique from the knee, start from power position.

Common Mistakes:

Aside from standard technique faults, the most common mistake with this session is not giving part A the time it deserves.

In part B, only count repetitions that are completed with technical proficiency. Poor technique or illegal lifts should not be counted, with that weight attempted again in the next set.

Dan Williams

Dan Williams

Founder/Director

Dan Williams is the Director of Range of Motion and leads a team of Exercise Physiologists, Sports Scientists, Physiotherapists and Coaches. He has a Bachelor of Science (Exercise and Health Science) and a Postgraduate Bachelor of Exercise Rehabilitation Science from The University of Western Australia, with minors in Biomechanics and Sport Psychology.

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