YCB’s Summer Throw Down
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YCB’s Summer Throw Down

Just a few months ago we ran an in-house meet, The YCB Summer Throw Down. We had seven athletes participate.

  • Romona Frank Competed in her first meet.

  • Nicolle Durkee broke the New England Snatch record at 69kg for her age and weight category.

  • David Monesmith and Chris Krug had great comeback meets touching weights they haven’t seen in some time.

  • Kim Monesmith had a great meet and used this as a tune up for her prep for The Masters World Championship in Finland.

  • Sarah Barlow Tested the waters to see what was possible as a tune up for The Masters World Championship in Finland.

  • Elsbeth Paige-Jeffers (PJ) was looking to improve her ranking in New England and to qualify for USAW Nationals. She Snatched 80kg and made a big Clean & Jerk of 110kg. She did in fact improve her placement and now sits in 6th overall in NE, and she did qualify for Nationals with a 190kg total as a 71kg lifter.

    Videos of the top Snatches and Clean & Jerks portion linked below.

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How WEIGHTLIFTING transfers to SPORT
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How WEIGHTLIFTING transfers to SPORT

Force and Power Output

-Any and all sport requires a level of force and power to be given. That may be derived from pushing off the ground to tackle an opponent, swinging a bat to hit a ball or taking off from the starting line in a 100m sprint.

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Principles, Practice, Persistence
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Principles, Practice, Persistence

Principles - building a foundation based on solid principles will eventually lead to building a solid structure. Without a solid foundation your end result might look more like the Leaning Tower of Pisa than a solid AF brick house. This is where the initial principles play a huge role in any athlete's development. Learning each element of weightlifting can be difficult and even daunting. However, these foundational principles are what make weightlifting such a rewarding sport.Practice - repetition is really the only way to get better at anything in life and weightlifting is no exception. If you aren't putting in the hours your results are going to reflect that. You wouldn't expect to be Picasso if you barely touched a paint brush. Pick up the bar and pick it up often. Persistence - yes you will have a love hate relationship with weightlifting. You can have some really incredible days in the gym and you can have some really terrible days too. These fluctuations come in waves and as long as we understand that and allow ourselves to ebb and flow, persistence will become second nature and something we eventually stop questioning. If you fight against it and hate the process you'll eventually fall out of love with weightlifting or anything else that appears daunting.

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