“He Was There, Then He Was Gone”: Former Lifeguard Gives Eyewitness Account of Lazar Đukić’s Death

Rudy Trevino, the 10-year owner of Fit Stop CrossFit in San Antonio, was at the finish line during the first event of the 2024 CrossFit Games in Fort Worth.

“He was there, then he was gone,” said Trevino of how he saw Lazar Đukić disappear into Marine Creek Lake last Thursday.

Trevino — a former lifeguard trained in deep, open-water rescue — knew what he was seeing. 

“There are classic signs that you are taught to look for. Lazar had them all: head tilted back, eyes wide open, bobbing motion,” Trevino said. 

He estimates that Đukić was only 50 meters from the finish line.

“I have heard people say he was 100 meters away, but I don’t think he was that far. Maybe 50,” he added. 

A Plea for Help

Trevino, who used to train and certify other lifeguards, immediately began yelling at the security standing right near him.

“I was ignored,” he said.

Then he jumped the barricade and began working his way to the finish line, where he was met by two more security guards.

“I again pleaded with them to get someone out there. They said it was being handled, but it wasn’t,” Trevino said. 

That’s when Trevino started second-guessing himself.

“Maybe I was wrong. Maybe I didn’t see what I thought I saw. I hoped I was wrong,” Trevino said of the thoughts that raced through his mind.

He was not.

“We saw him drowning,” he said.

Looking Back

Days later, Trevino keeps replaying the event in his mind.

“My biggest regret is not fighting those guys. Pushing my way where someone of more importance would take notice and at least start the process of looking for him because, at that point, he would have only been under the water for under a minute,” Trevino said. “Maybe I could have run to the pier that was right there and jumped in. People would have taken notice then.”

He keeps asking himself why he didn’t fight harder, and the only answer he can come up with is that he trusted the organizers and lifeguards knew what they were doing.

“And then [I] turned to self-doubt. Maybe I was seeing things,” he said. 

Trevino was not imagining things, and based on what he witnessed, Đukić didn’t even have a chance, he said. 

The two safety people he saw on stand-up paddle boards in the water near Đukić weren’t equipped to rescue a drowning athlete.

“Their board was only good for someone to grab onto, but what if they had to jump in and go after someone? There was no flotation device in sight…It’s incredibly dangerous to go in after someone drowning without a flotation device,” Trevino said. “They drown you trying to save themselves inadvertently,” Trevino said.

Trevino said that he also saw two jet skis in the water, “but even they didn’t appear to have rescue equipment.”

The standard Trevino was always taught was “10 seconds to spot a victim, 20 seconds to get to them.”

There was no way a jet ski could get to someone in 20 seconds with only two out there,” he said. 

“Those rescuers were not equipped to actually rescue,” he concluded.

More on This Story

Remembering Lazar Đukić: A Tribute

Athletes Withdraw From 2024 CrossFit Games Following Death of Lazar Đukić

CrossFit Community Reacts to Lazar Đukić’s Death

“Thank You, & I’m Sorry”: CrossFit Director of Sport Dave Castro Speaks on Lazar Đukić’s Death

“You Loved the Sport That Didn’t Love You Back”: Luka Đukić Comments on Brother Lazar’s Death

Featured image: Joe Genetin-Pilawa

The post “He Was There, Then He Was Gone”: Former Lifeguard Gives Eyewitness Account of Lazar Đukić’s Death appeared first on BarBend.

2024 CrossFit Games Event 8 “Dickies Triplet” Results: Classic CrossFit to Start Sunday

As we head into the final day of a very emotional week at the 2024 CrossFit Games, athletes continue to compete with a heavy heart. 

Last night, the individuals ended with pushing and pulling, and this morning, the athletes will start the day with a classic CrossFit triplet.

Catch upHead here for full 2024 CrossFit Games results!

The athletes ran inside Dickies Arena for this event — a short straightaway into a hairpin turn and then back out onto the competition floor for the other movements.

Many athletes wore black armbands with the name of their friend, Lazar Ðukić, printed on them.

Credit: @carlitosfleury / Instragram

[Related: Best Bodyweight Exercises]

Individual Event 8:  Dickies Triplet

5 rounds for time of:

175-meter run

12 toes-to-bars

8 alternating dumbbell snatches (70/100 pounds)

 Time cap: 11 minutes

Final Results

Recap

Women’s Division

In the first heat, six women kept the same pace, with Emma McQuaid opening a slight lead. 

She excelled more on the run, where Kyra Milligan gained ground every round on the heavy dumbbell. Chloe Gauvin-David rounded out the top three.

Shelby Neal broke up toes-to-bar early but held on during the later rounds. This allowed her to catch up to McQuaid and Gauvin-David and gave her a chance.

Gauvin-David ultimately won the heat.

The second heat was full of women trying to advance to the final heat for the rest of the day. 

Abigail Domit moved to the front of the pack immediately, but Alex Gazan and Alexis Raptis took over the lead heading into the second round.

Heading into round four, Alexis Raptis opened a lead and she started to push.

Danielle Brandon and Alex Gazan joined her on the snatches. Brandon cycled the dumbbell quickly in hopes of catching Raptis but fell just a second or two short. 

Raptis won the heat, giving a lesson in perfect pacing.

The top 10 women took to the floor for the final heat, and the pace on the run was noticeably faster from the start. 

[Related: Best Glutes Exercises]

Tia-Clair Toomey-Orr got back on the run fast, with her speed on dumbbell snatches helping her gain valuable seconds. 

Gabi Migała stayed close to Toomey-Orr as Haley Adams started to creep up in later rounds.

No one could catch her, as Toomey-Orr’s split times improved with every round. 

She won the heat and event — her 40th event win at the CrossFit Games. 

Haley Adams snuck in after Migała for third place in the heat.

Men’s Division

The first heat of men came out on the run with a blistering pace, with Bayley Martin in the lead. 

The lane set-up on the floor made the men aware of where they needed to push to grab valuable extra seconds coming back in after the run.

Austin Hatfield increased his pace and set the time to beat. The rookie showed the calculated pace of a veteran.

In the second heat, Henrik Haapalainen came out and looked like a new man. He sped through the first few runs and added to his lead every round. 

He was ten seconds ahead of Hatfield’s pace as he began round four.

Saxon Panchik started to creep up on Haapalainen in the final round but fell less than a second short. Panchik finished second in the heat.

[Related: Best Barbells]

The battle for the podium among the men is the tightest we have ever seen at the CrossFit Games, and the athletes in the final heat showed it with their pace. 

Jelle Hoste was the fastest runner and took an early lead. He knew he had to grab some extra time on the run to compensate for a slower time on the dumbbell.

James Sprague crept up in the middle rounds, clearly wanting the leader’s jersey back.

In the pivotal fourth round, Sprague, Jayson Hopper, and Brent Fikowski got to the snatches at the same time. 

Hopper made his move on the final run, passed Sprague (after some shouldering), and finished with a heat and event win.

In his post-event interview, Hopper mentioned how his poor finish in last year’s “Helena” pushed him in his training this year and led him to this event win.

Featured image: @carlitosfleury / Instagram

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Team China Wins 5 of 6 Possible Weightlifting Golds at 2024 Olympics

At the 2024 Olympics, Team China did what they do best — win. The world’s most dominant weightlifting team of the 21st century bagged five out of six possible gold medals over the course of 10 events at the tail end of Paris 2024. 

No other nation won more than a single weightlifting gold at the summer Games this year.

Team China’s weightlifting industry has produced more gold medals than any other single country at every Olympics event since 1996, a streak extended by their podium toppers in Paris.

Meanwhile, a risky gamble on one of their former champions blemished what would have been a top-to-bottom sweep, and China is less likely to enjoy such lavishness at the next Olympics in 2028

Team China 2024 Olympics: Weightlifting Medals

China was the only nation to field a full six-athlete weightlifting roster in Paris 2024 as other nations struggled to produce athletes that could succeed in the pressure cooker that was the 18-month qualification period. 

Their Paris team consisted of four prior Olympians and two newcomers who proved to be just as ferocious as their more tenured colleagues: 

Li Fabin: Men’s 61KG, Gold

Hou Zhihui: Women’s 49KG, Gold 

Luo Shifang: Women’s 59KG, Gold

Liu Huanhua: Men’s 102KG, Gold

Li Wenwen: Women’s +81KG, Gold

[Related: Best Knee Sleeves for Weightlifting Workouts]

Of their five medalists, Li Fabin, Hou, and Li Wenwen all made their Olympic debut in Tokyo 2020 (and won golds there as well), while Luo and Liu were Games first-timers.

What Happened To Shi Zhiyong?

The lone Team China weightlifter to miss out on the Olympic podium in Paris lifted in the Men’s 73KG event. Shi Zhiyong, Team China’s two-time (2016, 2020) Olympic Champion and snatch world record holder, bombed out during the clean & jerks.

Shi blew a 10-kilogram lead in the snatches (165 to runner-up Rizki Juniansyah’s 155) and missed all three of his clean & jerk attempts at 191 kilograms. He has long battled a series of debilitating injuries, but clinched a Paris ticket thanks to a glimpse of brilliance at the last-chance qualifier competition in April.

“My lower back injury is severe,” Shi told Chinese media shortly after the 73KG event in Paris. “Everyone trusts me and has provided the best support, but I couldn’t contribute. I feel like I’ve failed.”

[Related: Best Weightlifting Belts for Olympic Lifting]

Shi has not formally announced his retirement as of this article’s publication, but spoke on social media about his desire to spend more time with his family and allow his body to heal after a long career at the top of one of weightlifting’s most competitive divisions. 

Team China 2028 Olympics: Will They Dominate Again? 

Team China has enjoyed a mostly unchallenged tenure as captains of industry in weightlifting at the regional, World, and Olympic levels for over a decade, particularly throughout the last two Games cycles.

While weightlifting was recently confirmed for the summer Games in Los Angeles in 2028, China may for the first time find itself on the precipice of forfeiting its title as weightlifting’s winningest country.

North Korea (DPRK) returned to the international weightlifting scene in 2023 after a four-year hiatus. They dominated a handful of international meets but, because they started too late in the qualification period, the Democratic People’s Republic fielded no weightlifters in Paris. 

In the year-ish since their comeback, Team DPRK stole many existing world records from China.

As of August 2024, North Korea holds 16 Senior world records in weightlifting (only three of which were set by their men) while China boasts a hearty 22

[Related: Best Barbells for Weightlifting]

Chinese weightlifting coaches have expressed admiration for Team DPRK’s potency in weightlifting, particularly among their women athletes. North Korea’s 49-kilogram triple world record holder Ri Song Gum is the strongest women’s weightlifter in the world when measured by Sinclair coefficient, which attempts to equalize athletes across different body weights. 

More Weightlifting From the 2024 Olympics

Maude Charron Chugged Maple Syrup to Win Silver Medal at 2024 Olympics

Karlos Nasar Claims World Records, Gold Medal in Paris

Is Mihaela Cambei Weightlifting’s Next Superstar?

Featured Image: Yilin Yang / @squat_jerk_journalist

The post Team China Wins 5 of 6 Possible Weightlifting Golds at 2024 Olympics appeared first on BarBend.

What You Need to Know Ahead of the Final Day of the 2024 CrossFit Games (Today’s Events and Current Standings)

Today marks the conclusion of the 2024 CrossFit Games, where the world’s top athletes battle for the title of Fittest on Earth.

Held for the first time in Fort Worth, Texas, the competition has been intense, with athletes pushing their physical and mental limits.

As the Games wrap up, every point and second matter, with several athletes still in contention for the top spot.

Current Top Ten Standings

Individual Men

The leaderboard is tight as we head into the final events. On the men’s side, Brent Fikowski leads with 583 points. His consistent performance throughout the competition has put him in a strong position, but James Sprague (538 points) and Roman Khrennikov (535 points) are hot on his heels.

Just six points separate Dallin Pepper in fourth place and Jayson Hopper in fifth, setting the stage for a thrilling finish.

PlaceNamePoints1Brent Fikowski5832James Sprague5383Roman Khrennikov5354Dallin Pepper5295Jayson Hopper5266Patrick Vellner5187Jay Crouch5178Ricky Garard5059Justin Medeiros47410Jelle Hoste440

Individual Women

For the women, Tia-Clair Toomey holds a commanding lead with 655 points. After taking a year off, her return to competition has been nothing short of spectacular.

Behind her, Gabriela Migała sits in second with 595 points, while Emily Rolfe, with 554 points, is in third. The race for the podium remains fierce, with Bethany Flores and Haley Adams also within striking distance.

PlaceNamePoints1Tia-Clair Toomey6552Gabriela Migała5953Emily Rolfe5544Bethany Flores5205Haley Adams5166Aimee Cringle4547Paige Semenza4388Grace Walton4269Brooke Wells42310Madeline Sturt421

Today’s Schedule and Key Events

The final day features two critical events that will determine the champions.

Event 8 – Dickies Triplet:

Starting at 11:10 AM at Dickies Arena, athletes will tackle five rounds for time, consisting of a 175-meter run, 12 toes-to-bars, and 8 alternating dumbbell snatches. With points so close, this event could significantly impact the standings, particularly for those just outside the podium positions.

Event 9 – TBD:

Scheduled for 3:10 PM, this yet-to-be-revealed event is likely to be the last challenge athletes face in this year’s competition. The unknown element adds an extra layer of suspense, as competitors will need to adapt quickly and give their all to secure their rankings.

Key Highlights from the Competition

This year’s Games have been marked by both triumph and tragedy. Tia-Clair Toomey’s comeback has been a highlight, with her dominant performances reminding everyone why she’s a multi-time CrossFit champion. On the men’s side, Brent Fikowski has demonstrated remarkable consistency, maintaining his lead through a series of grueling events.

However, the competition has also been shadowed by the tragic passing of Lazar Đukić during Event 1. His death has deeply affected the athletes and the CrossFit community, underscoring the mental and emotional resilience required to compete at this level.

Weightlifting Rule Leaves Super-Heavy Athletes Breathless at 2024 Olympics

On Aug. 10, the world’s strongest — and largest — weightlifters gathered in the South Paris Arena for the Men’s +102KG weightlifting event at the 2024 Olympics.

Some competitors were seen breathless throughout the event as they scrambled to recuperate while battling with the barbell and each other for medals.

A weightlifting rule involving the time allotted to athletes between attempts is applied equally regardless of stature and is partially to blame.

Credit: Jessie Johnson / @barbellstories

Catch Your Breath

Commentators welcomed fans to the start of the event by remarking on the size of the athletes in attendance.

“Just to give you some idea of the size of these men, Georgia’s Lasha Talakhadze is a man-mountain,” they said. “He’s 6’6” and weighed in at 178.45 kilograms (393.4 pounds).”

Talakhadze weighed in as the second-biggest athlete behind Iran’s Ali Davoudi. As the event deepened and the stakes climbed higher, Talakhadze, Davoudi, and the other Men’s “supers” struggled to regulate their breathing before (and after) their lifts.

“At the Olympics, we get a one-minute clock once the bar is loaded to make our attempt,” says Caine Wilkes, a super-heavyweight 2020 Olympian for Team USA. “If the athlete ‘follows themselves,’ they’re awarded two minutes.”

To ‘follow oneself’ in weightlifting means that an athlete makes multiple attempts on stage back-to-back without another lifter coming out in between.

Athlete appearances are typically staggered as weightlifters attempt to outdo each other by small margins, but there are exceptions.

Georgia’s three-time Olympic Champion Talakhadze, who has lifted more than any weightlifter in history, is an exception to the staggered rollout. As the strongest man in the field at every event he’s attended for the past decade, Talakhadze is usually the final athlete with remaining attempts.

En route to his third Olympic gold in Paris, Talakhadze finally met his match and only narrowly clinched gold ahead of Armenia’s Varazdat Lalayan and Bahrain’s Gor Minasyan.

In 2022, BarBend correspondent Brian Oliver reported on behalf of the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) that Talakhadze had been advised by his personal doctor to shed body weight, citing heart problems.

At the 2023 World Weightlifting Championships in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Talakhadze was seen panting and listless backstage as his team attempted to cool him down. Talakhadze had attempts remaining after all his competitors had finished.

“Riyadh was one of the hottest places I’d ever competed, even though the venue was climate-controlled,” Wilkes recalls.

The time-limit rule Wilkes describes is applied uniformly and is not exclusive to the Olympic Games. The lightest weightlifters at the Olympics are the women who occupy the 49-kilogram (108-pound) division. They are given two-minute breaks as well if they have to follow themselves.

Wilkes notes that short periods of rest can cause issues with recovery: “Sometimes, if we need more time, we’ll call for weight changes on the barbell, since any change made will stop the clock,” he says.

Wilkes also revealed that some super-heavyweights will replicate these conditions during their training by intentionally resting shorter than they’d prefer to help develop better conditioning and keep their breathing in check.

According to the American Heart Association, an athlete whose heart rate is elevated too long during exercise puts themselves at risk of high levels of troponin, which are considered a potential marker of cardiac damage.

Credit: Jessie Johnson / @barbellstories

Not all large-bodied athletes are troubled by abbreviated rest times in weightlifting meets.

“I personally don’t mind that all lifters have the same rest times; the current rules help keep the competition moving,” Wilkes says.

But when you’re the strongest man alive, literally, it’s a different game. Back-room cameras have shown Talakhadze with labored breathing at events like the European or World Championships, as he is fanned by his coach in the moments before his next appearance.

Shortness of breath didn’t stop Talakhadze from claiming the gold medal at the 2024 Olympics. And like every other time in the past — Talakhadze has been undefeated internationally for over a decade — nor could any of his competitors.

More Weightlifting at the 2024 Olympics

Liu Huanhua Wins Historic Weightlifting Gold for China at 2024 Olympics

5 Weightlifters Injured During Men’s 89KG Event at 2024 Olympics

Canadian Weightlifter Maude Charron Chugged Maple Syrup To Win Silver Medal at 2024 Olympics

Featured Image: Jessie Johnson / @barbellstories

The post Weightlifting Rule Leaves Super-Heavy Athletes Breathless at 2024 Olympics appeared first on BarBend.

Li Wenwen Dominates 2024 Olympics, Wins Weightlifting Gold for China

The world’s most dominant weightlifting team of the 21st century, Team China, sent six weightlifters to the 2024 Olympics. They will return home with five gold medals after Women’s +81KG weightlifter Li Wenwen won the gold medal in the final event of the Games on August 11.

Li, 24, entered the competition with an exorbitant lead ahead of the other super-heavyweight women. As such, winning the gold bordered on an afterthought for the world record holder.

[Related: Best Weightlifting Shoes for Beginners]

Li Wenwen (+81KG) | 2024 Olympics

Prior to the commencement of the Women’s +81KG weightlifting event, Li was already considered a runaway favorite for her second Olympic title.

Her qualification Total — the sum of her best snatch and clean & jerk and the metric by which athletes are ranked at the Games — was a full 29 kilograms ahead of anyone else, marking the largest preliminary advantage of any weightlifter in Paris.

Li Wenwen Weightliftng Results | 2024 Olympics

Snatch: 130, 136

Clean & Jerk: 167, 173, 174x

Total: 309

Li declined her third snatch attempt having set herself up five kilograms ahead of snatch runner-up Park Hyejeong (KOR) halfway through the session.

She also declared 174 kilograms for her final attempt, but instead of lifting hauled her coaching staff up on stage, literally, and took a bow for the audience.

Li Wenwen | An (Almost) Impeccable Resume

Li has been a mainstay of China’s international weightlifting roster for five years. Her first international appearance at the 2019 World Cup was also her only non-gold-medal performance ever; she won silver there.

Since then, Li has competed in 10 international weightlifting meets for China, winning 10 overall gold medals in the process.

Li held all three Women’s +81KG weightlifting world records prior to Paris:

Snatch: 148KG

Clean & Jerk: 187KG

Total: 335

More Weightlifting News From the 2024 Olympics

Greatest Ever: Lasha Talakhadze Wins Third Gold at 2024 Olympics

Liu Huanhua Wins Historic Weightlifting Gold for China at 2024 Olympics

Hou Zhihui Sets Olympic Record Clean & Jerk to Steal Gold Medal at 2024 Olympics

Featured Image: Jen Marchese / @one_kilo_

The post Li Wenwen Dominates 2024 Olympics, Wins Weightlifting Gold for China appeared first on BarBend.

2024 Olympics Results: Women’s +81KG Weightlifting

The 2024 Olympics in Paris, France, are finally here. For the best super-heavyweight Women’s weightlifters in the world, the moment of reckoning came during the +81-kilogram event on August 11.

Here’s what went down yesterday:

Women’s 81KG Results & Recap

Men’s 102KG Results & Recap

Men’s +102KG Results & Recap

BarBend will update this page as the event progresses, including podium results and a play-by-play of the competition from start to finish. Stay tuned!

[Related: The Best Weightlifting Shoes on the Market]

2024 Olympics: Women’s +81KG Weightlifting

Editor’s Note: Below are the entrants for the +81KG weightlifting event at the 2024 Olympics. The notation reads “Athlete (Country): Qualification Total.”

Li Wenwen (CHN): 325

Park Hyejeong (KOR): 296

Emily Campbell (GBR): 287

Duangaskorn Chaidee (THA): 286

Mary Theisen-Lappen (USA): 283

Lisseth Ayovi Cabezas (ECU): 276

Halima Abbas (EGY): 275

Naryury Perez Reveron (VEN): 267

Iuniarra Sipaia (SAM): 267

Crismery Santana Peguero (DOM): 263

Nurul Akmal (INA): 260, Reallocation

Tursunoy Jabborova (UZB): 258, Reallocation

[Related: Best Lifting Straps for Weightlifting]

Go Deeper: This IWF document contains the complete +81KG ranking leaderboard. Only the top 10 athletes in their respective divisions, plus those considered via Continental and Universality allocation, compete in Paris.

2024 Olympics Women’s +81KG Weightlifting Results

Women’s 81KG Podium

Gold:

Silver:

Bronze:

Editor’s Note: No individual medals are awarded for the snatch and clean & jerk at the Olympics. The notation above reads, “Athlete (Country) — Total (Snatch/Clean & Jerk).”

Event Recap — Snatch

Event Recap — Clean & Jerk

[Related: Best Pre-Workout Supplements for Weightlifting]

2024 Olympics Weightlifting Schedule

Weightlifting events will be held at the 2024 Olympics from Aug. 7 to Aug. 11, 2024, in Paris, France. Catch all the action live by referring to the full schedule below. All times are in Eastern Standard Time and are subject to change:

Wednesday, August 7

9:00 AM: Men’s 61KG

1:30 PM: Women’s 49KG

Thursday, August 8

9:00 AM: Women’s 59KG

1:30 PM: Men’s 73KG

Friday, August 9

9:00 AM: Men’s 89KG

1:30 PM: Women’s 71KG

Saturday, August 10

5:30 AM: Men’s 102KG

10:00 AM: Women’s 81KG

2:30 PM: Men’s +102KG

Sunday, August 11

5:30 AM: Women’s +81KG

More 2024 Olympics Content on BarBend

Why Can’t North Korea Compete in Weightlifting at the 2024 Olympics?

2020 Olympian Predicts Weightlifting Results at the 2024 Olympics

These “Banned” Countries Have Struggled To Send Athletes to the 2024 Olympics

Featured Image: USA Weightlifting

The post 2024 Olympics Results: Women’s +81KG Weightlifting appeared first on BarBend.

When Will You See Results Using a Treadmill? A Running Coach Lets You Know

Whether you’ve committed to riding it out on the ancient machine in your parents’ basement or are in the market for one of the best treadmills out there, everyone comes to the treadmill for a reason. Sometimes, it’s for the pure sport of running when weather doesn’t allow you to get out, or the convenience of just slipping on your running shoes in the house and getting after it. Other times, you have a specific fitness goal in mind — maybe getting your steps in, improving your cardio training, lowering your blood pressure, weight loss, or even boosting mental health.

The real question is when will you get to enjoy all of these wondrous health benefits from treadmill training? Certainly, a single workout will elevate your heart rate and work your muscles tremendously — you might even get the oft-sought runner’s high. But what about the longer-term changes to your body? As a certified personal trainer myself, I chatted with running coach Lee Whitaker and fellow CPT Kate Meier to bring you the deets on the ultimate question: “When will you see results using a treadmill?”  

Experts Who Contributed

Alex Polish, ACE CPT

Kate Meier, NASM-CPT, USAW-L1, CF-L1

Lee Whitaker, USATF (Level 1 & 2 Endurance)

How to Spot Treadmill Results

Whenever you dive into a cardio workout — no matter which of the best cardio machines you’re cruising on — there is a lot going on behind the scenes in your body. As you start or continue your journey, you may be laser-focused on one set of results — like a reduction of body fat — without noticing your improved energy levels and increased lower body strength, which are fantastic results in themselves.

Our tester running on the NordicTrack EXP 7i treadmill.

To help you take rapid notice of the results as they begin to emerge, we’ll get insights from certified personal trainer and BarBend editorial team member Kate Meier. Whether it’s strength training or putting together a treadmill routine, Meier offers her insights into tracking both your specific goals and your overall health — and when it will all happen. It might not all be as simple as social media makes it look, but Meier will lay it all out in terms of what you can actually expect.

Look for Small Changes First

Some changes to your health and wellness levels will be impossible for you to visually track — like the breakdown of cholesterol deposits that might otherwise contribute to heart disease. Others are going to be easier to spot — like the growth of your leg muscles and the increasing ease of training. Even so, dramatic breakthroughs are rare, so you’ll have to be on the lookout for incremental improvements.

[Related: 5K Training Plan]

“If you commit to running on a treadmill three to four times a week, after just a few weeks, you might notice that the same workouts don’t feel as hard as they just did,” says Meier. “You might notice other small results, like you look forward to your workout or dread it less; you can run or walk further or a little faster than when you first started; or you generally feel better about yourself after a workout. Those are the small results that you notice first before the bigger results occur, like weight loss or hitting distance goals.”

Set Small Goals

It’s often the case that your improvements go unnoticed because you set the bar too high at first. For instance, if the only goal in your mind is to eventually run a 5K without stopping, you may not appreciate how you are now able to jog an entire mile without breathing heavily. In short, setting smaller, more achievable goals within the larger goal is a great way to take note of your steady progress.

Our tester using a steep incline on the NordicTrack Commercial X22i.

“Seeing these smaller results can keep you motivated,” says Meier. “This is especially true if your goal is weight loss. That kind of a goal is dependent on much more than just using a treadmill; what you’re consuming, how you’re sleeping, and your activity outside of the gym all plays a role in that. However, if you can track some smaller results, like how your clothes fit or how your workouts feel, it will make the journey to seeing a smaller number on the scale more enjoyable.”

Treadmill Workouts for Beginners

When you’re just getting started with your treadmill workout routine, it may actually be counterproductive to immediately go all out with high-intensity interval training (HIIT). The intensity of your workouts doesn’t need to be sky high in order for your workout routine to be beneficial. 

With that in mind, here are some of the best treadmill workouts you can use to get started if you’re a beginner when it comes to treadmill training. This list was put together with the assistance of certified expert running coach Lee Whitaker, who has even used treadmills to train for marathons.

Brisk Walking

The saying “You have to walk first before you run” is true in both literal and figurative settings. If you’re new to treadmill training, a fitness routine built around walking can be a perfect starting point. Brisk walking is possibly the best exercise for establishing a comfortable training rhythm and getting all of your muscle groups conditioned for what will come as you improve. 

[Related: Best Walking Treadmills]

Our tester walks on a Horizon 7.0 AT treadmill

The critical element here is that you should try to walk at a faster pace than you would if you were casually browsing a downtown shopping district. For most people, that will be at a speed between 3 and 4 miles per hour. There are study results that demonstrate how walking consistently at just over three miles per hour accelerated fat loss in study subjects. (1)

Brisk Walk: 1 x 30-60 minutes, 3-4.5 mph, 0% incline

With a workout routine like this, look for walking to become a lot easier after the first week or two. Traveling the same distance at the same speed might seem to require less effort. Results related to body composition will likely take longer than a couple of weeks if you’re balancing nutrition and fitness in a sustainable, healthy way.

12-3-30

While 12-3-30 may harken back to your high school locker combination, the 12-3-30 workout is a treadmill workout created by TikTok influencer Lauren Giraldo. According to Giraldo, she managed to lose 30 pounds (over an unspecified period of time) by doing workouts where she walked at a 12-percent incline and at a speed of 3 miles per hour for 30 minutes. 

This simple formula takes the guesswork out of treadmill training with a manageable workout that is easy to remember. In addition, walking at a treadmill incline of 10 percent or higher has been suggested to greatly increase the activity in the muscles of the quadriceps and hamstrings in comparison to lower inclines. (2) On the other hand, activation of the glues is lower when walking at a very high incline in comparison to walking at a moderate incline. (3)

Walk: 1 x 30 minutes; 3 mph, 12% incline

Because this workout takes you uphill, you might on the one hand see faster “results” in terms of body composition — your clothes may start fitting differently within a month or so if you’re doing this a few times a week and practicing sustainable nutrition habits. But on the other hand, it might take a little longer for workouts to feel “easier,” simply because this one is more intense than it might seem. So, be patient with yourself and give yourself plenty of recovery time between workouts.

Aerobic Walk-Run

Even in the beginning stages of treadmill training, it’s a good idea to help your body prepare to advance to a more challenging form of exercise. Since there is a different muscle activation pattern between walking and running, inserting running into your fitness routine can help to familiarize your body with a higher level of demand.. It will also help you to make progress toward sustained running throughout your workouts.

Our tester running on a treadmill

“For a true beginner, I’d set them up at a low incline and have them train at an aerobic pace,” says certified running coach Lee Whitaker. “Just that alone is probably going to be uncomfortable for someone who hasn’t been running. They could try to go for 5 minutes at first, with a 5-minute walk or recovery period, and then I’d have them repeat it like two more times for a 30-minute workout while inserting some running. Over time, I would have them progress to where they’re doing more running than walking during the non-recovery periods.”

[Related: Best Treadmill for Beginners]

Warm-Up: 5 minutes, slow walking, 2-2.5 mph, 0% incline

Incline Walk: 5 minutes, 3-4 mph, 2-4% incline

Recovery Walk: 5 minutes, 0% incline

Incline Jog: 5 minutes, 5-6 mph, 2-4% incline

Recovery Walk: 5 minutes, 0% incline

Incline Walk: 5 minutes, 3-4 mph, 2-4% incline

Recovery Walk: 5 minutes, 0% incline

Here, adjust the times as needed. If you’ve got some more experience or a higher base fitness level, your incline jogs or walks might be longer or a bit faster. If you can’t quite run for 5 minutes yet, that’s OK — shave it down to 2 minutes or even just a single minute. Add 30 seconds or a minute each time you repeat the workout. That right there is an amazing way to see your results — you are running more before tapping out. That’s an incredible result that you can likely see within a few workouts.

Treadmill Workouts for Weight Loss

Many people will come to a treadmill with the goal of reducing body weight: there’s a reason cardio and weight loss are connected on social media. To be sustainable and health, you’ll want to moderate the amount of time you’re committing to physical activity — and fuel yourself accordingly with food. Along the way, you might find yourself wanting to do high-intensity workouts to fuel body composition changes. These HIIT training sessions can help fuel strength increases, too, which are going to be a big deal for body composition.

HIIT Workout

High-intensity interval training is a proven tactic for quickly getting your body up to speed. Using short sessions of peak exertion on the treadmill, you can force your body to rapidly adjust to the heightened work load. Despite the brevity of the work sessions, HIIT treadmill workouts have shown themselves to be as reliable as sustained training at lower intensity levels when it comes to generating weight loss. (4)

Our tester runs on a Horizon 7.0 AT Treadmill

“You’re going to be doing 30 seconds of really heavy work and then taking a break,” explains running coach and elite ultra marathon runner Lee Whitaker. “You’re going to kick that thing up again to 6 to 8%, and then set the treadmill really fast so that you literally sprint for 30 seconds — and then take a break for 30 seconds. You need to be very careful doing a workout like that on the treadmill; it’s basically a 30-second hill sprint. For someone who just wants to lose weight and isn’t hyper-focused on running performance, 20 minutes is good.”

Warm-Up: 5-10 minutes of slow jogging, 4.5-5.5 mph, 0% incline

Sprint: 20 x 30 second sprint, 30 seconds rest, fastest maintainable speed, 6-8% incline

Cool Down: 5-10 minutes of slow jogging, 4.5-5.5 mph, 0% incline

If weight loss is a goal of yours, know that the “results” you’ll see from the treadmill are deeply impacted by lifestyle factors like stress levels, sleep, genetics, and nutritional habits. You can be doing a spectacular job in your workouts, but if you’re not sleeping, weight loss goals are bound to stall. While you can lose about a pound a week sustainably, you may more likely start noticing your clothes fitting differently after a a month or so of about three workouts per week.

Aerobic Pace Workout

Aerobic exercise is the bedrock of most runners’ training routines. Simply by being able to maintain a steady pace at an elevated heart rate, you’re going to improve any number of health conditions related to your heart and body composition — talk about results. The crucial thing to remember here is to stay the course and not overdo it.

Our tester on the ProForm Carbon TLX.

“For somebody trying to lose weight, I would want them to do an endurance-focused workout that would just be a steady state jog or run at that aerobic pace,” advises running coach Lee Whitaker. “You could start at 30 minutes and build up to an hour based on the fitness of the person. You want to stay at a low-to-moderate intensity, and for somebody that’s trying to lose weight, you wouldn’t want them to consider the workout difficult in terms of their effort level.”

Warm-Up: 10 minutes of slow jogging, 4.5-5.5 mph, 0% incline

Aerobic Run: 40 minutes of low- to moderate-intensity running, 6-8 mph, 0% incline

Cool Down: 10 minutes of slow jogging, 4.5-5.5 mph, 0% incline

The key here is keeping the intensity low. It’s tempting to think that if you’re not running fast, you won’t see “results” — that’s just not true. The result of running at a low intensity is that you’re building a tremendous amount of mental and physical endurance with each and every workout. You can measure this progress easily by noting how much better different runs feel over time. Grabbing one of the best fitness trackers is also a great way to track your progress. It’s quite satisfying seeing your resting heart rate decrease as your fitness level increases.

Incline Running

Running at an incline simply requires more energy than running at a level surface. What this means to you is if you can sustain the same speed and effort level at an incline that you can on the flat treadmill, you can prompt more physiological change. This also means that, if one of your goals is weight loss, your rate of fat loss may be higher if you can spend more time running at an incline.

Our tester walking at tallest incline on the NordicTrack X22i

“For this workout, you want your treadmill at 4 to 8%; something that’s steep but not ridiculously steep,” instructs running coach and ultra marathoner Lee Whitaker. “Crank it up to some kind of hard effort where you’re moving pretty well, but not at an all out sprint like you’re running from a bear. It should be a pace you could just barely tolerate for maybe two minutes. Your heart rate should get really high, your breathing is heavy, and legs should be burning a bit. After 2 minutes of that, quickly hop back down to a walking speed. So you could go 2 minutes of running, 2 minutes of walking, and repeat that all the way up to 30 minutes or so.”

Warm-up: 5-10 minutes of slow jogging, 4.5-5.5 mph, 0% incline

Incline Running: 8 x 2 minute run, 2 minute recovery walk, 4-8% incline

Cool Down: 5-10 minutes of slow jogging, 4.5-5.5 mph, 0% incline

After a couple of weeks, you’re likely to find that the same pace is easier to hold for longer at a given incline. When you switch to running on a flat surface, you’re likely to find that you’re running faster even after just a few sessions.

Treadmill Results FAQs

How long does it take to see results from a treadmill?

How long it takes to see results from treadmill training depends on the intensity and frequency of your workouts, along with the stability of your nutrition plan. With this being said, you will probably begin to notice results — from easier workouts to improved energy, all the way to the beginnings of body composition changes — from your training within two to three weeks.

Is 30 minutes on a treadmill enough to lose weight?

Whether or not 30 minutes on a treadmill is sufficient to lose weight is dependent upon several factors. For instance, sustained treadmill running is usually going to burn significantly more calories than continuous treadmill walking over the same period of time. However, 30 minutes of treadmill training is usually enough to lose weight as long as your diet is also optimized for weight loss, focusing on sustainable, nutritious choices.

What is a good incline to walk on a treadmill to lose weight?

Incline walking is a low-impact form of exercise that you can use to burn more calories during a workout and lose weight as a result. Studies suggest that inclines that generate the greatest muscle activity in the largest muscles of the legs are likely to impose the largest metabolic cost, and lose the most weight. (2) For most people, this is accomplished in an incline range of 5 to 10 percent.

References

La New JM, Borer KT. Effects of Walking Speed on Total and Regional Body Fat in Healthy Postmenopausal Women. Nutrients. 2022 Jan 31;14(3):627. doi: 10.3390/nu14030627. PMID: 35276986; PMCID: PMC8840715.

Silder A, Besier T, Delp SL. Predicting the metabolic cost of incline walking from muscle activity and walking mechanics. J Biomech. 2012 Jun 26;45(10):1842-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2012.03.032. Epub 2012 May 11. PMID: 22578744; PMCID: PMC4504736.

Jeong DE, Lee SK, Kim K. Comparison of the activity of the gluteus medius according to the angles of inclination of a treadmill with vertical load. J Phys Ther Sci. 2014 Feb;26(2):251-3. doi: 10.1589/jpts.26.251. Epub 2014 Feb 28. PMID: 24648642; PMCID: PMC3944299.

D’Amuri A, Sanz JM, Capatti E, Di Vece F, Vaccari F, Lazzer S, Zuliani G, Dalla Nora E, Passaro A. Effectiveness of high-intensity interval training for weight loss in adults with obesity: a randomised controlled non-inferiority trial. BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med. 2021 Jul 20;7(3):e001021. doi: 10.1136/bmjsem-2020-001021. PMID: 34367654; PMCID: PMC8292807.

The post When Will You See Results Using a Treadmill? A Running Coach Lets You Know appeared first on BarBend.

2024 CrossFit Games Event 7 “Push Pull 2.0” Results: Freestanding Handstand Push-Ups Make the Difference

The final event of the day was all about inverted proficiency. It started with kipping handstand push-ups, moved to strict handstand push-ups, and ended with freestanding handstand push-ups.

As expected, Tia-Clair Toomey-Orr entered the event in first, with a 51-point buffer over Gabi Migala, who is hoping to finish on the podium for the first time in four CrossFit Games appearances.

Catch upHead here for full 2024 CrossFit Games results!

Four-time Games veteran Emily Rolfe, a former gymnast, was in third, with Haley Adams close behind in fourth. Bethany Flores, who has been having the competition of her life, was in fifth.

Further down the leaderboard but looking to move up with a strong performance were Alex Gazan (10th) and last year’s second-place finisher Emma Lawson (11th), both of whom are considered podium contenders.

Credit: Susana Rodriguez, @ideyafilms_ / Instagram

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As for the men, second-year competitor James Sprague still had the lead going into Event 7, but he was tied in points with Brent Fikowski, competing in his ninth Games. 

Eighteen points back was Roman Khrennikov in third, while five-time podium finisher Pat Vellner sat in fourth, 26 points behind the top spot.

Also looking to keep building momentum on “Push Pull 2.0” was the two-time champion Justin Medeiros, who was coming off an event win on the “Clean Ladder.” After a slow start to the week, Medeiros had moved into 11th overall.

And if “Push Pull 2.0” would, in fact, prove to be largely about how well you could get through the 15 freestanding handstand push-ups at the end, then things were looking good for Medeiros. 

He was second on the Inverted Medley event at last summer’s CrossFit Games, which also featured freestanding handstand push-ups (Khrennikov was fifth on Inverted Medley, Vellner sixth, and Fikowski and Sprague tied for 23rd). 

Individual Event 7: Push Pull 2.0

For time:

45 handstand push-ups

80-foot sled pull from standing (110/180 pounds)

30 strict handstand push-ups

80-foot sled pull seated from the platform

15 freestanding handstand push-ups

Time cap: 10 minutes

Final Results

Recap

Women’s Division

Heat one belonged to rookie Lexi Neely, another former gymnast, who became the first athlete to do her 15 freestanding handstand push-ups in just two sets (nine and six), en route to setting the fastest time yet (6:03.41). She was more than three minutes ahead of the next competitor.

Nobody in the next heat even came close to Neely’s time; Chloe Gauvin-David was the closest with a time of 6:49.86. The third heat was filled with women known to be proficient upside down — Alexis Raptis, Brooke Wells, and Danielle Brandon — and they did not disappoint.

Raptis led much of the way, but Brandon and Wells made a hard charge on the final 15 freestanding handstand push-ups. Raptis, though, was able to hold them off, finishing in 6:31.62, while Wells came in at 6:47.44 and Brandon at 6:51.80. 

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Neely’s time from heat one continued to stand.

In the final heat, Toomey-Orr quickly took the lead, followed by Migala and Rolfe. 

Toomey-Orr was able to extend her lead on the 30 strict handstand push-ups, but like every other heat, it would come down to the final 15 freestanding handstand push-ups. Toomey-Orr, though, got there before any other athlete had even started their second rope pull.

Migala was next to the 15 freestanding handstand push-ups, but at that point, Toomey-Orr had already finished six of her reps.

Toomey-Orr then started to fail some reps, and Migala, Rolfe, and Bethany Flores all started creeping up closer. But none could pass the six-time champ, who held on for the heat win.

Flores finished next, followed by Rolfe and then Migala, but none was able to match Neely’s time from heat one. 

And, in fact, the top six times all belonged to athletes from earlier heats. 

The result: Toomey-Orr heads into Sunday with a 65-point buffer over Migala in second. Rolfe sits in third, while Flores quietly moved into fourth, and Adams in fifth.

Men’s Division

South Africa’s Ruan Potgieter set the time to beat in the first heat, completing the event in 7:35.94. Saxon Panchik then went a full minute faster with a time of 6:31.80  in heat two.

All eyes were on Medeiros in heat three. The two-time champ needed a big performance to continue to move up the leaderboard. 

Medeiros was second to finish the first 45 handstand push-ups behind rookie Chris Ibarra, but he was the first athlete to kick back into a handstand to complete his 30 strict handstand push-ups after the first rope pull. 

But it was Ibarra who blasted through the 30 handstand push-ups the fastest, and he had finished his second rope pull by the time Medeiros started his.

Ibarra then had a hard time getting through the 15 freestanding handstand push-ups, giving both Medeiros and Travis Mayer the opportunity to catch up. Still, they were well off the pace set by Panchik in heat two.

Medeiros went on to win the heat in 7:56.36, good enough for fifth in the event, and he goes into Sunday in ninth overall. Cole Greasehaber, who made up a ton of ground on the freestanding handstand push-ups, finished second. Mayer came in third and Ibarra in fourth.

In the final heat, Australia’s Jay Crouch, eighth going into the event, came out to an early lead that he extended through the 30 strict handstand push-ups and second rope pull. 

Fikowski finished the 30 strict handstand push-ups next, just as Crouch was finishing up his rope pull.

But as we saw in other heats, the event really came down to the 15 freestanding handstand push-ups, which came down to a close race between Crouch, Fikowsk, and a hard-charging Khrennikov.

Fikowski was calm and deliberate, taking the heat in 7:08.36, 16 seconds ahead of Crouch. 

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And again, like in the other heats, Jayson Hopper came out of nowhere to finish third, sneaking in just ahead of Khrennikov, who failed multiple times to finish his final set of three handstand push-ups.

Panchik’s time from heat two held up for the event win, while Fikowski finished second overall and Crouch third. 

In a post-event interview, an emotional Fikowski said: “I’m thinking about Lazar. It’s my job to compete, so I’m going to compete…but it’s really hard. He’s on our mind. He was a great friend. He was a great guy. You kind of keep seeing him everywhere…But I made a commitment to finish the competition. That’s what I do, and so I’m going to give it my best, but Lazar is on our minds.”

The result: Fikowski heads into Sunday in the lead, Sprague hangs on to second overall after placing 17th on the event, Khrennikov sits in third, Dallin Pepper (11th on the event) in fourth, and Hopper in fifth. Vellner, sixth before the event, dropped to seventh overall.

That being said, the competition couldn’t be much closer. Only 30 points separate Ricky Garard in eighth and Khrennikov in third, with a day of competition and 200 points still left to go.

Up Next 

Athletes will take on two events on Sunday, but at the time of publication, CrossFit hadn’t yet announced the details of those events.

Credit: Susana Rodriguez, @ideyafilms_ / Instagram

The post 2024 CrossFit Games Event 7 “Push Pull 2.0” Results: Freestanding Handstand Push-Ups Make the Difference appeared first on BarBend.

2024 CrossFit Games Event 6 “Clean Ladder” Results: Strength and Speed Prevail

Lift big, and lift fast, or you’re out. 

That was the name of the game during Saturday’s second of three events at Dickies Arena in Fort Worth, TX.

Heading into the event, six-time champion Tia-Clair Toomey-Orr had a too-close-for-comfort lead over Emily Rolfe — just 23 points separated the two — and was looking to distance herself on what can only be described as a wheelhouse event for her. 

Just behind them was Haley Adams, who sat out last season for mental health reasons but has come back stronger than ever in 2024. 

Heavy events have been a weakness for Adams in the past, so this was the perfect opportunity to prove that taking a year off competing gave her the chance to plug some holes in her game.

Catch up: Head here for full 2024 CrossFit Games results!

On the men’s side, James Sprague went into the event as the surprise leader, with Roman Khrennikov trailing him by just 15 points. 

Following them were the pair of veteran Canadians, Brent Fikowski and Pat Vellner, who were third and fourth, respectively, and Jayson Hopper, who was fifth. 

Considering the event (on paper) looked like damage control for Sprague — and a potentially strong event for Vellner, Fikoswki, and Hopper — it was the perfect time for some serious leaderboard shifts. 

Image: Dallas Hamm  

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Individual Event 6: Clean Ladder

For time:

Round 1: 3-3-2-2-1 cleans

Round 2: 2-1-1-1 cleans

Round 3: 1-1-1 cleans

Round 1: 

Women: 165/175/185/195/205 pounds

Men: 255/265/275/285/295 pounds

Round 2: 

Women: 205/215/225/230 pounds

Men: 295/305/315/325 pounds

Round 3: 

Women: 230/240/250 pounds

Men: 325/345/365 pounds

Final Results

Recap

Women’s Division

With Arielle Loewen, Dani Speegle, and Jacqueline Dahlstrom withdrawing after Saturday’s first event, the women’s field was reduced to 32.

Kyra Milligan set the tone early, winning the first heat. Shelby Neal took the second, nine seconds faster than the next-fastest competitor. 

The third heat belonged to Alex Gazan, who casually power cleaned her way to an easy heat win. Meanwhile, Australian veteran Madeline Sturt managed to hold off Tia-Clair Toomey-Orr on her way to taking the final heat. 

Milligan’s time from the first heat, though, held up as the fastest of the round (0:45.85).

As expected, both Rolfe and Adams had a hard time in the event. 

Neither finished the cleans before the two-minute time cap, and neither advanced to the second round. Rolfe finished 27th and Adams 31st.

The excitement built in round two, with Neal making it look easy. She won the first heat more than 25 seconds ahead of Grace Walton. 

The second heat was a showdown between Toomey-Orr and Milligan, who were neck-and-neck the entire way. 

Toomey-Orr managed to stand the final barbell up a little bit faster and took the heat, but both Milligan and Gazan were just one second behind.

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Round three was an even tighter one between Toomey-Orr and Milligan, ending in a near-photo finish. 

The result: Toomey-Orr by one-tenth of a second. And just like round two, Gazan was close behind in third.

Gabi Migala finished fourth, and last year’s silver medalist, Emma Lawson, was fifth, doing herself a huge favor as she entered the event in 17th and needed a strong performance to keep her in the mix.

The performance was also huge for Migala, another athlete who is chasing the podium. She went into the event in fourth overall and managed to pass both Rolfe and Adams and now sits in second overall. Rolfe dropped to third and Adams to fourth with one event left on Saturday.

Men’s Division

Three of the overall top-five men made it through the first round — Roman Khrennikov and James Sprague both missed the cut. 

They finished 21st and 22nd, respectively.

Meanwhile, Games veteran Travis Mayer put up the fastest time of any athlete in round one.

In the second round, Pat Vellner took the first heat, just ahead of Hopper, while rookie competitor Austin Hatfield, coming off a second-place finish on Saturday’s first event, all but dominated. Mayer finished second.

Of the top five overall men, Vellner and Fikowski both advanced to the final, but the third round looked like it would be a showdown between Hatfield and Mayer for the event win.

The final three barbells in the third round didn’t disappoint. 

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As expected, Hatfield took the early lead, power cleaning the first barbell before finally switching to a squat clean on the second lift. The third barbell, though, got the best of him. 

He failed the lift, opening the door to the rest of the field.

It was ultimately two-time champion Justin Medeiros, in 13th overall heading into the event, who took advantage of Hatfield’s fail. 

He catapulted himself out of nowhere to capture the event win, just ahead of Brazil’s Bruno Marins, while Mayer snuck in for third. Fikowski went on to finish eighth, Vellner 10th, and Hopper 12th. 

The win is possibly a pivotal turning point for Medeiros, who now sits in 11th overall.

Heading into the final event on Saturday, Sprague and Fikowski are tied for first in points. Khrennikov is third, and Vellner is knocking on the podium door in fourth.

Up Next 

Saturday’s final event, Push Pull 2.0 begins at 5:10 pm CT and is a throwback event from the 2014 CrossFit Games.

It starts with 45 handstand push-ups, followed by an 80-foot sled pull at 110/180 pounds, and continues with 30 strict handstand push-ups and an 80-foot sled pull. It finishes with 15 freestanding handstand push-ups, all in a 10-minute time frame.

Featured image: Dallas Hamm  

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