Looking for Fitness and Fun for the Long Haul?
mariodispenza
Posts: 28 Member
Olympic weightlifting has been around for over a hundred years. Unfortunately, in the U.S. it hasn't caught on as a sport like it has elswhere in the world. This is a real shame because believe it or not, we have a much lower injury rate than football or soccer, we focus on nutrition because we compete in weight classes (and performance) and with the masters division, we have competitors in their 80's (Yes, in their 80's!)
We focus on technique, flexibillity, speed and overall body strength. And we do it at a fraction of the cost of most commercial gyms. You'll find many Olympic weightlifting coaches who donate their time rather than charge for it. Men's Health ran this article a few years ago and it's spot-on. http://www.menshealth.com/fitness/weight-lifting-workout
Interested?
We focus on technique, flexibillity, speed and overall body strength. And we do it at a fraction of the cost of most commercial gyms. You'll find many Olympic weightlifting coaches who donate their time rather than charge for it. Men's Health ran this article a few years ago and it's spot-on. http://www.menshealth.com/fitness/weight-lifting-workout
Interested?
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Replies
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I was sold when I first saw my coach coaching a discus thrower about 15yrs ago. I knew instantly it was much better than the RANDOM training I was doing upstairs. 60 competitions later I'm loving it. I got to the National standard after about 8yrs of training :P
Koing0 -
I was sold when I first saw my coach coaching a discus thrower about 15yrs ago. I knew instantly it was much better than the RANDOM training I was doing upstairs. 60 competitions later I'm loving it. I got to the National standard after about 8yrs of training :P
Koing
60 meets? Holly crap! That's impressive! What's the national standard?0
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