Monday, October 4, 2010

Who am I?

Popout

Today gentlemen, I am honored to coach you

More honored to be leading you onto the field of battle

But theres another honor to be bestowed upon you

And that is in the answer that comes with that question:

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

Thats right, and you need to remember that all through this game

I will conquer what has not been conquered

Defeat will not be in my creed

I will believe what others have doubted

I will always endeavor to pull esteem, honor, and respect out of my team

I have trained my mind and my body will follow

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

I will acknowledge the fact that my opponent does not expect me to win

But I will never surrender

Weakness will not be in my heart

I will look to my comrades and to those who are a part of me in this world and those who have trained

me

And I will draw strength from them

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

I will gladly go out into the field of battle

And I will move in everything I can do

And I will reach my field of battle by any means at my disposal

And when I get there, I will arrive violently

I will rip the heart from my enemy, and leave it bleeding on the ground

Because he cannot stop me

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

To my side I have comrades, comrades that have been with me through thick and thin

Who have sacrificed their blood, sweat and tears

Never will I let them fall, never will I let them down, and I will never leave an enemy behind

Because our opponent does not know my heart

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

No one will deny me, no one will define me

And no one will tell me who and what I am and can be

Belief will change my world

It has moved continents, it has moved countries, it has put men on the moon

And it will carry me through this battle

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

Defeat, retreat: those are not in my words

I dont understand those definitions

I dont understand when things go wrong

I dont understand mistakes

But I do understand this:

I understand victory,

And I understand never surrendering

No matter how bad things go my heart and my mind will carry my body through limits and weakness

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

Today will be that day

Not tomorrow, not next week, but right now, right here

In your house and in your homes

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

History will remember me

I will not let worrying affect my cause

I will define myself

I will write my own pages

And no one will tell me what I cannot be

I will never give up

Not until Ive given everything I got

Because who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

Who am I? I AM A CHAMPION!

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Wednesday, September 29, 2010

The Leg Matrix


You might call this our 2 minutes of Hell workout. If you can make it through two rounds of this routine, you're a fitter man than most.

Here’s the kicker: The best performance we’ve ever heard of was done by a Division one FEMALE volleyball player. Her time: two rounds in 3 minutes total.

How to do it: Do one set of each exercise below without resting, and keep track of how long it takes you to complete the circuit. Then rest for twice that duration, and repeat once. When you can finish the first circuit in 90 seconds, skip the rest period.

• Bodyweight Squat: 24 reps

• Bodyweight Alternating Lunge: 12 reps (each leg)

• Bodyweight Split Jump: 12 reps each leg

• Bodyweight Jump Squat (for fat loss): 24 reps

Sunday, September 26, 2010

2010 Scotiabank Marathon Official Results


Wanted to thank everyone who came out for this event to cheer on those who were participating. My feet are a little banged up but trust me when I tell you that I'm going to do it again next year to try to get a sub 2-hour time. Congrats to everyone who completed the race, we achieved something very difficult today. I'll toast to that!

Tam, William 1:56

Hambre, Sam 2:03

Khazanchi, Manesha 2:40



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Friday, September 24, 2010

How To Build the Ultimate Running Playlist


First, you need to decide what BPM you are looking for and what kind of run this is. For example:

  • 5k - very fast run, need high BPM songs for the whole time, and a short playlist (since it usually doesn't take more than 40 minutes to finish).
  • Marathon - very slow run, you need mostly low BPM songs but not too low (in the 120-130 range and maybe a few higher ones to boost morale), and a very long list.

Once you know your target BPM, you need to find songs with that BPM. There are several ways to do this:

Automate it. You can use BPM analyzing software like Mixmeister (Free) or Cadence(iPhone $4.99, Desktop for Mac OS X/Windows is Donationware) to analyze your entire library. The problem with this is that they usually get around 20-30% of the songs wrong.
80% success rate isn't bad you say? Consider this, if you have a music library of 5000 songs, 20% wrong means you'll have 1000 songs with the wrong BPM. Try running up a hill when a slow jazz song comes up just because the app decided it has a BPM of 170 and it's really 60.

Do it manually. It takes more time, but once you've done 100 songs or so you get really fast at it. This is the most accurate way I know to get the right BPM. I use the manual BPM tapper at All8.

Get list from a specialized website. Sites like Running Playlist already did the work for you and include hundreds of songs and playlists designed for specific events (5k, 10k, etc.) There are also many other sites who do the same thing of course, but I prefer Running Playlist.

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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

The Claim: Replacing Your Desk Chair With an Exercise Ball can Improve Your Posture.

THE FACTS Exercise balls are becoming a popular alternative to plain old office chairs, a way — some say — to burn more calories and improve posture.

Christoph Niemann

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The increase in the calorie burn is real but small. According to a 2008 study, performing clerical work at a desk while sitting on an exercise ball burns about four more calories an hour than the same activity in a chair, or roughly 30 extra calories in a typical workday.

And that figure does not factor in the additional burn that would come from routines like bouncing or leg lifts, which many users say the balls inspire them to do.

But as far as posture is concerned, there is not exactly a compelling body of evidence. Although proponents say the balls force users to sit up straight to stabilize themselves, a 2009 British study found that prolonged sitting on atherapy ball led to just as much slumping and “poor sitting position” as a desk chair.

Another study last year, by Dutch researchers, compared workers who did hourlong typing tasks on exercise balls and while seated in office chairs with armrests. The balls produced more muscle activity and 33 percent more “trunk motion.” But they also produced more spinal shrinkage.

“It is concluded that the advantages with respect to physical loading of sitting on an exercise ball may not outweigh the disadvantages,” the researchers wrote.

Other studies have had similar results.

THE BOTTOM LINE Sitting on an exercise ball burns more energy than sitting on an office chair, but the evidence that it improves posture is lacking.

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Friday, September 17, 2010

Is She a Keeper?

Are You the Center of Her World?

It might feel nice to be worshipped for a while, especially if you've just been dumped, but that'll get old fast—particularly when she calls four times during the season finale of The Wire.

She's a keeper if
. . . she has at least one non-work-related hobby she's passionate about. It means she knows how to have fun without a man and that she won't need you constantly by her side. And if she continues to make time for her own friends (loyalty is good), she won't freak out when you plan a poker night.


Has She Paid for Some Dates?

We know an uptown sort of lady who boasts to her friends, female and male, "I have never had to pay for a drink in my life." According to her retro worldview, men pay for everything, and her boyfriends wait on her hand and foot while she watches Desperate Housewives.

She's a keeper if . . .
she likes treating you sometimes. It means she'll approach relationships in a more egalitarian way—and when she says she'll take you for richer or poorer, she'll mean it.


Has She Always Exercised?

If she still has her seventh-grade swimming trophy and a collection of 10-K T-shirts, chances are she'll work out for decades to come, which means the great butt and killer legs that first grabbed your attention are here to stay. But those who go on exercise binges (is that a Tae Bo tape?) or fad diets, only to lose interest quickly, are destined for saddlebags. And if, like the girlfriend of a certain friend of ours, she stays slim by eating a plain celery stalk for dinner every night, pack her a nice sandwich before you dump her.

She's a keeper if . . . you can set your watch to her 30-minute gym visit. An active lifestyle means way more than having shuffled through a half-marathon 6 years ago.


Does She Ever Surprise You?

A just-because present, perhaps? We know it sounds hokey. But we're not talking about a throw pillow bearing a photo of the two of you and the inscription "2gether 4ever" (unless it's a gag gift, in which case she's hilarious and a total keeper). No, we mean the little things that say she's thoughtful and likes the idea of taking care of you.

She's a keeper if . . . she notices that you're out of shaving cream and buys some; you arrive for a date and she's cooking, with a good bottle of red already breathing; she initiates sex.


Does She Hate Her Job?

Our friend John dated a woman who always complained about work. "Turns out," he told us, "all that criticizing was just a cover for being hopeless at her job and her excuse for not getting off her butt to improve the situation." She wouldn't take responsibility for her own happiness, so she tried to find a sense of purpose in him—a burden nobody needs.

She's a keeper if . . . even if she's not in her dream job yet, she has a plan for getting there.


Does She Own a Vibrator? Condoms?

If so, don't feel threatened. Taking an active role in her sexual health and sexual enjoyment bodes well for a long-term sex life. Women who use vibrators have higher sex drives, more orgasms, and better sex lives with their partners, according to a recent survey.

She's a keeper if . . . she knows how to harvest her own orgasms—then she can show you how to as well (ergo, no faking, and less pressure on you). Stock up on double A's.


Does She Always Agree with You?

Yawn. You want a girl with an opinion. Not an annoyingly constant devil's advocate, but someone who will hear out your position and defend her own. A study found that couples who have heated spats but then make up have a better future in the sack than best-friend couples who never fight. Sparks are hot.

She's a keeper if . . .
once in a while she plays Ann Coulter to your Al Franken. Or Maureen Dowd to your Rush Limbaugh.


Are Your Zodiac Signs Compatible?

Trick question. If she cares, worry.


Do You Think She's Smarter?

That's a good thing. We've found in our own love lives that relationships are best when each thinks the other is a bit smarter. Life is richer with a woman who can teach you a thing or two. There's a difference between a woman who says or does impressive things and one who says or does cute things.

She's a keeper if . . .
you're in bed and can't get something she said out of your head—and it wasn't when the two of you were talking dirty.


Did You Have First-Date Sex?

We can't tell you how many male friends have told us that first-date sex—oral or otherwise—is a long-term deal breaker. It's time to upgrade your thinking, gentlemen. This unabashed passion probably informs her work, her play, her politics, her future kids, her future libido, and more.

Our friends Melanie and Andrew, who got wasted and "went all the way" the first time they met, have been married for 5 years and have an adorable son. (And the sex is still very good. Hey, people tell sex-advice columnists everything.)

Don't let a great girl get away because of your old-fashioned prejudices—keep her!

[via MH]

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Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Best Action Sports Photos Of 2010

Last week, Red Bull gathered the best photographers in the world to showcase images of action sports across a variety of categories. From surf to skate to snow to lesser-known "action" sports like jumping off of buildings, Red Bull collected images that were not only amazing photographs, but also crazy feats of humanity. Red Bull's 2010 Illume honored a total of 50 photographs—our favorites are after the jump. If you're in Dublin, stop by Trinity College throughout the week to see the full display.

Surfer Ryan Hipwood, shot by Stuart Gibson in Tasmania. Winner of the "Energy" category for Red Bull's Illume 2010 Photography Contest.

Surfer Peter Mendia, shot by Chris Burkard in Chile. Winner for best overall photo, the "Illumination" category for Red Bull's Illume 2010 Photography Contest.

Surfer Andrew Mooney, shot by Nathan Smith in Australia. Winner of the "Close-up" category and also the "Athlete's Choice Award" for Red Bull's Illume 2010 Photography Contest.

Skier Dan Treadway, shot by Eric Berger in British Columbia. Winner of the "New Creativity" category for Red Bull's Illume 2010 Photography Contest.

The Simpel Session mountain-bike qualifiers, shot by Vincent Peraud in Estonia. Winner of the "Culture " category for Red Bull's Illume 2010 Photography Contest.

Alex Maclean and Nicolas Ivanoff, shot by Daniel Grund in Monument Valley, USA. Winner of the "Experimental" category for Red Bull's Illume 2010 Photography Contest.

Stefan Lantschner, shot by Tim Korbmacher. Winner of the "Playground" category for Red Bull's Illume 2010 Photography Contest.

Alfredo Salcido, shot by Miguel Angel Lopez Virgen in Mexico. Winner of the "SanDisk Sequence" category for Red Bull's Illume 2010 Photography Contest.

Micha Krøl, shot by Adam Kokot in Poland. Winner of the "Spirit" category for Red Bull's Illume 2010 Photography Contest.

José Eber Pava Ordoñez, shot by Marcel Lämmerhirt in Hamburg, Germany. Winner of the "Wings" category for Red Bull's Illume 2010 Photography Contest.
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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Nike Unveils New iPhone App Just for Runners

Nike has just rolled out a new iPhone app for runners, available for download now [iTunes link].

The Nike+ GPS App for iPhone will pull in data from the device’s accelerometer and GPS to give runners an effective, accurate and useful tool for getting in shape and staying motivated. So far, it’s available in English only and sells for $1.99.

Although fitness apps abound in the App Store, few carry the street cred or instant name recognition of Nike.

The app will allow runners to visually map and track every run, indoor and outdoor, “free range” or treadmill. Nike says the app even works when a GPS signal is unavailable. Mapped routes show a breakdown of the runner’s pace at various points during the run, as well. You can track your distance, time and number of calories burned.

One interesting aspect of the app is the “Challenge Me” feature. It helps runners challenge themselves to run greater distances, longer times or quicker paces than their previous runs. Aside from giving challenges, the app also provides in-run, on-demand motivational messages from pro athletes and celebrities.

And of course the app carries the now-obligatory social sharing features. Through integration with NikePlus.com, runners can save each run to their online profiles and share the run through the site, Twitter and Facebook.

We have no word so far on when to expect Android, BlackBerry or other apps, but Nike says the app will work for iPod touch (second, third and fourth generations), iPhone 3GS and iPhone 4. The company makes no promises about how the app will function on an iPad; then again, if you’re running with your iPad, you might need less motivation to run faster and more motivation to give the tech gadgets a rest.

Here’s a video sent to us by Nike showing some of the ins and outs of the app:

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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Nike 6.0: D-Pad Session Teaser


The D-Pad Session. One of the most creative and progressive end of season sessions to go down. Featuring Gjermund Bräten, Mason Aguirre, Jake Blauvelt, Eero Ettala, Terje Haakonson, Kevin Backström, Ethan Morgan, Jamie Nicholls, Ståle Sandbech and more.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Exercise Boosts Your Brain – Here’s How

We all know exercise is your best shot at having a healthy heart, a strong immune system, and maybe even a 100th birthday party. Years of research have also shown that an active lifestyle boosts memory and cognitive capacity, and can slow the progress of neurodegenerative disease. But what actually changes in the brain when we go for a run? New research is showing some of the molecular reasons why keeping fit also keeps you sharp, and it has to do with your brain’s untapped potential for growth.

Dr. Fred Gage of the Salk Institute has been hunting down the neuronal consequences of exercise for over a decade. In 1998, Gage and colleague Peter Eriksson rocked the neuroscience world with their discovery that humans keep producing new neurons throughout adulthood. He also showed that mice and rats that regularly ran on exercise wheels grew more neurons than a couch-potato control group. But until recently, the mechanisms of this process have been poorly understood.

Recently, Gage and collaborators have been publishing a variety of papers describing the molecular pathways by which exercise leads to brain growth. Gage’s work in the 90’s showed that our brains have a store of stem cells that lie largely dormant, waiting for some stimulus to initiate cell division. A growth factor called bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) works to control cell division throughout the body, including in the brain. The more BMP, the less growth. Regulatory factors like BMP are essential to a healthy body; studies have shown that the absence of BMP activity is linked to colon cancer.

But as we get older, higher counts of BMP accumulate in the brain and keep our neural stem cells asleep. This is where exercise comes in. Within one week of being given an exercise wheel, mice showed half as much BMP signaling in their brains. The mice also showed increased levels of the protein Noggin (yes, I know), which acts as a BMP-antagonist. There are still questions as to whether exercise directly decreases BMP, or does so indirectly via Noggin production. Either way, stem cells begin to divide and new neurons are born.

Gage has observed that neurogenesis is pronounced in the hippocampus, a brain structure that is essential to long-term memory and navigating space. This could help to explain how exercise helps mitigate the effects of Alzheimer’s disease; as AD progresses, the hippocampus is the first target of severe neurodegeneration. When researchers pumped mice full of Noggin, they saw huge improvements in their maze running skills (mostly memory and spatial navigation, i.e hippocampal functions).

Dr. Fred Gage in his element

Researchers have long known about the link between exercise and brain function. In elderly populations, even small amounts of daily exercise showed increased levels of concentration, learning ability, and abstract reasoning – not to mention memory. Most theories have cited increased blood flow & better oxygen delivery to the brain as the major mental health benefits of exercise, and this is undoubtedly true. But these new relationships help to tease out some of the other molecular mechanisms at work when we’re at play.

But don’t start lining up for Noggin injections just yet. Like most biological systems of balance, the relationship between BMP and Noggin is an important one. A recent study showed that neurons placed in Noggin-soaked petri dishes stopped BMP signaling altogether, with some undesirable effects. As predicted, the stem cells divided out of control and were eventually used up; after a few weeks, neurogenesis slowed to a creep. BMP is an essential ingredient to keeping the brain’s stem cell stores intact.

So the next time you sit down to watch television, or, um, surf the internet, remember: your BMP count might be getting into dangerous territory. Best case scenario, you’ll be forgetting things faster in your twilight years. Worst case scenario? Death.


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Thursday, August 5, 2010

Be Sure Exercise Is All You Get at the Gym

When you go to the gym, do you wash your hands before and after using the equipment? Bring your own regularly cleaned mat for floor exercises? Shower with antibacterial soap and put on clean clothes immediately after your workout? Use only your own towels, razors, bar soap, water bottles?

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If you answered “no” to any of the above, you could wind up with one of the many skin infections that can spread like wildfire in athletic settings. In June, the National Athletic Trainers’ Association, known as N.A.T.A., issued a position paper on the causes, prevention and treatment of skin diseases in athletes that could just as well apply to anyone who works out in a communal setting, be it a school, commercial gym or Y.

The authors pointed out that “skin infections in athletes are extremely common” and account for more than half the outbreaks of infectious diseases that occur among participants in competitive sports. And if you think skin problems are minor, consider what happened to Kyle Frey, a 21-year-old junior and competitive wrestler at Drexel University in Philadelphia.

Mr. Frey noticed a pimple on his arm last winter but thought little of it. He competed in a match on a Saturday, but by the next morning the pimple had grown to the size of his biceps and had become very painful.

His athletic trainer sent him straight to the emergency room, where the lesion was lanced and cultured. Two days later, he learned he had MRSA, the potentially deadly staphylococcus infection that is resistant to most antibiotics.

Mr. Frey spent five days in the hospital, where the lesion was surgically cleaned and stitched and treated with antibiotics that cleared the infection. He said in an interview that he does not know how he acquired MRSA: “The wrestling mat might have been contaminated, or I wrestled with someone who had the infection.”

If it could happen to Mr. Frey, who said he has always been health-conscious in the gym and careful about not sharing his belongings, it could happen to you.

The Risks

Recreational athletes as well as participants in organized sports are prone to fungal, viral and bacterial skin infections. Sweat, abrasion and direct or indirect contact with the lesions and secretions of others combine to make every athlete’s skin vulnerable to a host of problems. While MRSA may be the most serious skin infection, athlete’s foot, jock itch, boils, impetigo, herpes simplex and ringworm, among others, are not exactly fun or attractive.

Athletes who are infected should be kept from competing in matches for a week or more until treatment renders them noninfectious. The authors of the trainers’ study warned against simply covering infections like herpes and active bacterial lesions in order to return to competition.

Likewise, people like you and me who work out at a facility or swim in a public pool should stay away until cleared by a doctor who is well versed in skin diseases.

Steven M. Zinder, a trainer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and chief author of the new paper, said in an interview that these recommendations are not esoteric.

“It’s what we all learned — or should have learned — in sixth-grade health class,” he said. “It’s all common sense. You need to keep yourself and your equipment clean. You never know who last used the equipment in a gym. It can be a great breeding ground for these bugs, some of which are pretty nasty.”

The report, published in the August issue of The Journal of Athletic Training, stated, “Athletes must shower after every practice and game with an antibacterial soap and water over the entire body.”

Dr. Zinder noted that after a workout, women tend not to shower at the facility, while men, who are more likely to shower, often fail to cleanse their entire bodies, including their feet. Well-equipped facilities should provide antibacterial liquid soap.

“You should be showering at the gym and putting on clean clothes that are kept separate from the dirty ones,” he said. In fact, he added, it’s best to have two bags, one only for clean clothes, and to wash the dirty-clothes bag now and then.

Assume Exposure

Jack Foley, athletic trainer and director of sports medicine at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa., and co-author of the report, said athletes should always assume they are exposed to skin infections.

At any given time, he said in an interview, one person in three in the United States suffers from a skin disease that can be spread to others, even while in the incubation stage.

The report noted that there had been “an alarming increase in the prevalence of MRSA” in the noses of both healthy children and adults. Thus, sneezing into one’s hand or blowing one’s nose without washing with an antibacterial cleanser afterward may spread these dangerous bacteria to others.

While hand hygiene is most important over all , avoiding fungal infections requires a daily change of athletic socks and underwear; carefully drying the armpits and groin and between toes (perhaps blow-drying the feet on low heat); and using foot powder. Shower shoes can help prevent infection as long as they don’t keep you from soaping your feet.

A viral infection called molluscum contagiosum may not be on the popular tongue, but it is commonly seen in young children and , spread through skin-to-skin contact, is not uncommon among athletes, including swimmers, cross-country runners and wrestlers, the report stated.

Prevention of this highly contagious infection requires “meticulous hygiene” after contact with secretions from other athletes through benches, towels and mats.

If you plan to work out in a gym or use a locker room, Mr. Foley suggested that before choosing a facility, you quiz the management about the cleaning agents used (they should be approved by the Environmental Protection Agency) and daily cleaning schedule for all surfaces and equipment. If exercise mats are not cleaned between classes, he suggested bringing your own. Antibacterial wipes or spray bottles should be provided and used by everyone to clean equipment after a workout.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Four Recommended Apps for Losing Weight

Image representing iPhone as depicted in Crunc...Image via CrunchBase

LOSEIT (iPod Touch, iPad andiPhone; free)

Tell the app how much weight you want to lose and how many pounds per week you want to take off, and it calculates the amount of calories you can consume each day. LoseIt has a database of 40,000 food items and can also calculate how many calories your daily exercise burns up.

CALORIE COUNTER by FatSecret (works on all platforms; free)

This program works much like LoseIt. But one advantage is that when you enter your basic information, you can sync up with the FatSecret Web site. The site has forums where users can swap ideas about diets, recipes and working out.

TAP & TRACK (iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad; $3.99)

This app costs $4, but users say it’s worth every penny. The program helps you come up with a daily calorie goal and features a large food and exercise database.

WEIGHT WATCHERS MOBILE (iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad, BlackBerry and Windows Mobile 6; subscription required)

If you already follow Weight Watchers or Weight Watchers Online, consider their app or one that can track the points used in their diets. Free for online subscribers, Weight Watchers Mobile lets you track and calculate points and see your weight loss history.


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