• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Breaking Muscle

Breaking Muscle

Breaking Muscle

  • Fitness
  • Workouts
    • Best Shoulder Workouts
    • Best Chest Workouts
    • Best Leg Workouts
    • Best Leg Exercises
    • Best Biceps Exercises
    • Best Kettlebell Exercises
    • Best Back Workouts
    • Best HIIT Workouts
    • Best Triceps Exercises
    • Best Arm Workouts
  • Reviews
    • Supplements
      • Best Pre-Workout
      • Best BCAAs
      • Best Testosterone Boosters
      • Best Bodybuilding Supplements
      • Best Creatine
      • Best Supplements for Weight Loss
      • Best Multivitamins
      • Best Collagen Supplement
      • Best Probiotic
      • Best Non-Stim Pre-Workout
      • Best Greens Powder
      • Best Magnesium Supplements
    • Protein
      • Best Protein Powder
      • Best Whey Protein
      • Best Protein Powders for Muscle Gain
      • Best Tasting Protein Powder
      • Best Vegan Protein
      • Best Mass Gainer
      • Best Protein Shakes
      • Best Organic Protein Powder
      • Best Pea Protein Powder
      • Best Protein Bars
    • Strength Equipment
      • Best Home Gym Equipment
      • Best Squat Racks
      • Best Barbells
      • Best Weightlifting Belts
      • Best Weight Benches
      • Best Functional Trainers
      • Best Dumbbells
      • Best Adjustable Dumbbells
      • Best Kettlebells
      • Best Resistance Bands
      • Best Trap Bars
    • Cardio Equipment
      • Best Cardio Machines
      • Best Rowing Machines
      • Best Treadmills
      • Best Weighted Vests
      • Concept2 RowErg Review
      • Hydrow Wave Review
      • Best Jump Ropes
  • News
  • Exercise Guides
    • Legs
      • Back Squat
      • Bulgarian Split Squat
      • Goblet Squat
      • Zercher Squat
      • Standing Calf Raise
      • Hack Squat
    • Chest
      • Bench Press
      • Dumbbell Bench Press
      • Close-Grip Bench Press
      • Incline Bench Press
    • Shoulders
      • Overhead Dumbbell Press
      • Lateral Raise
    • Arms
      • Chin-Up
      • Weighted Pull-Up
      • Triceps Pushdown
    • Back
      • Deadlift
      • Trap Bar Deadlift
      • Lat Pulldown
      • Inverted Row
      • Bent-Over Barbell Row
      • Single-Arm Dumbbell Row
      • Pendlay Row
Fitness

Featured Coach: Jeff Martone, Part 1 – Saved By The Kettlebell

Jeff Martone has been doing kettlebells for so long he actually had to BUILD his first one because they didn't have them in the US. Find out how he discovered kettlebells and what they did for him.

Becca Borawski

Written by Becca Borawski Last updated on Dec 6, 2022

For Jeff Martone, life before kettlebells was an interesting, but frustrating one. He lived a life on par with a professional athlete, training daily teaching military and law enforcement, after years of playing football, wrestling, and studying martial arts. Eventually his body gave out. Even after multiple surgeries his shoulders literally would not stop dislocating and then his knees began to go as well. And then Jeff met Pavel Tsatsouline and discovered the kettlebell.

I was working at a trainer academy, basically this academy where they train other instructors. If you want to be a firearms instructor you come down there, or a combatives instructor, or a sniper, or whatever. I always said the day I can’t lead by example is the day I need to change jobs, and that day was rapidly approaching because of injuries that had occurred starting back in ‘85, all that year playing football, starting off on defensive tackle. I made all-state that year, but I also dislocated my shoulder every single game. I would just pop it back in and just play. I would always joke around saying, “If you’re gonna be stupid, you better be tough.”

As the 1980s progressed, Jeff continued to play football, along with training martial arts and boxing. He would undergo three shoulder surgeries. As the clock kept ticking and he trained his way into the 1990s, he would suffer meniscus and ACL injuries in both his knees as well as a work-related fall that injured his back. After two solid decades of unending injury, Jeff’s toughness took a backseat and he started thinking about why this might be occurring. As Jeff shared:

It was only after I tore my ACL that I really started rethinking how I trained, and asking, “Why is this?” So I asked my friend who wanted to be a surgeon, “Why is it that I train so hard…but yet I’m falling apart at the seams?” And he gave me the typical, “Could be this; could be that.” But one thing he did say was, “Hey Jeff, your job and what you do is like that of a professional athlete.” I had never really thought about that before. And the problem was I wasn’t training like an athlete; I was training more like a bodybuilder.

At the time Jeff was living and working in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and this is when he first crossed paths with Pavel Tsatsouline. While Pavel is known as the man who brought kettlebells to the United States, at this time in 1999, kettlebells were still not a known quantity. Jeff, like others who talk of their first encounter with Pavel, met him at a flexibility seminar.

That’s when I actually met Pavel; he was in Albuquerque doing a little gig on stretching and flexibility, which was about a year before he even introduced kettlebells, or a year and a half. So that wasn’t even part of it. It was about two hours, and he talked about how to get a full-body workout doing only deadlifts and military presses.

Shortly thereafter Jeff would be transferred to a different military assignment in Arkansas. His job was recruit training for federal agents, but he took his lessons from Pavel with him.

jeff martone, kettlebells, rkc, pavel tsatsouline, tactical athleteSo me and a buddy, we’d do the deadlifts and presses before we take to the hills and go running with the guys, and what I noticed was my knees weren’t hurting, my back wasn’t hurting, we were covering twice as much ground as the students, and our performance was really good. And these guys were younger with really athletic backgrounds, and they were hurting, and they were pulling muscles, or ready to throw up, and stuff like that. So we ended up doing a five-day custom course of Pavel, and this was before kettlebells came out. And during that course he was like, “Now do an arm bar stretch or a Turkish get up with a dumbbell.” And at the end I was like, “Is there anything else out there?” And he was like, “Well, there’s this thing called a kettlebell.”

Based on what he learned from Pavel, Jeff went home and made his first kettlebell himself. Lucky for Jeff he had trained a backup career in blacksmithing. In April 2001 he would take Pavel’s first official kettlebell course and, along with Steve Maxwell, become one of the first certified kettlebell instructors in the United States.

As soon as he began applying kettlebell techniques with his students, Jeff saw a difference in their performance and a decrease in rates of injuries. He also credits it with rehabbing all of his own injuries.

I believe the kettlebell is the best rehab tool you can use for shoulders, back, and knees. If you don’t know what you’re doing, and you’re dislodging your arm, or whatever, or you just try to pick it up and throw it around, you’re going to hurt yourself, just like you would trying to self-teach Olympic lifting. You need a coach. But…it’s really good for your back. It fixes more low back injuries than anything else.

For your shoulders, it’s phenomenal, because its all about how the weight, the offset center of gravity of weight on your forearm when you’re pressing or doing Turkish get ups. What it does is, the range of motion in their shoulders, it actually build flexibility and range of motion. But more than anything, it strengthens the stabilizers in your shoulder girdle.

After decades of shoulder dislocation and contemplating yet another surgery, it was training with kettlebells, with the utmost attention to form, that cured Jeff’s shoulder problems. When he teaches his students he applies same attention to form. jeff martone, kettlebells, rkc, pavel tsatsouline, tactical athleteDespite his injuries having derailed his original military goals, Jeff credits them with making him a better coach in the long run.

If you look at all the surgeries and injuries I’ve had over the years, I can say this for a fact: One, each one was a blessing in disguise, because it’s made me a better coach. It’s also made me more sympathetic to the people that have injuries… So I’ve got a lot more compassion for people when they’re injured. Two, by being injured, it’s made me a better coach, given me a better eye for detail, and I’ve got a lot more patience in dealing with people. It’s not about me; it’s all about the others.

Now read part two of our feature interview where we discuss with Jeff the topics of instructing, writing workouts, and the three things every great coach needs to be:

Featured Coach: Jeff Martone, Part 2 – Great Coaches Are Great People

To follow Jeff’s four weeks of workouts here on Breaking Muscle follow this link:

Strength & Conditioning Workouts from Jeff Martone

Becca Borawski

About Becca Borawski

Becca found her way to a career in health and fitness through Martial Arts and CrossFit. Originally a music editor for film and television, Becca started studying Martial Arts in 2000. Though she started with traditional Martial Arts it was not long before she discovered Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) and her path was forever altered. She began training in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) and Muay Thai and started working with professional MMA fighters, building websites, working on fight promotions, and producing videos.

As a competitor in BJJ herself, Becca wanted to get stronger and fitter. In 2006 she discovered CrossFit and became a student at CrossFit Los Angeles. In only a couple of years she became CrossFit Level III Certified, left her career in the film industry, and dedicated herself full time to coaching. She has since been certified through CrossFit in Olympic Lifting, Powerlifting, Nutrition, Endurance and Kids coaching. She also held an NSCA-CSCS from 2006-2008 and is a certified IndoRow instructor. In addition to coaching adults, she founded the CrossFit LA Kids program in 2010 and taught children aged 5-17.

Becca regularly takes on new sports, which have included indoor rowing, fencing, and most recently, cycling, as she believes it makes her both a better athlete and a better coach. In order to reach more people with her coaching, Becca also created ModernAthena.com – a website dedicated to women in pursuit of physical fitness and self-improvement.

View All Articles

Related Posts

Fergus Crawley 5K Run Tips Photo
Fergus Crawley Shares 5 Tips For Running a Better 5K
Actor Chris Hemsworth in gym performing dumbbell row
Chris Hemsworth Diagrams a Killer Upper Body Workout Fit For an Action Star
Person outdoors exercising with kettlebell
The Best Kettlebell Workouts for Beginners, for Fat Loss, and More
Hugh Jackman Deadpool 3 Workouts Spring:Winter 2023
Hugh Jackman Returns to Wolverine Condition in Workouts for “Deadpool 3”

Primary Sidebar

Latest Articles

New Year’s Fitness Sales (2025)

XWERKS Motion BCAA Review (2025): A Registered Dietitian’s Honest Thoughts

Assault Fitness AssaultBike Pro X Review (2025): Assault’s Best Bike Yet?

13 Best Exercise Bikes for Home Gyms (2025)

Transparent Labs BCAA Glutamine Review (2025): The Key to Post-Workout Recovery?

Latest Reviews

Element 26 Hybrid Leather Weightlifting Belt

Element 26 Hybrid Leather Weightlifting Belt Review (2025)

Omre NMN + Resveratrol, Lifeforce Peak NMN, and partiQlar NMN on a red background

Best NMN Supplement: Fountain of Youth in a Bottle? (2025)

The Titan Series Adjustable Bench on a red background

Titan Series Adjustable Bench Review (2025)

A photo of the NordicTrack Select-a-Weight Dumbbells on a red background

NordicTrack Adjustable Dumbbell Review (2025): Are These Value Dumbbells Worth It?

woman lifting barbell

Be the smartest person in your gym

The Breaking Muscle newsletter is everything you need to know about strength in a 3 minute read.

I WANT IN!

Breaking Muscle is the fitness world’s preeminent destination for timely, high-quality information on exercise, fitness, health, and nutrition. Our audience encompasses the entire spectrum of the fitness community: consumers, aficionados, fitness professionals, and business owners. We seek to inform, educate and advocate for this community.

  • Reviews
  • Healthy Eating
  • Workouts
  • Fitness
  • News

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS Feed

© 2025 · Breaking Muscle · Terms of Use · Privacy Policy · Affiliate Disclaimer · Accessibility · About