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Fitness

CrossFit Open 2018: Best Programmed Ever

This year's CrossFit Open tested every energy system, skills at all levels, max strength, and recovery. It was one for the ages.

Mike Tromello

Written by Mike Tromello Last updated on Feb 22, 2023

This year’s CrossFit Open kicked off on February 22 with WOD 18.1 and ended with final score submissions for with WOD 18.5 last week. As each Open WOD was announced, I offered you the same briefing I gave the athletes at my gym, Precision CrossFit. My aim was to give you immediate feedback that would arm you with valuable strategies and tips to help you make the most of your efforts and score your best possible performance in each WOD.

This year’s CrossFit Open kicked off on February 22 with WOD 18.1 and ended with final score submissions for with WOD 18.5 last week. As each Open WOD was announced, I offered you the same briefing I gave the athletes at my gym, Precision CrossFit. My aim was to give you immediate feedback that would arm you with valuable strategies and tips to help you make the most of your efforts and score your best possible performance in each WOD.

Today, I’m going to give you a recap of the 2018 Open, share what I’ve learned, and provide you with some takeaways that might give you an edge in your training and performance going forward.

Recap and Takeaways

First, let me say outright that, in my opinion, this was the best programmed Open ever. This year’s Open tested every energy system, skills at all levels, max strength, and recovery. In some cases, this was the clearest and most pristine testing of a system ever. In particular, the testing of recovery and strength in 18.2 was extraordinarily well done.

The first big takeaway is simply a confirmation that, once again, HQ’s programming of the Open stayed true to established rep counts, including:

  • 100+ Toes-to-Bar
  • 36 or more Muscle Ups
  • 45+ Handstand Push Ups
  • 60-85 C2B Pull Ups

Yes, there were fewer HSPU in this Open. But, there was a new HSPU standard, and you still needed the capacity for 60-85 to be able to perform to that new standard with a good time. The one real new rep count change was actually in double unders. Going forward, we can expect to see in excess of 600 DUs in WODs, and your training should reflect that new reality.

Dumbbells continued their increasing prominence this year as well. We saw new movements in the dumbbell clean-and-jerk and front squat. You should become proficient not only with these movements but with their natural correlate – Thrusters. I’m confident that you can expect dumbbell thrusters in a future Open WOD. Dumbbells are here to stay, and you should expect to see more of them, and in a greater variety of movements and movement pairings.

Also be sure to become very skilled at handstand walks, which are sure to reappear in future WODs. Specifically, you need to be able to perform consistent handstand walks even after suffering through a variety of capacity-draining, neurologically-taxing, and strength-demanding movements. This year, for those of you who tend to “scorpion” when you handstand walk, you may have found that, after the deadlifts lit up your back, you had a tough time pushing through the handstand walks.

Last, let me address those of you who felt that rowing made the first WOD a “big man’s” WOD. That’s nonsense. It’s rowing. It’s going to be in every Open. You simply need to be prepared for it. Many athletes at my gym skip rowing WODs, no matter how clever I am in trying to trick, threaten, and cajole them into doing it. Granted, it’s not sexy, but rowing is an indisputable mainstay of the CrossFit program and a necessary capacity to have. What’s more, it’s probably the best way to work and understand your heart rate zones and get familiar with your individual redline.

2019 Training Tips

Based on what we saw this year, there are four things you should pay particular attention to in preparing for 2019.

  1. First, work the new standards. There’s little chance they will go away.
  2. Next, dedicate yourself to rowing proficiency. Increased row capacity and getting comfortable with being uncomfortable on the rower can boost your ranking significantly.
  3. You should also stay true to the established reps counts, as I’ve described above.
  4. Last, your overall goal for the coming year is to get stronger, but not slower.

Yes, You Should Do The Open Every Year

In closing, let me recap why you should do the Open each year, regardless your fitness level or chances of moving on in the competition. As I have always said, aiming for success in the Open is not just for top-tier athletes. It’s also a tremendous opportunity to build benchmarks and goals into your year-round training. Even if you never go on to high-level competition, completing the Open WODs each year gives you performance data you can use to chart your progress and evaluate your programming going forward.

What’s more, the message, as demonstrated in the programming of the WODs, is clear: the CrossFit Open is for everyone. It’s a chance to not only benchmark your performance but to share in something uniquely challenging with your friends and your own box’s community. It’s an annual event and a tradition that you should embrace and enjoy.

Last, for reference, here are all my tips for the 2018 CrossFit Open WODs:

  • Quick Tips For CrossFit Open WOD 18.1
  • Quick Tips For CrossFit Open WOD 18.2
  • Quick Tips For CrossFit Open WOD 18.3
  • Quick Tips For CrossFit Open WOD 18.4
  • Quick Tips For CrossFit Open WOD 18.5
Mike Tromello

About Mike Tromello

Mike, a graduate of Occidental College, spent three years playing for the SCIAC Champion Tigers, graduating with his bachelor’s degree in 2005. In the summer of 2005, Mike spent six months playing professionally in Europe for the Gefle Red Devils of Sweden. Mike also served as the defensive coordinator for the organization’s prep team, as well as the head strength and conditioning coach.

Upon his return home, Mike went back to Occidental College to complete his master’s degree and earn his secondary school teaching credential, which he completed in the spring of 2006. In December of 2006, Mike represented Team USA against Team Canada in a football showdown between the two countries. Between 2005 and 2009, Mike spent five seasons as the strength and conditioning and secondary coach for the Occidental College football team.

In September of 2008, Mike took over as the middle school strength and conditioning coach at Harvard-Westlake School. Here, he was put in charge of the school’s developmental strength and conditioning program. For eight years, Mike aided in the school’s creation of a vertically-integrated strength program. Within this program students where taught how to build a technical weightlifting base, starting in the seventh grade, that was developed upon over time. Through technical efficiency learned at a young age, students vertically integrated to the high school program where strength was developed further. This program received much acclaim by major strength and conditioning associations, such as the NSCA. It also led Mike to publish a book on the subject matter: “Building the Beast: A comprehensive Guide to Adolescent Strength & Conditioning.” In addition to this work with adolescents, Mike also was the Head Strength & Condition Coach for the Varsity Water Polo and Track Teams. By the completion of his tenure at HW, Mike was a part of 2 National and 3 CIF Championship Teams. Mike was also put into the HW Water polo Hall of Fame.

In addition to his work as an elite strength & conditioning coach, Mike is also an accomplished CrossFit and Weightlifting coach. Over the past several years he has coached multiple athletes, all of whom have fared very well, to the national and world levels of Weightlifting: Frank Datello (2018 University National and AO3 Champion), Urbana Sepulveda (2019 Masters National Champ, 2019 Masters Worlds Silver Medalist, 2019 World Open Champ), Margie Rivas (2019 World Open Silver Medalist), Hannah Hall (2020 Youth & University National Champ), Crystal Riggs (2012, 13 & 15 American Open Championships, and 2015 & 16 USA Nationals), Katie Crowe (2012 & 13 American Open Championships), Chrissy Barron (2015 American Open Championships), Nathan Doud (2015 American Open Championships), Deanna Douglas (2015 & 16 University Nationals), Danielle Marino (2015 & 16 University Nationals), and Evan Hardman (2016 University Nationals), Lindsey Valenzuela (2009 American Open Championships) . In CrossFit he has coached multiple Games and Regional athletes, such as Hunter McIntyre (2019 CrossFit Games), Team Torrance Training Lab (2018 CrossFit Games), Tori Dow (2017 & 18 CrossFit Games), Hannah Hall (2018 CrossFit Games), Bill Grundler (2016 CrossFit Games 45-49 Silver Medalist), James Grundler (2015,16,17, & 18 CrossFit Games), Alison Locke (2014 & 16 CrossFit Games), Dan Wells (2015 CrossFit Games), Greg Smiley (2013 CrossFit Games), Chelsey Grigsby (2018 CrossFit Games), Dane McLaughlin (2018 CrossFit Regionals), Nolan Gouveia (2018 CrossFit Regionals), Katie Crowe (2011,12,13,14, & 15 Southern California & California Regionals), Jessica Goeser (2012,13,14,15 & 16 Southern California & California Regionals), Lindsey Deitsch (2014, 15 & 16 Southern California & California Regionals), and Daimino Stewart (2014, 15 & 16 Southern California & California Regionals), to name a few. In addition, he has coached his gym’s team (TEAM PRECISION) to every Regional / Sanctional since the inception of the CrossFit Games Open in 2011.

-WINNER OF THE 2016 STAR PHYSIQUE AWARD FOR MOST INSPIRING COACH IN HEALTH AND FITNESS
-MASTERS DEGREE
-CERTIFIED STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING SPECIALIST (CSCS)
-REGISTERED STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING COACH WITH DISTINCTION(RSCC*D)
-USAW NATIONAL COACH
-USAW LEVEL 2 COACH
-CROSSFIT LEVEL 2 COACH
-CIF COACHING CERTIFIED
-CALIFORNIA TEACHING CREDENTIAL

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