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Fitness

The CrossFit Open: Stop Whining About Muscle Ups

Athletes competing in the Open need to remember that the competition is a search for the "fittest on earth" - and it might not be you.

Patrick McCarty

Written by Patrick McCarty Last updated on Nov 22, 2021

Do we really need to have the muscle up conversation again? When 15.3 was announced, the CrossFit world split into two camps:

  1. “OH MY GOD, YES!!!!!!!!!!!!!”
  2. “OH MY GOD, NO!!!!!!!!!!”

Do we really need to have the muscle up conversation again? When 15.3 was announced, the CrossFit world split into two camps:

  1. “OH MY GOD, YES!!!!!!!!!!!!!”
  2. “OH MY GOD, NO!!!!!!!!!!”

Starting an Open workout with muscle ups? Heresy! The conversation on Facebook and other social media quickly became an “us versus them” issue. Us, being those of us who just want to play in the sandbox with this worldwide community of athletes, and them, being those elite snobs who have their muscle ups.

Here is a sampling of some of the comments that I saw:

  • “[T]his just says we don’t care about our non-competitive athletes – GO AWAY.”
  • “It’s a total slap in the face to the intermediate CrossFitter.”
  • “Originally, the Open was supposed to be about everyone. Everyone doing the same WOD and competing against each other for fun, THEN we find the people that are going to regionals and the games. Now it’s the other way around…let’s find the elite athlete and screw the rest of you.”
  • “By programming the MU as the first movement you affectively change the criteria from ‘the fittest’ to ‘the fittest that can do muscle ups.’”

There seems to be some confusion that the CrossFit Games testing process is supposed to be fair. While the worldwide community aspect of doing one big WOD together is a nice thought, and while it allows you to compare yourself to everyone around the whole world, that’s not the primary purpose.

“[I]f you entered the Open in the RX division and can’t do muscle ups, you entered the wrong division.”

The primary purpose is to find the fittest person on earth. The Open is merely stage one of that selection process. Here’s the harsh reality, folks – if you decide to compete in the RX division, you had better damn well be able to do whatever is asked of you. First, last, or in between. I don’t know what about this concept is so muddling.

A Tale of Two Goats

When I competed in the CrossFit Games 50-54 masters division in 2014, I knew almost beyond a doubt that handstand walks would be tested.

I didn’t want them to be, but they were the flavor of the year, coming up in at the regional level and knocking a lot of folks out of the running, so I was pretty sure they were going to show up. Even for the old guys.

And despite my coach prescribing the requisite amount of training for handstand walks, I won’t lie – I traded the hard work for hope. Hope that there was a smidgen of light that would cause Dave Castro to bypass this particular movement for the masters.

So I did my work, but I basically phoned it in. I would sort of hope that I got upside down, but I never did. It was easier just to roll back off the floor and say to myself “Whelp, that should do it for today.”

Contrast that with Heather McCauley, another athlete at my box, Cincinnati Strength and Conditioning. Heather is a strong female who excels in heavy barbell movements – but one year ago, she did not have muscle ups.

So, Heather began a serious effort to achieve them. Almost daily, I would see her working on some variation of the progression. Not just jumping up on the rings and flailing and hoping it happened, but working on progressions from the floor, working the turnover, working the chest to bar, working the grip.

Day after day, week after week, she worked on her muscle ups. It was almost as if she was possessed.

“She joked that her ‘thirty muscle ups for time’ was 29 days, but before long, she was cranking them out every minute on the minute.”

As for me, I got to the CrossFit Games in July, and sure enough, handstand walks came up. Each athlete had to go a minimum of five feet to get a single point. I made it four. Zero points for me.

Some of my competitors walked over 200 feet on their hands. I basically did a legless bear-crawl for four feet. It was, to say the least, sad. I chose to sidestep the hard work, and I paid the price.

Meanwhile back at the gym, Heather was still working on her muscle ups. Finally in late 2014, she nailed one. Success! However, as is somewhat common with muscle ups when first achieved, they come and go.

Heather experienced that ebb and flow where after the initial joy of getting on top of the rings, the muscle ups went away again for a while. Undeterred, she kept at it. Day after day, week after week, just hammering those muscle ups.

Persistence Pays Off

The next milestone for Heather was hitting the thirty-muscle up mark. She joked that her “thirty muscle ups for time” was 29 days, but before long, she was cranking them out every minute on the minute. Ultimately, when she approached the rings, there was no question. None.

Finally, her (and my) coach, Stephen Flamm, put them into a workout. Heather’s first WOD containing muscle ups was as follows:

For time:

  • 5 muscle ups
  • 15 bar-facing burpees
  • 25 deadlifts (175lbs)

There are several things going on here. First, a coach who intuitively knew that muscle ups were coming and very likely in a much different order this year in the Open, and who challenged his athlete (like he did me with the handstand walks) to be ready. It would have been easy enough to say, “They always come at the end in the Open.”

But as we all know, the Open has evolved, and the scaled division opened this door wide. Hence, no messing around. On February 16, Stephen began to program workouts for Heather that began with muscle ups.

Additionally, Heather simply attacked them. She put in the work – relentless, driven work – in order to master this movement and was ready for a testing piece that started with muscle ups. So, when 15.3 was announced, her reaction was this:

Heather did 15.3 and scored 161 reps – one full round and four muscle ups.

The difference between my handstand walks at the CrossFit Games and her muscle ups in 15.3? Where I traded the work for hope, Heather simply did the work.

Be Realistic About the Open

So, while I understand the frustration with 15.3, it doesn’t matter what has happened the last four years.

The fact that a scaled option was introduced should have been a major red flag that muscle ups, or some other difficult movement, was coming early in one of the workouts, not late.

My takeaway is this: if you entered the Open in the RX division and can’t do muscle ups, you entered the wrong division.

Check out these related articles:

  • 5 Tips to Get Your First Muscle Up With Carl Paoli
  • How to Succeed In Your First CrossFit Open
  • The CrossFit Games Open Is Broken

Photos 1 and 2 courtesy of CrossFit Empirical.

Photo 3 courtesy of Shannon Khoury.

Patrick McCarty

About Patrick McCarty

Patrick McCarty is a CrossFit Level 1 Trainer and masters athlete. As a masters-level athlete, Patrick competed in the 2011, 2013, and 2014 Reebok CrossFit Games. Patrick’s fitness journey has taken him from traditional weightlifting to marathon running and, ultimately, to CrossFit, where he found the perfect balance of strength and conditioning, nutrition, and proper goal setting, which allowed him to find levels of fitness and well-being that eluded his twenty-year old self.

In addition to his own training, Patrick’s real passion is coaching. He provides programming and coaching for dozens of clients across the globe and finds immense satisfaction in helping other achieve their fitness goals, whether it’s climbing a rope for the first time or making it to the CrossFit Games. By day, Patrick is a web developer who owns his own design company, CJT Digital Design, in Loveland, Ohio.

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