CFER Athlete Guide

The CFER Member Guide · CrossFit East River
I'm a
1–60 classes in. Building the base.

You don't need to get in shape for CrossFit. CrossFit is how you get in shape.

This is the most common myth about us, and we want to clear it up right away. You don't have to do a couple of months of bootcamp first. You don't have to lose 10 pounds first. You don't have to know what a thruster is. Whether your last consistent workout was in college, you tried a corporate box in Midtown once and got chewed up, or you've walked past 647 East 9th for years without coming in, you're in the right place. This guide assumes you have four real hours a week, a job that doesn't stop, and a reason to start that actually matters. Mechanics first. Everything else later.

Year one is when CrossFit stops feeling like a workout.

It starts feeling like infrastructure. Your sleep is better. Your back doesn't ache at the desk by Thursday. The deadlift you couldn't budge in March is your January warm-up. The mantra (Mechanics, Consistency, Intensity, in that order) is the single sentence that separates the members still here at year 5 from the ones who burn out in 4 months and end up back at Barry's.

Veteran territory. Protect what you've built.

The basics are autopilot. The challenge now isn't building fitness. It's keeping it while the rest of life accelerates. Twelve-hour days, two trips a month, a 6 AM or 6:30 PM window. This guide is about training smarter in four hours a week than most people manage in eight.

Training to test, not training to feel.

You're past the question of whether you'll do the Open. Build your Athlete Profile below (same framework the CrossFit Competitor's Training Guide uses), then run the periodization, comp-day fueling, and recovery monitoring sections. We give it to you Manhattan-pro style: what's worth the hours, and what's just gym lore.

The Method

What is CrossFit?

The fitness program your gym is built on, explained in under 60 seconds.

The one-line definition

CrossFit is constantly varied, functional movement, performed at high intensity. The stated goal is "increased work capacity across broad time and modal domains." In plain English: the ability to do more work, across more kinds of work, faster.

Constantly varied

The workout changes every day. Strength, sprint, long, gymnastics, barbell. You can't get good at random, and that's the point.

Functional movement

Squats, presses, deadlifts, throws, jumps, pulls. Stuff you'd do moving a couch or carrying groceries. Just heavier and faster.

High intensity

The catalyst. Intensity is what actually produces results. Strength, body composition, conditioning, all of it. We scale loads and reps. We don't scale intensity.

The 10 General Physical Skills

If you're getting more fit, you're improving at all 10 of these. The first four are organic (you get them via training), the next four are neurological (skill-based), and the last two require both.

Cardio / respiratory enduranceyour engine
Staminalocalized endurance
Strengthforce production
Flexibilityrange of motion
Powerstrength × speed
Speedcycle rate
Coordinationmovement patterning
Agilitychange direction
Balancecenter over base
Accuracycontrolled trajectory

The 9 Foundational Movements

Every movement in CrossFit is a variation or combination of these nine. Master them and you have a vocabulary that opens up everything else.

Air squat
Front squat
Overhead squat
Shoulder press
Push press
Push jerk
Deadlift
Sumo deadlift high pull
Medicine-ball clean

Sickness → Wellness → Fitness

The CrossFit view of health is a continuum. We're not just trying to keep you out of disease territory. We're trying to push the dial all the way to fitness.

Sickness
Disease, dysfunction
Wellness
"Normal" / asymptomatic
Fitness
Capable, resilient, adaptable

"Fitness is sickness in reverse."

A brief history (the short version)

CrossFit was founded by Greg Glassman in Santa Cruz in 2000. Glassman trained cops, firefighters, and military. He noticed they were getting fitter than his regular gym clients doing isolation work. The reason was simple: his cops were doing constantly varied, functional, high-intensity work. He wrote the original "What is Fitness?" article in 2002 and the methodology went global from there. The CrossFit Games launched in 2007 on a California ranch with 70 athletes. Today there are around 15,000 affiliates worldwide and a million-plus practitioners. CFER joined that movement in 2013.

The Gym

Welcome to CFER

The East Village's first proper CrossFit affiliate. Veteran-owned. Community-first.

The short version

In early 2013, the space at 647 East 9th was an abandoned wine-storage garage with pink walls and a "For Rent" sign. Co-founder Eric J. Leon (US Army Airborne veteran, NYU Stern grad) saw what the rest of the block didn't, crawled under the door to look at the space, took the lease, and opened the East Village's first proper CrossFit affiliate. We've been on this block ever since.

Thirteen years later we're 2,500 sq ft of barbells, racks, rowers and rigs in the heart of Alphabet City, ~130 active members, fourteen staff. The corporate entity is Leon Barbell LLC. The brand is CrossFit East River. Everyone calls it CFER.

"Come as you are"

No pressure to keep up. No bro culture. Scale, modify, take a day. The community absorbs everyone.

"We are the machines"

No treadmills. No ellipticals. Barbells, bodies, dumbbells, kettlebells, rowers, rigs. The training does the work.

"A Community Of Fitness"

Friends first, athletes second. Saturday Partner WOD is the social anchor. The WhatsApp group is where it lives off-floor.

What members say

"Incredibly welcoming, very 'come as you are' with no pressure to keep up. 10/10 and very happy to have this gym community in the East Village." Sophie F.

"I was a person who never would have tried CrossFit. A friend brought me one morning and I've come almost every day since." Maddy O.

"It feels more like working out with a bunch of friends in a garage. The atmosphere is almost the opposite of intimidating." Rachel W.

The neighborhood

Alphabet City, East Village. Two blocks from Tompkins Square Park, ten minutes from the East River, an L-train stop from Brooklyn. Members live in the EV, the LES, Stuy Town, and increasingly across the bridge.

The Roadmap

Your first 30 classes

Three stages, the first 30 classes. What to focus on, what to expect, what to ignore. The deeper "build the base" and "find the edges" stages live in the First Year guide. Toggle up there when you're ready.

1

Just show up

Classes 1–5 · Week 1–2

Your only goal

Get through the door. The hardest rep of your CrossFit career is the one where you put your shoes by the door the night before.

What to focus on

  • Coach's name. Athletes around you. The bathroom and water locations.
  • How a class flows: brief, warm-up, strength or skill, workout, cool-down.
  • Saying YES to scaling. "Coach, what should I do for this?" is the smartest sentence in the gym.

What to expect

  • You will be sore. Specifically your glutes, hamstrings, and forearms.
  • You will feel like everyone else knows what they're doing. They don't. They're just used to not knowing.
  • Workouts will feel impossibly hard. Then a week later they'll feel possible. That's the magic.
Milestone: 5 classes in 2 weeks. That's it. Don't worry about loads, times, or scoring yet.
Pitfall: Trying to "look strong." Skip the RX weight. Coaches respect the people who scale on purpose 100x more than the ones who get hurt going heavy.
2

Learn the language

Classes 6–15 · Week 3–6

Your goal

Build a vocabulary. The whiteboard stops being hieroglyphics. You know what an EMOM, AMRAP, and "for time" mean. You know your benchmark loads.

What to focus on

  • The 9 foundational movements (see Section 1). Get to know each one with an empty barbell.
  • Your 3RM back squat, your 5RM deadlift, and your strict press 1RM. These are your benchmarks.
  • Logging every workout in Wodify. Even badly. Future-you needs the data.
  • Showing up on a non-favorite day. (The day you'd skip is the day you most need to be there.)

What to expect

  • Your first scaled benchmark (Annie with single-unders, Nicole with ring rows). It will be humbling. Write it down.
  • Your body changes faster in weeks 3 to 8 than at any other time. Enjoy it.
  • You'll start recognizing people. Talk to them. Coffee after Saturday Partner. The community is the secret weapon.
Milestone: Log your first scaled benchmark (Annie, Nicole, the 500m row). Doesn't matter what the score is.
Pitfall: Going 5 or 6 times your second week. You will get hurt. 2 to 3 times a week max for the first 3 weeks, then build to 4. Walk on off-days.
3

Find your rhythm

Classes 16–30 · Month 2–3

Your goal

Lock in 4 classes a week. Have favorite WODs and least-favorite WODs. Start to feel like you're actually getting better.

What to focus on

  • Mechanics, Consistency, Intensity, in that order. Get the rep right. Then get it right every time. Then add weight or speed. Never invert it.
  • Asking for one cue per session. "Coach, can you watch my third set?"
  • Trying a Saturday Partner WOD or Friday Strength Specialty class.
  • One non-class movement skill per week (handstand hold, double-unders, a heavier KB swing) outside of class.

What to expect

  • Your first PR (personal record). Loudly celebrated. PRs are CFER's love language.
  • A "hit-the-wall" moment around class 20 to 25 where you wonder if you're still improving. You are. The first 15 classes were neurological gains. Now your tissues are catching up.
  • Your nutrition starting to matter. The workouts won't feel right if you're eating like someone who doesn't train.
Milestone: 4 classes a week for 4 straight weeks. Streak in the books.
Pitfall: Chasing the leaderboard. The board is a coaching tool, not a status symbol. Compare yourself to last-month-you, not Sarah's Fran time.

Ready for what's next?

Once class 30-ish is in the books and movements start feeling familiar, toggle to First Year at the top of the page. That guide covers Build the Base, Find the Edges, your first real benchmarks, and recovery basics.

The Only Rule That Matters

Mechanics first. Everything else later.

There's exactly one thing we want from you for your first ~30 classes. It's not RX. It's not a fast Fran. It's not pretty pull-ups.

The first 30 classes job

Move the right way, every rep. That's it. Squat to depth. Press with a stacked spine. Hinge from the hips, not the lumbar. Hands break the plane on a pull-up. Hips finish before the elbows bend on a clean. Coach calls it, you do it, on the next rep.

Why we don't ask you to chase numbers yet

Two reasons. First, at this stage your gains come from neurological learning. Your brain is figuring out the pattern. You're not getting stronger or fitter yet, you're getting coordinated. Adding speed or load right now bakes in a bad pattern that's painful to un-learn later. Second, tendons and connective tissue take longer to adapt than muscles do. You can feel strong before you are strong. A slow ramp is what keeps you out of the doctor's office.

What "good mechanics" looks like

Yes

  • Squat: hips below knee crease, knees tracking over toes, neutral spine
  • Deadlift: bar against the shins, hips back, neutral spine from setup to lockout
  • Press: bar finishes overhead, ears between biceps, no back arch
  • Burpee: chest AND thighs touch the ground, hands leave the floor at the top

Not yet

  • Adding weight when the rep starts looking different
  • Going faster when the squat is shallow or the back is rounding
  • Skipping the warm-up because "I'll just do the WOD"
  • Trying to keep up with the person next to you

The "mechanics → consistency → intensity" order

This is the single most important sentence in CrossFit, written by founder Greg Glassman: Get the movement right. Then get it right every time. Then add speed and load. You're in phase 1. The whole game right now is getting it right. Phase 2 and 3 come later. Those live in the First Year guide.

How to make this easy

Ask your coach for one cue per class. "Coach, can you watch my third set and tell me one thing?" That's it. One cue. Then practice it. Next class, ask for one more. In 20 classes you'll have 20 cues internalized. That's how good movers get built.

Vocabulary

The benchmarks you'll meet

These will hit the whiteboard. You'll hear about them in the gym. Your job right now is to move well, not to chase a number on these. They're locked for a reason. This is just so the words make sense when a coach mentions them.

"The Girls": the original CrossFit benchmarks

In 2003, Greg Glassman named a handful of workouts after women (the way hurricanes are named) because, in his words, "anything that leaves you flat on your back and incapacitated only to lure you back for more deserves naming after a lady." They became the standard yardsticks of fitness across every affiliate in the world.

Fran

21-15-9 thrusters (95/65) and pull-ups, for time

The most famous CrossFit workout, period. Short (under 10 minutes for almost everyone), brutal, glycolytic. You'll do it eventually. Just not today.

Helen

3 rounds: 400m run, 21 KB swings (53/35), 12 pull-ups

A classic triplet. Tests your running, your power output, and your gymnastics in one 12-minute package.

Grace

30 clean-and-jerks at 135/95, for time

A single-modality barbell workout. Tests strength-stamina, meaning how heavy you can move fast under fatigue. Elite is sub-2:00. Most members live in the 4 to 6 minute zone.

Cindy

20-min AMRAP of 5 pull-ups, 10 push-ups, 15 squats

The bodyweight engine test. No equipment, no excuses. A great one to repeat every 6 months. It tracks your gymnastics and endurance combined.

Murph

1-mile run, 100 pull-ups, 200 push-ups, 300 squats, 1-mile run

A Hero WOD (named after Lt. Michael Murphy, killed in action 2005). Done every Memorial Day. The whole gym does it together. It's a rite of passage.

Filthy 50

50 reps each of 10 movements, for time

The chipper archetype. Long (25 to 35 minutes). You don't sprint. You pace. A good introduction to longer time-domains once you've built the engine.

The acronyms that confused you in week 1

WODWorkout of the day
AMRAPAs many rounds as possible
EMOMEvery minute on the minute
RX'd"As prescribed." Full weight, full standards.
ScaledModified loads or movements for your level
For timeFastest finish wins
1RM / 3RMHeaviest you can lift for 1 (or 3) reps
MetconMetabolic conditioning. The "main workout."
PRPersonal record
BoxWhat CrossFitters call a gym (CFER is a box)

Pin this page. The first time you hear "we're going to chip through a 50 EMOM with a 3RM thruster builder" you'll laugh instead of panic.

What you CAN test today

The full Girls and Murph stay locked until your mechanics are solid. But we still want you to leave a baseline on the board you can chase. Pick one or two of these, log the score in Wodify, and re-test the exact same workout in 6 months. The gap between scores is your CrossFit transcript.

Annie (scaled)

50-40-30-20-10 single-unders + sit-ups, for time

Total volume: 300 reps. Tests coordination and aerobic capacity at low skill cost. Most new members land between 7 and 12 minutes.

Re-test goal: shave 60 to 90 seconds off in 6 months.

Nicole (scaled)

AMRAP 20 min: 400m run + max ring rows (or jumping pull-ups)

You run the same 400m every round, then knock out as many ring rows as you can before the next run. Track total reps across the 20 minutes.

Re-test goal: +20 reps in 6 months.

The 500m row

Sit on the rower, pull as fast as you can sustain, for 500 meters

A pure engine test with zero skill prerequisites. Starting targets: under 2:00 for men, under 2:15 for women. Slower than that is fine. The score is just the baseline.

Re-test goal: drop 10 seconds in 6 months.
Honest Answers

The questions you're slightly afraid to ask

These are the things every new member privately wonders. We surveyed brand-new athletes and pulled the most common ones. None of these are stupid.

Will I be the worst person in class?

No. Even if you're the slowest on the board on a given day, no one cares. Everyone in this room was new at some point, and every regular remembers walking through the door for the first time. The vibe is "let's go, you got this," not "look at that person."

Real talk: the last finisher of a workout usually gets the loudest cheer. That's not a coaching script. That's just how this gym is.

How often should I actually come?

My honest answer (not the standard CrossFit one): the threshold for actually changing your fitness is doing it more often than you don't. That's 4 days a week, every week. 3 days is maintenance at best, and most year-1 plateaus live there. So once your body has caught up to the stimulus, 4 is the floor.

For the first 2 to 3 weeks though, 2 or 3 times is plenty. Your tissues, nervous system, and sleep need a beat to absorb the new input. Coming 5 times in week 1 is how you end up tweaked and skipping week 3.

The build:

  • Weeks 1 to 3: 2 or 3 times. Wherever they fit.
  • Week 4 onward: 4 times, every week. The cadence that survives a bad work week is the one you actually keep.
  • Month 3+: 5 times is reasonable if you're sleeping well and eating enough.

If 4 days truly cannot fit, 3 days is still good. Just don't kid yourself that it's enough to change fast.

I'm sore. Is that bad? Should I still come?

Sore is normal. Sore enough you can't sit on the toilet means you went too hard. Sharp pain, pain at a joint, or pain that doesn't fade after 24 hours: tell a coach.

Showing up sore is fine. The warm-up is designed to ease soreness, and most members feel better walking out than walking in. Talk to your coach if it's rough. They'll often scale the day so you can move without grinding the same muscles.

Do I need to be in shape first?

No. This is literally what we do. Coaches scale every workout to your level. The 65-year-old grandma rowing on the bike and the competitor snatching 225 are doing the same workout at different doses.

If you can walk, you can start CrossFit. Day-one fitness is not required. Day-one willingness is.

What should I wear?

Whatever you can squat, jump, sweat, and hang from a bar in. T-shirt, shorts or leggings, athletic shoes. No need for CrossFit-specific gear. Whatever shoes you own work for the first 20 classes.

Don't show up barefoot for the WOD (safety). Don't wear baggy stuff that catches on a barbell. That's basically the dress code.

What if I can't do a pull-up, a push-up, or squat to depth?

You do a scaled version. Ring rows instead of pull-ups. Knee push-ups instead of full push-ups. Box squats to a height you can reach. The goal is to move well at your current level, with intent, every rep. RX has nothing to do with it for the first 60 classes.

Coaches will assign your scale before the workout starts. Just tell them what you're working with and they'll handle it.

What's a thruster? A burpee? A wall ball?

Thruster: front squat with the bar racked on your shoulders. As you stand up, press the bar overhead. One fluid move.
Burpee: from standing, lie flat on the floor (chest and thighs touch), then jump back up. Repeat.
Wall ball: hold a medicine ball, squat down, stand up and throw it to a target on the wall (10ft for men, 9ft for women). Catch in the squat. Repeat.

Coach demos every movement before class. If you forget what something is, just ask. "Hey, what's a thruster?" is the most welcome question in the gym.

How long until I "get good"?

Depends on what "good" means. The typical arc:

  • By month 1: the movements feel natural, you know the lingo, you can complete most WODs scaled.
  • By month 3: you start RX-ing some workouts. PRs start happening.
  • By month 6: you know your benchmarks. People in class 1 ask you what AMRAP means.
  • By year 1: CrossFit is part of your identity. You'd be sad if you missed a week.

Faster than you'd think.

Should I do CrossFit AND cardio? AND weights?

For your first 3 months, just CrossFit. That's plenty of stimulus. Adding "extra" cardio or lifting on top at this stage usually backfires. You under-recover, your CrossFit performance drops, and you get hurt.

Past month 3, walking on off-days is great. Light cardio (a zone-2 jog, row, or bike) is great. Anything more intense than that, ask a coach first.

Is CrossFit dangerous?

CrossFit's injury rate in published studies is comparable to general fitness training and lower than most contact sports. The risk factors that actually matter: ego, going too hard too soon, ignoring pain, and bad coaching. We handle three of those. The fourth (ego) is on you.

Show up. Listen to your coach. Scale on purpose. Don't go 100% in your first month. You'll be fine.

I missed a week. Now I'm scared to come back.

The hardest class is the one after a break. Show up anyway. Don't text first. Don't apologize. Just show up. The gym is genuinely happy to see you, no questions asked. Missing two weeks happens to everyone. The members still here at year 3 aren't the ones who never missed. They're the ones who always came back.

Do I need supplements, protein powder, or pre-workout?

For your first 6 months, no. Eat real food. Drink water. Sleep 7+ hours. That covers 95% of what supplements claim to do.

If you want to add one thing for recovery, make it protein. Chicken, eggs, fish, Greek yogurt, beef, or yes a protein shake if it's easier. Target about 0.8 to 1.0g of protein per pound of bodyweight per day. That's the whole conversation.

I already have ClassPass, SoulCycle, or a Peloton. Should I drop them?

For your first 3 months, keep them. Just don't use them on CrossFit days. CrossFit is a high-intensity stimulus, so piling SoulCycle or Barry's on top in the same week (especially the same day) is how new members under-recover and end up tweaked.

A realistic month-one stack: 3 CrossFit classes, 1 yoga or Peloton zone-2 session, 1 real rest day. Once your body adapts (around month 3), you can re-introduce a second modality. See the Your Fitness Stack section below for how each NYC modality plays with CrossFit and what to drop on stack days.

The exception is Pilates or reformer. Keep that every week. It's one of the best complements to CrossFit at any stage.

I travel for work 2x a month. Am I going to lose everything?

No. Travel is one of the more forgiving variables in CrossFit. There are 15,000+ affiliates worldwide and most welcome travelers for a small drop-in fee (usually $25 to $35). Dropping in on the road is one of the best parts of being part of the CrossFit community, so we encourage it. When there's no box nearby, a bodyweight workout on a hotel floor is still real CrossFit.

The travel kit:

  • Use the affiliate map at map.crossfit.com. There's a box within a couple miles of almost every major US city.
  • The hotel WOD: Cindy scaled to whatever pull-up surface the room has (or skip pull-ups, do ring rows on a doorframe if your bag has bands). Or: 50 burpees + 100 sit-ups + 150 squats for time.
  • Walk a lot. 30+ minutes a day of walking holds the baseline.

2 trips a month does not hurt year-one progress. 4+ trips a month with no plan does.

The Year-1 Mantra

Mechanics → Consistency → Intensity

The most important sentence in CrossFit, written by founder Greg Glassman. Memorize the order. Never invert it.

The hierarchy that builds athletes

One sentence. Three phases. In order.

Phase 1
Mechanics
Move the right way. Squat depth, neutral spine, full range, points of performance for each lift.
Phase 2
Consistency
Move the right way every rep. Set 1, rep 1 should look like set 5, rep 21. Under fatigue too.
Phase 3
Intensity
Now add load and speed. This is where adaptation happens — but only on a foundation of phases 1 and 2.

If a rep starts breaking down — drop the load or slow down. Period. Speed and weight chase consistency. Consistency chases mechanics. Never the other way around.

What this looks like in year 1

Yes, this is your year

  • You're starting to RX some shorter workouts. Cool.
  • You're testing benchmarks (Fran, Helen, Grace, 1RMs) and tracking them.
  • You're learning to break sets on purpose — 9 pull-ups as 5+4 instead of grinding singles.
  • You're noticing patterns: "My low back rounds when I get tired on the deadlift." That's awareness. Take it to a coach.

Not this year

  • Going for an RX you haven't earned — adding 30 lb because Sarah did, even though your last set looked rough.
  • Skipping the warm-up to "save energy."
  • Training 6 days a week. 3–4 is your sweet spot for year 1.
  • Comparing to year-5 athletes. You're 8 months ahead of yourself — that's the only comparison.
Months 4–8

Build the base

The first 30 classes were learning. Now we build the engine under it. Strength, skills, capacity.

The four legs of the base

Strength

Test & track your 1RMs in back squat, deadlift, strict press, bench. Re-test every 12 weeks. If a number isn't moving, change something.

Skills

Pick one gymnastics skill to chase per quarter. Pull-up → kipping pull-up → C2B → bar muscle-up. Build progressively, not all at once.

Engine

1×/week zone-2 cardio outside of class. 45–60 min easy run, row, or bike. Conversational pace. Boring. Highest-ROI thing you can do.

Volume

4 classes a week, consistent, beats 6 classes one week + 1 the next. Show up on the day you'd skip. That's where progress lives.

Strength benchmarks to chase (anyone, any year)

Not "you need to hit these by month X" — but rough waypoints showing the path.

  • Back squat: bodyweight × 1.5 (intermediate) → 1.75 (advanced) → 2.0 (elite)
  • Deadlift: bodyweight × 2.0 (intermediate) → 2.5 (advanced) → 3.0 (elite)
  • Strict press: 0.75 × bodyweight (intermediate) → bodyweight (advanced)
  • Clean & jerk: bodyweight (intermediate) → bodyweight × 1.5 (advanced)
  • Snatch: 0.75 × bodyweight (intermediate) → bodyweight × 1.2 (advanced)

The Friday Strength Specialty is here for you

The 3 rotations — Weightlifting, Gymnastics, BodyBuilding — are exactly the work your base needs in year 1. Show up for one rotation in full (a month at a time) and you'll see the difference in your regular metcons within 6 weeks.

"How heavy?" the year-1 question

The honest answer: heavy enough that the last rep of your last set is the hardest rep you've done — but still looked technically clean. If you reach the last rep and it was easy, you went too light. If it broke down, you went too heavy. Iterate weekly.

Months 9–12

Find the edges

By month 9 you have a base. Now we find what's holding you back and attack it on purpose.

Your year-1 weakness inventory

You don't need the full Athlete Profile (that's the Competitor tool). Just walk through this list and pick the one that feels weakest — that's where you spend your "plus" work for the next 6 weeks.

  1. Aerobic engine — do you survive 20+ min workouts, or do you blow up at minute 8?
  2. Gymnastics — pull-ups, HSPU, T2B, muscle-ups. Year 1 is when these start mattering.
  3. Olympic lifts — does the snatch / C&J feel like coordinated power or hopeful chaos?
  4. Sprint metcon capacity — can you redline for 4 minutes without quitting?
  5. Mobility — can you hit overhead squat to depth without falling backwards?

The 6-week weakness sprint

Pick one. Commit to 2× per week, 15 min before or after class, for 6 weeks. That's it. Examples:

If gymnastics is the edge

  • 2×/week: 5 sets of 3–5 strict pull-ups (banded if needed) before class
  • 1×/week: Cindy (20-min AMRAP of 5/10/15). Track total rounds.
  • Daily "snack": 30 hollow-body holds at home, 5 minutes total.

If engine is the edge

  • 1×/week zone-2 outside of class: 45–60 min easy run, row, or bike
  • 1×/week intervals: 8 × 500m row at 1:1 work:rest, sustained pace
  • Walk 30+ min/day on off-days

Register for the Open

The CrossFit Open happens every February–March. 3 workouts over 3 weeks. Everyone does it — scaled or RX. It's the highlight of the gym year, and your first Open is when CrossFit goes from "what I do" to "who I am."

Sign up at games.crossfit.com/open. We do the workouts together as a gym, Friday nights. Bring snacks.

Now You Test

Your first benchmarks

You're past the "mechanics first" phase. Now we put numbers on the board, track them, and watch them move. Pick 3 from this list and test in the next 30 days. Log every score in Wodify.

The benchmarks worth knowing (and re-testing every 3 months)

Fran

21-15-9 thrusters (95/65) + pull-ups

The signature CrossFit test. Glycolytic, painful, fast.

Beginner 7–9 min · Intermediate 5–7 min · Advanced 4–5 min · Elite <3 min

Helen

3 rds: 400m run, 21 KB swings (53/35), 12 pull-ups

Tests running + power + gymnastics. ~12 min for most.

Beginner 15–17 · Intermediate 11–14 · Advanced 9–10 · Elite <8

Grace

30 clean & jerks (135/95)

Single-modality barbell. Tests strength-stamina at moderate load.

Beginner 6–7 · Intermediate 4–5 · Advanced 3–4 · Elite <2

Cindy

20-min AMRAP: 5 pull-ups, 10 push-ups, 15 squats

The bodyweight engine test. Equipment-free.

Beginner 10 rds · Intermediate 15 rds · Advanced 20 rds · Elite 25+ rds

Back Squat 1RM

heaviest single rep, full depth

The most-tracked strength benchmark in CrossFit.

Goal: bodyweight × 1.5 (intermediate), × 2.0 (advanced)

Deadlift 1RM

heaviest single, hips back, neutral spine

Pulls everything else up with it. Always trains.

Goal: bodyweight × 2.0 (int.), × 2.5 (adv.), × 3.0 (elite)

How to test smart

  • Don't test cold. Warm up like you would for a regular class workout, plus 1–2 specific sets at the WOD's working weight.
  • One test per week, max. Don't try to PR Fran and your back squat in the same session. Pick one. Crush it. Recover.
  • Strategy matters. For Fran: plan your thruster breaks BEFORE the clock starts. Don't decide mid-set.
  • Log it. Scaling, time, load, RX/scaled, who you trained with — all in Wodify. In 12 weeks you'll re-test and the data is gold.
  • Then forget it for 12 weeks. Constant re-testing slows progress. Train, train, train, then test.
The Multiplier

Recovery 101

In year 1, the difference between people who keep getting better and people who plateau is recovery. Not programming. Not extra work. Recovery.

The 3 inputs that matter (in this order)

1. Sleep — 7–9 hours, consistently

Adaptation happens in sleep, not in the gym. The gym is the stimulus; sleep is the response. Set a hard bedtime, reverse-engineer from your wake time. No screens 30 min before bed. Cool, dark room. Caffeine cutoff at 2 PM. Wearables (Whoop, Garmin, Oura, Apple Watch) are great after 6 months — you'll see the pattern between sleep and lifting performance instantly.

2. Protein — 0.8–1.0g per pound of bodyweight, daily

You can't recover from training without raw materials. Target ~0.8–1.0g of protein per pound of bodyweight, every day. Spread across meals (not all at dinner). Real food (chicken, beef, fish, eggs, dairy) preferred; whey protein is a fine top-up.

Carbs around training: a real meal 2–3 hours before; a real meal within 1–2 hours after. Don't fast through a hard training day — you'll feel it the next session.

3. Volume management — 3–4 classes/week, programmed deloads

4 classes a week is the year-1 sweet spot. 5 is OK if you sleep and eat well. 6 is asking for trouble. Every 8–12 weeks, take a "deload week" — 3 classes that week instead of 4, all at 70–80% effort. Your body needs the dip to keep building.

The recovery hierarchy

Skip
Gadgets, infrared, ice baths, supplements
Helpful
Foam roll, mobility, walks, sauna
Essential
Sleep, protein, water, rest day

Master the right side before spending money on the left.

Signs you're under-recovering

  • Resting heart rate trending up week-over-week
  • Sleep quality dropping (waking at 3 AM, feeling unrested)
  • Strength numbers stalled or going backwards
  • Irritable, low motivation, not looking forward to class
  • Nagging tweaks that aren't healing in 7–10 days

If you see 2+ of these for a week: take a full week at 60% volume. You'll come back faster than you left.

The Manhattan tax

NYC adds a recovery cost most CrossFit content ignores. A 60-hour work week, 11 PM bedtimes, a glass of natural wine on Wednesday, a Saturday brunch that's actually two cocktails, weekday cortisol that doesn't fully drop until Sunday afternoon — all of it is real stress your body is paying for. 4 quality CF sessions + actual recovery beats 6 sessions on top of a punishing week. Train less when life accelerates. That's the move.

The Year-1 Questions

What everyone wonders around month 8

The questions that show up after the new-member glow wears off. Honest answers.

When am I "RX ready"?

Per-movement, not per-WOD. You're RX-ready on a movement when (1) you have the strength to complete the prescribed weight for the prescribed rep scheme, AND (2) you can still do it with clean mechanics on the last rep.

Most year-1 athletes can RX some WODs (the ones in their wheelhouse) and still scale others. That's normal. Even competitors scale workouts. The real flex is scaling on purpose, every time.

When can I start kipping pull-ups?

The standard rule: 5 strict pull-ups before you kip. Strict first because (a) it builds the shoulder strength the kip relies on and (b) it protects your shoulders. Adult-onset CrossFitters often try to skip this step. That's the number-one source of pull-up shoulder injuries.

If you have 5 strict, ask your coach to teach you the kip swing. Most coaches will spend 5 minutes after class walking you through it.

Why am I plateauing?

Most year-1 "plateaus" aren't plateaus. They're recovery debt. Sleep, protein, training frequency are all interacting. The fastest fix: take a deload week (3 classes at 70%), then re-evaluate. 8 times out of 10, the numbers move again.

The other 2 times: you've stopped progressively overloading. Add a little weight or a rep to your "plus" work. Trust the program (PRVN is what we run) and supplement with intentional accessory work if your weakness is identified.

Should I follow a separate strength program?

In year 1, no. Stick with the CrossFit class plus the Friday Strength Specialty rotation. That's plenty. Adding a separate program right now usually leads to over-training and under-recovering.

In year 2 with a clear strength deficit (for example, back squat under bodyweight times 1.5 after a year of consistent training), a 12-week supplemental block (Starting Strength, 5/3/1, or a coach-built block) can help. Talk to a Manager first.

Why does my back hurt after deadlifts?

Usually because your low back is rounding under load. The neutral spine breaks down before the hips can finish. That's lumbar flexion under compression, and the soreness is your erectors doing work the hips should be doing.

Fix: drop the load by 20% for a session. Have a coach watch your setup and the top of your pull. Film yourself from the side. Brace harder (deep breath in, brace like someone's about to punch you). The pain should resolve within a week of cleaner pulls.

If pain persists or is sharp and localized, see a PT. Don't try to train through it.

How much should I eat?

Track for 7 days with MyFitnessPal. Don't change anything, just log. You'll see the truth. From there:

  • To maintain: roughly 14 to 16 calories per pound of bodyweight
  • To gain muscle: add 200 to 300 calories per day on top of maintenance
  • To lose fat: subtract 300 to 500 calories per day from maintenance, protein up

Protein at about 0.8 to 1.0g per pound of bodyweight regardless. Carbs around training. Real food preferred over shakes.

Should I do the Open scaled or RX?

The honest rule: pick the division you can complete with intent. If you can do the RX workout and finish near the time cap with reasonable mechanics, go RX. If RX would leave you grinding singles for 20 minutes with bad form, do Scaled.

The Open scores you within your division, so doing Scaled well beats doing RX poorly every time. Pick the version where you can perform, not the one with the better name.

I've been here a year and still don't have a muscle-up. Normal?

Totally normal. The muscle-up is a year-2 (often year-3) skill for most adult-onset CrossFitters. Pre-reqs: 10 strict pull-ups, 10 strict dips, and an understanding of the kip transition. Most people in year 1 have part 1 of that list. The other two parts are the year-2 project.

Don't chase the muscle-up while your strict pull-up is still at 5. Build the foundation. The muscle-up comes for free once the base is there.

I want to compete. Should I switch to the Competitor track in this guide?

If you've done one Open and want more, yes, peek at the Competitor track. The Athlete Profile star chart is the best tool we have for showing what to attack next. But don't burn year 1 on competition-specific training. The base you're building now is what feeds competition fitness 2 years from now.

My calendar is brutal. What's the minimum viable CF week?

To maintain what you've built, 2 classes a week. To keep improving, 4. The middle ground (3 a week) is where most year-1 plateaus happen, because change comes from doing something more often than you don't. 4 days is the floor for that math to work in your favor.

If life collapses your calendar for a stretch:

  • 2 per week: pick the two with the biggest gap. Tuesday and Saturday is a classic. Do each class fully. Don't half-ass them just because there are fewer.
  • 1 per week + walking: Saturday class plus 30 minutes of walking on most other days holds the baseline. Don't try to "make up" missed sessions when life resets.
  • 0 for a week: just come back. The hardest class is the first one back. Don't text, don't explain, just show up.

Year-one plateaus almost always come from inconsistency, not from low volume. 2 sessions a week, every week, beats 5 sessions every other week.

I'm training for the NYC Marathon. How do I keep CrossFit in?

You can, and this combo works better than most people think. Strength training reduces marathon injury risk. The framework:

  • 16-week marathon block: CrossFit drops to 2 or 3 per week. Skip metcons with high-volume running (we'll scale them out). Keep the Friday Strength Specialty if it's not a tempo or long-run day.
  • Calendar around the long run. Saturday long run means no CrossFit on Saturday OR Friday. The legs need to be fresh.
  • The week-of-race taper: drop CF to one short metcon on Tuesday. No PR attempts. No DOMS-inducing sessions inside 5 days of race day.

See the "CF + NYC Marathon block" sample week in the Fitness Stack section for a day-by-day template.

I'm doing CrossFit + yoga + something else. Is that too much?

Possibly. Use the recovery check from Recovery 101:

  • Resting heart rate trending up for 2+ weeks?
  • Sleep quality dropping?
  • CF numbers stalled or going backwards?
  • Nagging tweaks?

2 or more yeses and you're over-doing it. The fix isn't always to drop CrossFit. Sometimes it's drop the third modality, or stop doing SoulCycle on the same day as CF. The Fitness Stack section's sample weeks show realistic combinations that don't blow your recovery budget.

The Veteran's North Star

Aiming for RX

You're past the "I exist at the gym" phase and into the "I want to do this well" phase. The job now: choosing RX on purpose, scaling on purpose, and earning every prescription one movement at a time.

What "RX ready" actually means

The mistake most veterans make is treating RX as a binary: "Am I RX-ready or not?" Wrong question. The right question is per-movement:

You're RX on a movement when…

  • You have the strength to complete the prescribed weight or skill
  • You have the capacity to do it for the prescribed rep scheme (not just one set)
  • Your last rep still meets movement standards — same depth, same lockout, same control as your first
  • The time domain stays intact — if "intermediate" Fran is 7 min and RX Fran would take you 12, the stimulus is wrong; scale.

Movement standards — the ones that actually matter

The Open is graded by these. Internalize them now; they're not optional.

Movement The non-negotiable standard
SquatHip crease below the top of the knee at the bottom. Full hip + knee extension at the top.
Pull-upArms fully extended at the bottom. Chin clearly over the bar at the top.
Push-upChest touches floor. Body rigid (no piking, no worming). Full arm lockout at top.
HSPUHead touches floor (or mat). Arms fully extended, body straight at top.
Wall ballHip below knee in receiving position. Ball strikes the target (10/9 ft) at the top.
Box jumpHips fully open on top of box. Two-foot takeoff for RX divisions (no step-up).
BurpeeChest AND thighs touch floor. Two feet off floor at the top (small jump).
Toes-to-barBoth feet touch the bar at the same time, between the hands. Full arm extension at the bottom.

The "scale up on purpose" decision tree

Use this before every WOD where you're tempted to RX. Honest answers only.

  1. Can I do the heaviest movement at the prescribed weight for at least one clean set of the prescribed reps? If no → scale.
  2. Is the highest-skill movement (HSPU, MU, T2B, snatch) something I can do for the volume in the WOD? If no → scale that movement, not the whole WOD.
  3. Will going RX put me 50%+ above the stimulus time? If yes → scale.
  4. Will I have to grind singles for 5+ minutes on any movement? If yes → scale.

If you get past all four with honest yeses — RX. If you fail one, that movement scales. Mixing scales (e.g., RX weight but scaled rep volume) is totally legit and often the smartest choice.

Skill Progressions

The skills that separate Year 1 from Year 3

Strict before kipping, kipping before efficient, efficient before fast. Each takes ~12 weeks of focused work. Pick one. Commit. Then pick the next.

Butterfly pull-ups

Pre-req: 15+ unbroken kipping pull-ups, no shoulder issues

  1. Drill the rhythm — empty hanging swings, hands on bar, hip pop emphasis
  2. Singles, eyes on the bar — focus on the toes-forward to chest-back trajectory
  3. 2s and 3s — link reps with no pause at the top
  4. Set of 5 — then 10, 15 — fast tempo, light grip

Bar muscle-up

Pre-req: 10 strict pull-ups, 10 strict dips, comfortable kipping

  1. Kip swing with arch-hollow — get the body shape big and dynamic
  2. Big kip pull-up to chest-to-bar — drive hips to bar, pull hard
  3. Banded transition drills — practice the rollover with assistance
  4. Jump-up muscle-up from box — feel the transition without the pull
  5. First strict-ish MU, then kipping — singles, then doubles

Ring muscle-up

Pre-req: bar MU; 5 strict ring dips; comfortable false-grip work

  1. False-grip ring rows + holds — wrist conditioning is the limiter
  2. Kip swings on rings — practice arch-hollow on the unstable platform
  3. Strict transition drills — pull to chest, slow transition
  4. Banded / box ring MUs — assistance to feel the full movement
  5. First kipping ring MU — singles only for the first month

Kipping HSPU

Pre-req: 30s freestanding handstand hold OR 5 strict deficit HSPU

  1. Strict against wall — build to 5 unbroken reps from elevated abmat
  2. Kip drills — knees-to-chest from hands-on-floor, no press yet
  3. Kip + press from abmat — feel the timing of knees down → press up
  4. Touch-and-go reps — link sets of 3, then 5, then 10

Double-unders (unbroken)

Pre-req: comfortable single-unders, properly sized rope

  1. Buy a rope cut to YOU — RX Smart Gear, ~$40, lifetime ROI
  2. Single, single, double drill — find the rhythm
  3. 5 in a row — keep practicing the same wrist motion
  4. 20, 50, 100 unbroken — relax the grip, breathe, look ahead

Olympic lift technique

Pre-req: comfortable with the lifts; want to add 20+ lb to C&J / snatch

  1. Film yourself monthly — top set, side angle, slow it down
  2. Burgener warm-up daily — empty bar, every training day
  3. One position drill per week — start position, transition, catch
  4. Take a USAW or local weightlifting clinic — best ROI in the sport
The Friday Class You're Underusing

Strength Specialty deep dive

Friday PM rotates through three specialty programs — Weightlifting, Gymnastics, BodyBuilding. Most veterans dip in and out. The athletes who break through plateaus stay through full rotations.

How to use each rotation

Weightlifting rotation

4-week block focused on snatch + clean & jerk + back/front squat. Test your lifts going in, test on the way out. Expect 5–15 lb PR on at least one Oly lift if you don't miss a session.

  • Don't add load until your form is intact for the whole set
  • Film your top set every week
  • Ask the coach for a cue you can take to Monday class

Gymnastics rotation

4-week block focused on strict + kipping pull-up / HSPU / muscle-up / T2B progressions. Pick ONE skill to drive forward this month. Don't try all four.

  • Practice strict before adding kip
  • Volume over PR — 50 quality reps > 5 max reps
  • Daily 5-min "snack" at home compounds fast

BodyBuilding rotation

4-week block of hypertrophy-style accessory work. Targets the muscles that CrossFit alone undertrains: lats, traps, posterior chain, single-leg work. Big impact on injury prevention for veterans.

  • Higher reps (8–15), shorter rest (60–90s)
  • Tempo matters more than load (3 sec eccentric)
  • This is where shoulder + knee health gets banked

The accessory protocol (any rotation)

20 minutes after class, 2× per week, pick your weakness from these:

  • Shoulder: banded face pulls 3 × 15, prone Y-T-Ws 3 × 10
  • Lower back: good mornings 3 × 10, GHD raises 3 × 10
  • Single-leg: RFE split squats 3 × 8/side, Cossacks 3 × 8/side
  • Grip: dead hangs 3 × max, farmer's carries 3 × 30m
The 3 Weeks That Test Everything

The Open at RX level

You've done the Open before. This year you're going RX. Different game. Different prep.

What changes when you go RX

  • Strategy matters more than fitness. Sub-3-min Fran isn't fitness; it's pacing + breaks executed perfectly. Same for the Open.
  • Movement standards are stricter — and judged. A "kinda" rep is a no-rep. Practice strict standards in regular class.
  • You're competing for placement. Top 25% of your division = Quarterfinals. That's the benchmark to optimize against.
  • Two-attempt math. Submit Friday with a full effort. Only redo Monday if a strategy error left points on the table.

The 3-week prep timeline (what to do in the weeks before)

3 weeks out
Stop building. Start sharpening.

Test your "limiting factor" movements — usually double-unders, bar muscle-ups, HSPU. Drill 5 minutes daily.

Make sure your equipment is dialed: rope cut to height, lifting shoes broken in, judge lined up.

2 weeks out
Test your "Friday routine"

Eat what you'd eat 2–3 hours before a heavy WOD. Sleep when you'd plan to sleep. Time your caffeine.

Drop training volume 15%. Keep intensity. You want to feel "bouncy" not "smashed."

1 week out
Open prep mode

Lower volume 30%. No 1RM testing. No new movements. Keep short, sharp pieces (5–10 min) at race pace.

Sleep 8+ hours. Hydrate (bodyweight ÷ 2 in ounces, daily). Carb intake up Thursday evening.

Friday (workout day)
Execute the routine

Pre-workout meal 2–3 hrs prior: 1–3g carbs/kg, moderate protein, low fat/fiber.

Caffeine 3–6 mg/kg, 30–60 min before. Warm up exactly how you'd plan to. Heat selection: get a judge you trust.

One and done. Submit. Move on.

The 2026 Open at a glance (real numbers)

For context — what placement actually means in a 379,000-athlete field (2026 individual division):

Tier Men 18–34 rank Women 18–34 rank
Top 1%~1,270~1,060
Top 5%~6,350~5,300
Top 10%~12,710~10,596
Top 25% (Quarterfinals cutline)~31,780~26,490
Median (50%)~63,550~52,980

2026 winners: Colten Mertens (M, back-to-back), Lucy Campbell (W, first Open win). Source: CrossFitDataLab 2026 analysis.

Training to Keep Training

Recovery & longevity

By year 2 your body talks back. The veteran's job is listening — and managing volume so you're still here, healthy, at year 10.

The 4 longevity levers (in priority order)

  1. Sleep 7–9 hours, every night. The single biggest variable. Track with a wearable — you'll see the correlation with PR days within a month.
  2. Protein 0.8–1.0g per lb bodyweight, daily. Non-negotiable for tissue repair past year 1.
  3. Programmed deloads every 8–12 weeks. Week 12 should be 3 classes at 70% intensity, not 5 at 100%. Your nervous system needs it.
  4. Mobility 10 min daily. The areas that hurt at 40 are the areas you didn't maintain at 30. Hips, T-spine, shoulders, ankles.

Warning signs (act on these)

You're heading for trouble if…

  • Resting heart rate trending up over 2+ weeks (5+ bpm above baseline)
  • Sleep quality dropping (waking at 3 AM, feeling unrested)
  • Strength numbers stalled or going backwards over 4+ weeks
  • "I'd rather not come to class today" 3+ times in a row
  • A nagging tweak that hasn't healed in 10+ days
  • HRV trending down for 2+ weeks

If you see 2+: take a full deload week immediately. 3 classes at 60–70% intensity, no PR attempts. Sleep priority #1. You'll come back faster than you left.

The 30/30 rule for in-class injury management

Old veterans know this one. If you have a tweak:

  • If sharp or new (under 48 hrs): tell a coach, scale OUT of that movement for the session.
  • If chronic (more than a week): see a PT or sports doctor. Don't train through it — train AROUND it.
  • If it's "annoying but functional": reduce that movement's load by 30%, reduce volume by 30%, for 30 days. Most resolve.

The veterans who are still here at year 10 are the ones who scaled smart, deloaded religiously, and never trained through pain.

Veteran Questions

The questions that show up in year 2+

When should I switch from "CrossFit member" to "competitor"?

If you've done 2+ Opens at RX, your numbers are consistently improving (not plateaued), and you genuinely enjoy training to test instead of training to feel good — then you're competitor-curious. Toggle to the Competitor track and try the Athlete Profile tool. It'll either light you up (= you're a competitor) or feel like overkill (= stay in the Veteran lane).

I've been here 3 years and feel stuck. What now?

3-year plateaus are real and common. Three things to consider:

  • Change the input. Commit to a full Strength Specialty rotation (12 weeks). Or a separate 12-week strength block. Same routine = same results.
  • Address a glaring weakness. Pick the worst one and put it on the calendar 2× per week for 8 weeks.
  • Check recovery. Most 3-year plateaus aren't programming — they're under-eating, under-sleeping, or grinding through chronic tweaks.
How heavy should I actually be going on metcons?

The honest target: load that lets you finish at the intended stimulus time, with clean mechanics on the LAST rep. For most "intermediate" metcons that's 70–80% of your 1RM on the lift in question, depending on the rep scheme.

If the coach posts an intended-stimulus time of 12 min and you're at 18 — you went too heavy. Drop load. The stimulus IS the workout.

Should I add a powerlifting or weightlifting program?

If your strength benchmarks are stalled (under bodyweight × 1.5 back squat after 2+ years), a 12-week supplemental block (5/3/1, Conjugate, or a coach-built linear progression) can move the needle. Run it INSTEAD of one Specialty rotation, not on top of CrossFit + Specialty.

Most veterans don't need it — they need to eat more protein and sleep more. But for a true strength deficit, it works.

I'm 40+ and feel slower than I used to. Normal?

Yes — but smaller than you'd think. Recovery slows ~5–10% per decade, max lifts drop ~5% per decade after 30. That's it. The "I'm too old for this" stuff is mostly recovery debt and de-prioritized basics (sleep, protein, mobility).

The 50+ Masters division at the Open has athletes doing things 20-year-olds can't. Age is a variable, not a verdict.

I miss a week — what's the smart return?

Don't try to "make up" missed sessions. Just resume the program where it is. First session back: 70% intensity. Second session: 85%. Third: 100%. Three sessions and you're whole again.

Should I drop in at other gyms when I travel?

Yes, and we encourage it. Drop-in fees run about $25 to $35 at most boxes. Training in another community gives you a window into how other coaches think and shakes you out of the home-gym rut. A few worth planning a trip around: CrossFit Mayhem (Cookeville, TN), MisFit Athletics (Maine), and any of the HQ-area affiliates in NorCal.

How do I judge a friend's Open workout?

Watch the CrossFit Games movement standards video for that year's Open. Pay attention to: full lockouts, ROM standards, transitions. No-rep early and often — the worst thing you can do as a judge is let bad reps count, because it ruins your friend's actual placement.

Stand where you can see the full body and the bar. Count out loud. Tell them what set you're on at the halfway mark.

Manhattan is exhausting — how do I train for the Open without burning out at work?

The veteran's superpower is recognizing when "more" is actually less. In the lead-up to the Open:

  • Keep CrossFit at 4×/week. Don't sneak in extra "Open prep" sessions on top — most veterans burn out by week 3 of trying to.
  • Drop the second modality temporarily. If you normally do CF + SoulCycle + yoga, pause SoulCycle in the 6 weeks pre-Open. Keep yoga; it's recovery.
  • Sleep is your competitive edge. 8 hrs minimum on the nights before Friday workouts. Hard bedtime, screens off 30 min before, blackout curtains.
  • Use a wearable. Whoop / Oura / Garmin — see the HRV section. Make decisions based on the trend, not the day.
  • Block your calendar. Treat the 4 weekly CF slots like recurring meetings with the CEO. Don't move them for low-priority calls.

The veterans who break through in their 3rd or 4th Open didn't add hours — they protected the hours they had.

I do Hyrox / BJJ / climbing on the side — is it making me better at CF or worse?

Depends on which:

  • Hyrox = direct positive transfer. CF lifters & engines win Hyrox. Hyrox training (sled, long runs) also feeds CF metcons.
  • BJJ = positive for hip mobility, grip endurance, mental game. Slight cost: shoulder fatigue, finger soreness on gymnastics days. Net positive if you manage volume.
  • Climbing = pure complement. Pull strength, scap control, finger conditioning. Skip pull-up volume on climb days and you're golden.
  • Power lifting / Olympic weightlifting = positive if it's your weak axis. If your back squat is already 2× BW, more PL won't move the CF needle as much as engine work.
  • Long-distance running = positive if you're managing the recovery, negative if you're racking up junk miles. The CF + marathon stack works; CF + "I just love running" without structure doesn't.

See the Fitness Stack section for how to schedule each one alongside CF.

The Competitor's Tool

The Athlete Profile

Real numbers in, prioritized weaknesses out. Built on the same evaluation framework as the CrossFit Competitor's Training Guide. Re-test every 12 weeks; let the chart drive your cycle planning.

What the tiers mean (in Open terms)

The 5 tiers map roughly to where you'd land in the CrossFit Open 18–34 division:

  • 5 / Elite — Top 5% (~6,000 of 127k men, ~5,000 of 106k women)
  • 4 / Advanced — Top 10–25% (Quarterfinals territory: top 25% = QF cutline)
  • 3 / Intermediate — Median performer in your age group
  • 2 / Novice — Bottom 30–50%, scaled-division range
  • 1 / Beginner — New to the sport; scaled in all events

Based on CrossFit Open 2026 data: 379,000 athletes worldwide, 233k in Men's/Women's 18–34.

Benchmarks for
Used to scale 1RM and time benchmarks. Doesn't store anywhere.

Fill what you know. Blanks are fine — the chart just doesn't plot them. Tip: hover/tap each label to see the tier table.

Max Strength 1 axis

Olympic Lifting 1 axis

Gymnastics 1 axis

Sprint Metcon 1 axis

Mid Metcon 1 axis

Engine 1 axis

Mobility 1 axis

Recovery & Lifestyle 1 axis

Saved locally ✓
You Tier 3 (intermediate)

Scores by axis

1 Beginner · 2 Novice · 3 Intermediate · 4 Advanced · 5 Elite

Your top three to attack

From the Competitor's Training Guide: "More frequently program weaknesses to increase the rate of progress."

The Year, Mapped

Periodization basics

From the CrossFit Competitor's Training Guide: a competitor's year isn't a continuous grind — it's phases. Off-season builds. In-season sharpens. Comp prep peaks. Recovery resets. Repeat.

Off-Season
June – October (5 months)
Build the engine + weakness work
  • Highest training volume
  • Target the bottom 3 axes of your Profile
  • Heavy strength block (12 weeks)
  • Aerobic base (zone-2 outside class 2×/week)
Pre-Season
November – December (8 weeks)
Specificity + intensity ramp
  • Add Open-style couplets/triplets weekly
  • Test benchmarks (Fran, Grace, Helen)
  • Skill volume: BMU, HSPU, MU touch reps
  • Begin tracking HRV + sleep daily
Comp Prep
January – February (6 weeks)
Peak — sharpen, don't build
  • Drop volume 20–30%
  • Maintain intensity
  • Practice "Friday routine" weekly
  • Test camera angles, judge logistics
The Open
Late Feb – mid March (3 weeks)
Execute, don't experiment
  • Taper 48–72 hrs before each workout
  • Pre-meal: 1–3g/kg carbs, 2–3 hrs prior
  • Caffeine 3–6 mg/kg, 30–60 min prior
  • One-and-done unless strategy was botched
Recovery
Late March – April (2–4 weeks)
Full reset
  • 3 classes/week at 60–70%
  • No PR attempts
  • Sleep + nutrition priority
  • Re-test Athlete Profile end of April

The volume rule of thumb

A competitor's weekly training volume typically peaks around 10–14 hours during off-season and tapers to 4–6 hours during the Open. The mistake most amateurs make is staying at peak volume year-round — which leads to plateau, injury, or both. The dip is the point.

Quarterfinals + Semifinals path

  • The Open (Feb–Mar): everyone competes. Top 25% per division → Quarterfinals.
  • Quarterfinals (March): 4-day online competition, 4 workouts. Top ~125 per division/continent → Semifinals.
  • Semifinals (May–June): in-person regional events. Top finishers qualify for the Games.
  • CrossFit Games (July–August): the world championship. ~40 individual men + ~40 individual women.
The 3 Weeks That Matter Most

Open peaking & strategy (2026 update)

The latest sport-science wisdom for The Open, distilled from current peaking research and 2026 Open coverage. "Preparation, not panic."

The 5 principles backed by current research

1. Taper, don't cram

2–3% improvement in endurance and strength performance from intelligent tapering. Reduce volume 48–72 hrs before each workout while maintaining short, sharp intensity. The goal: arrive feeling "bouncy and hungry," not "smashed."

2. Carb-load lightly

Increase to 5–7g carbs per kg bodyweight in the 24–36 hours before your attempt. Don't change your diet drastically — just bias toward easily-digestible carbs and increase portion size at dinner Thursday.

3. Pre-meal precision

2–3 hrs prior: 1–3g carbs/kg, moderate protein (0.2–0.4g/kg), low fat & fiber. Example for a 165-lb athlete: ~100g carbs + 25g protein. White rice + chicken + a banana = textbook.

4. Caffeine works

3–6 mg/kg, 30–60 min before your warm-up. Reduces perceived exertion and improves power output ~3–7% in metcon-length efforts. Test the exact dose in training first — don't experiment Open day.

5. One-and-done mindset

Go Friday. Give 100%. Accept the score. Move on. Redo Monday only if you botched strategy (e.g., went out too hot and DNF'd) — not because your friend went 8 reps higher. The first attempt is usually the best attempt.

6. Fix your limiting transition

Most leaderboard drops come from one weak movement. For 2026, common limiters: double-unders, bar muscle-ups, ring muscle-ups, sub-10-min HSPU sets. Pick yours; drill it daily in the 3 weeks before.

Friday Night Lights at CFER — the routine

  1. 3 hrs before: Pre-workout meal. Same one every week.
  2. 90 min before: Arrive at the gym. Watch a heat. Don't watch a heat of someone way better than you — bad anxiety.
  3. 60 min before: General warm-up (jog, bike, mobility). Get warm, not gassed.
  4. 45 min before: Caffeine. Hydrate (no chugging — sip).
  5. 30 min before: Specific warm-up. Each movement at workout pace + load, brief sets.
  6. 15 min before: Mental rehearsal. Walk through your strategy out loud with your judge.
  7. 5 min before: Hands on the equipment. Last-minute setup checks.
  8. 0:00: Go. Execute the plan, not the hero plan.

Strategy for the most common Open workout types

Format Strategy
Short sprint (sub-7 min)Don't pace. Redline from rep 1. Practice this style in training — most CrossFitters under-fire on these.
Mid metcon (7–15 min)Pick a SUSTAINABLE rep scheme from set 1. Break BEFORE failure. Avoid "first set giant, then crash."
Long AMRAP (20+ min)Negative-split. Round 1 should feel "too easy." Round 3 should feel "manageable." Round 5 should feel like the workout.
Couplet with limiting skill (e.g., MU + heavy lift)Plan break points on the skill movement BEFORE the workout. Set 1: 3. Set 2: 2. Set 3: singles. Stay ahead of failure.
Heavy lift ladderKnow your top 3–4 numbers cold. Don't burn through the warm-up sets. Conserve grip for the top bar.
Performance Nutrition

Comp day fueling

High-carb availability supports high-intensity output. Carbs are the gas; protein is the rebuild; fat & fiber are the things to keep low pre-workout.

The 24-hour fuel plan

Day before
Carb-bias your day

Aim for 5–7g carbs/kg bodyweight (~400–600g for a 75kg athlete). Bias toward easily-digestible sources: rice, potatoes, pasta, bread, fruit. Hydrate aggressively: bodyweight in lb ÷ 2 = oz of water minimum.

3 hrs prior
The pre-workout meal

1–3g carbs/kg + 0.2–0.4g protein/kg, low fat & fiber. Examples: chicken + white rice + jam; oatmeal + whey + banana; bagel + turkey + small apple.

45 min prior
Caffeine + hydration

3–6 mg/kg caffeine (200–400mg for most). Sip water with electrolytes. Optional: 30g of fast carbs (date, banana, gel).

During (if >25 min)
Carbs if you need them

For workouts under 25 min: water only. For multi-piece events or chippers: 30–60g carbs/hour via gels, dates, sport drink.

Within 60 min after
Refuel window

1g carb/kg + 20–40g protein. Bias toward fast: chocolate milk + protein shake works. Real meal 2–3 hrs later. Rehydrate with electrolytes.

3 pre-Open snacks (science-backed)

Option A — Banana + honey + Greek yogurt

60-90 min before. Fast carbs from banana + honey, stable BG from yogurt's protein. Light on the stomach, big on energy.

Option B — White rice + egg whites + jam

90 min before. High-glycemic, low fiber, low fat. Maximizes glycogen + power output. The classic "athlete plate."

Option C — Oatmeal + whey + berries

90–120 min before. Sustained carbs from oats, fast protein from whey, antioxidants. Best for early-morning heats.

What to avoid pre-workout

  • High fat (slows digestion → cramping risk)
  • High fiber (GI distress under high HR)
  • New foods on competition day (test EVERYTHING in training first)
  • Excessive caffeine (over 6 mg/kg can hurt more than help)
  • Sugar-alcohol "sugar-free" foods (GI distress)
The Mental Game

Mindset, mental, between heats

From the Competitor's Training Guide and current sports psychology: the mindset stuff isn't extra credit. At the competitive level it's the difference between heats.

The pre-workout mental routine (5 minutes, every time)

  1. Visualize the workout, start to finish. See yourself moving well, breathing, breaking sets, finishing under the cap. Run it twice.
  2. Anchor your strategy in one sentence. "Steady on the row, sets of 5 on the pull-ups, breathe at the bar." That's your mantra under fatigue.
  3. Pre-decide your "ugly minute" response. When (not if) it gets ugly — what do you do? Most competitors answer: "I lower my eyes, I keep my hands on the bar, I count to ten." Have one.
  4. Acknowledge the nerves. Nerves = your body preparing. Reframe "I'm nervous" as "I'm ready."
  5. Breathe. 4-second inhale, 4-second hold, 4-second exhale × 5 rounds. Lowers HR, focuses mind.

Between heats (multi-event competitions)

  • The first 10 minutes: active recovery only. Walk. Hydrate. Re-fuel if >2 hrs to the next event.
  • Don't watch the leaderboard. It locks you into other people's scores. Your job is your next event, not last event's ranking.
  • Don't replay errors. Acknowledge the mistake (1 sentence), file it, move on. Rumination eats the next event.
  • If >2 hrs to next event: light meal, 30 min before warm-up. Same pre-workout protocol as event 1.
  • If <90 min: liquid carbs only, no solid food. Walk, breathe, visualize the next event.

Goal-setting from the Competitor Guide

The 3-tier goal structure

  • Outcome goal: "Top 25% in the Open this year." External, partially out of your control.
  • Performance goal: "Sub-3:30 Fran by March." Internal, measurable.
  • Process goal: "Drill double-unders 5 min/day for 60 days." Daily, 100% in your control.

Use all three. Process goals build performance goals. Performance goals enable outcome goals. Skip process and the rest collapses.

The post-workout debrief (3 questions, 60 seconds)

After any tested effort — Open workout, comp event, benchmark re-test — answer in writing:

  1. What worked? (specifically — the breaks, the pace, the warm-up)
  2. What didn't? (specifically — where time was lost, where energy was over-spent)
  3. What's one thing I'd do differently next time?

Write it in Wodify notes or your phone. After 5–10 of these, patterns emerge. Coaching gold.

Daily Readiness

HRV & recovery monitoring

At the competitor level, training too hard on a low-readiness day costs you more than you gain. Daily monitoring is the cheapest performance hack you have.

The metrics worth tracking

HRV (heart rate variability)

The dominant readiness metric. Trend-relative — what matters is your HRV today vs. your 7-day baseline. Drops >15% from baseline = under-recovered.

Resting heart rate

Take first thing in the morning, same time, same context. A rolling 7-day RHR up 5+ bpm from baseline = stress signal (illness, training, life).

Sleep duration + efficiency

Sleep <6 hrs OR <80% efficiency for 2+ nights = scale today's session. Sleep debt compounds; performance doesn't recover same-day.

Subjective rating

"How recovered do I feel?" 1–10. Logged daily. Surprisingly predictive — your gut knows, even when the wearable doesn't.

The wearables that work (and which to pick)

  • Whoop — best for athletes who want HRV + strain + sleep with zero friction. Subscription model ($30/mo). The CrossFit competitor's default.
  • Garmin (Forerunner/Fenix series) — best if you also want GPS + training data. Body Battery + HRV status built-in.
  • Oura Ring — best for sleep + readiness; less great for training metrics. Worn 24/7 comfortably.
  • Apple Watch (with HRV4Training or similar) — works but requires manual measurement; not as seamless.

Pick one. Use it for 60 days. Make decisions based on the trend, not the day.

The decision tree

Green day (HRV at/above baseline, RHR steady, slept 7+)

Train as planned. Push intensity, attempt PRs, RX everything. This is when adaptation banks the hardest.

Yellow day (HRV 10–15% below, RHR up 3–5 bpm)

Train, but adjust. Drop top loads 10–15%, skip PR attempts, focus on technique work. Keep moving — full rest often makes recovery slower.

Red day (HRV >15% below, RHR up 5+ bpm, poor sleep, sick)

Active recovery only. Walk, mobility, foam roll, zone-2 cardio. NO intensity. Pushing here adds days to recovery — not gains.

The single rule

Train hard on green days. Train smart on yellow days. Rest on red days. The competitors who do this consistently for 5 years are the ones still here at year 10.

Your NYC Fitness Stack

How CrossFit fits with everything else you do

Manhattan doesn't have one gym in your neighborhood. It has twelve. Most CFER members keep one or two other modalities in the rotation. Here's how to make them complement each other instead of compete for the same recovery budget.

The eight modalities you'll see on most CFER calendars

Color-coded: green = complements · blue = recovery · red = similar energy as CF · gold = significant overlap

Yoga / Y7 / Sky Ting

RecoveryMobility~60 min
What it gives you
Hip / shoulder / T-spine mobility, parasympathetic recovery, breath work, the mental break CrossFit doesn't offer.
How to stack with CF
1 or 2 times per week, ideally a day after a hard CF session or on a rest day. Power vinyasa is not zero-intensity. Don't pile it on a 1RM testing day.
Pitfall
Hot power yoga right before CrossFit looks cool and feels cooked. Better used as a recovery anchor than a primer.
East Village picksY7 East Village (East 1st St) for the heated / candlelit / hip-hop vibe. Sky Ting (NoHo) for stricter vinyasa. The Studio (East 14th) for traditional.

Pilates / Reformer / Solidcore

CoreStabilizers~50 min
What it gives you
Single-leg balance, deep core stability, the rotational + small-stabilizer work CrossFit underdoses. Massive ROI for low-back and shoulder health past year 1.
How to stack with CF
1x per week reformer is the single best add-on for CrossFitters over 35. Solidcore is HIIT-intensity, so treat it as a CF day, not a recovery day.
Pitfall
Confusing "Pilates burn" with "I went easy." Your nervous system pays the bill the same as a metcon.
East Village picksBridge Pilates (Bowery, reformer mecca), CorePower NoHo, Solidcore Astor Place.

Running / NYRR

EngineRaces30–120 min
What it gives you
Aerobic engine, race-day pacing experience, the NYC race scene (Central Park almost weekly, the Brooklyn Half, the marathon).
How to stack with CF
Easy zone-2 runs are always fine. Workout runs (tempo, intervals) should be treated as a CF day. During marathon training, drop CF to 2 or 3 per week and prioritize lower-body recovery.
Pitfall
The long run the morning after a heavy back-squat session. The legs aren't there. Plan the week backwards from the long run.
NYC sceneNYRR races almost every weekend. The Brooklyn Half (May) and NYC Marathon (Nov) anchor the calendar. Tompkins Square is a great loop for short tempo work.

SoulCycle / Peloton / spin

CardioGroup energy~45 min
What it gives you
Compressed cardio in a fun, social format. Real lifesaver on travel weeks when your gym is a hotel basement.
How to stack with CF
1 or 2 per week alongside 3 to 4 CF sessions works well. It's not zone-2. It's threshold to redline. Treat it as another CF-intensity day, not as recovery.
Pitfall
SoulCycle + CrossFit in the same day = a fast track to under-recovery. If doing both, Soul first (lower-skill).
East Village picksSoulCycle Union Square (14th St) for the closest fix. The Peloton Tribeca studio if you already own the bike.

Hyrox

Sister sportRun + stations60–90 min
What it is
The fastest-growing fitness sport in the world. 8 x 1km runs alternated with 8 stations (ski erg, sled push and pull, burpee broad jumps, sandbag lunges, and so on). Simpler movements than CrossFit, longer time domain.
How to stack with CF
CrossFit training transfers directly. You already have every lift and every conditioning pattern. For Hyrox prep: 3 CF sessions per week, plus 1 sled-focused day, plus 1 long run. Don't drop CF.
Pitfall
Athletes who do only Hyrox prep neglect strength and skill. Your CF base is the edge. Keep it.
NYC sceneMajor Hyrox events at the Javits Center each spring. Growing prep classes at affiliate gyms.

BJJ / Boxing / Muay Thai

Sport-specificGrip + cardio60–90 min
What it gives you
An actual sport with problem-solving on the mat. Hip mobility under load, grip strength, mental engagement totally different from chasing a PR.
How to stack with CF
2 to 3 BJJ sessions plus 3 CF sessions per week is the classic Manhattan combo. Skip CF the morning of an evening BJJ class. Watch CF gymnastics volume on BJJ days because the grip compounds.
Pitfall
BJJ chews shoulders and grip. If your fingers feel like sausages, drop kipping pull-up volume that week.
East Village picksMarcelo Garcia LES (the legend), Renzo Gracie Manhattan, Church Street Boxing for the squared-circle vibe.

Climbing / Bouldering

GripPulling~90 min
What it gives you
Finger strength, scapular control, full-body problem-solving without hammering the nervous system.
How to stack with CF
1 or 2 per week is pure complement. Skip CF pull-up volume the day you climb. Your forearms will thank you.
Pitfall
Fingers and tendons adapt slower than your muscles think they did. Climbing 4 times per week as a newbie is how you strain a pulley. Build up slowly.
NYC picksBrooklyn Boulders Gowanus, Movement (Chelsea, the new spot), The Cliffs at Valley Stream if you'll take the LIRR.

Barry's / F45 / Equinox HIIT

Overlap warningGroup HIIT~50 min
What it gives you
More cardio, more group accountability, the same intervals-and-treadmill formula in a different room.
How to stack with CF
1 per week is fine. 2 to 3 per week and you're paying twice for very similar adaptations.
Pitfall
"CF Monday, Barry's Tuesday, CF Wednesday, Barry's Thursday" puts you in the red zone five days a week with no recovery infrastructure. Pick a lane.
Honest takeIf you love the energy and don't want to leave it: do 1 per week and let it count as your sprint metcon. Drop a CF metcon that day so the volume stays sane.

Sample weeks for the most common stacks

CF + 1× Yoga (the most common)

Mon
CrossFit
Tue
Yoga or restorative if Mon was hard
Wed
CrossFit
Thu
Rest or 30-min walk
Fri
CrossFit Strength Specialty
Sat
CrossFit (long metcon day)
Sun
Walk / coffee crawl

CF + Pilates + run (the longevity stack)

Mon
CrossFit
Tue
Reformer Pilates
Wed
CrossFit
Thu
Easy 30-min run
Fri
CrossFit
Sat
Long run (45–60 min) or rest
Sun
Walk / mobility

CF + NYC Marathon block

Mon
CrossFit (skip a metcon run portion)
Tue
Easy run 30–45 min
Wed
CrossFit (short metcon)
Thu
Tempo or interval run
Fri
Rest / mobility
Sat
Long run (90+ min)
Sun
CrossFit light or rest

CF + BJJ (3× each)

Mon
CrossFit
Tue
BJJ evening
Wed
CrossFit
Thu
BJJ evening
Fri
Rest
Sat
CrossFit or BJJ open mat
Sun
Walk / mobility

CF + SoulCycle (the cardio lover)

Mon
CrossFit
Tue
SoulCycle morning
Wed
CrossFit
Thu
Rest or easy walk
Fri
CrossFit
Sat
SoulCycle
Sun
Yoga or rest

The travel week (hotel / out of town)

Mon
CrossFit before flight
Tue
Hotel zone-2 (treadmill 30–40 min)
Wed
Bodyweight (50 burpees, 100 squats, 50 push-ups)
Thu
Drop-in at nearest affiliate
Fri
Travel home / walk
Sat
CrossFit (welcome back)
Sun
Rest

The Manhattan calculus

How to think about whether something earns its place in your stack.

Time
CrossFit at CFER is about 60 minutes including the walk if you live within 10 blocks. SoulCycle is 60 minutes door-to-door. Y7 is 75 minutes with the heated cool-down. Add it up honestly: each modality costs 4 to 5 hours of life per week.
Cost
CFER is around $300 a month unlimited. SoulCycle around $40 a class. Y7 around $30 a class. Reformer Pilates $50 to $80 a class. Stacking 2 add-ons at 1 per week is another $240 to $500 a month on top of CFER. The economic rule: if you're using your CF unlimited 3+ times a week, 1 add-on is great ROI. Two add-ons and you need to make sure you're really using all three.
Recovery
Sleep, food, and HRV don't care what brand you sweat under. Total weekly stress is what matters. 5 CF + 2 Soul + 1 Y7 on top of a 60-hour work week and bad sleep equals an injury within 90 days. More is not more.
Identity
Most NYC fitness churn comes from chasing a new shiny thing every quarter. The members still at CFER at year 5 picked one anchor (CrossFit) and added 1 or 2 complements they actually like. An anchor plus a sidecar beats a rotation of four things.
Travel
There are 15,000+ CrossFit affiliates worldwide and dropping in is encouraged. Most charge a small drop-in fee ($25 to $35). When you travel, that's your CF dose handled. Don't try to keep three other modalities going on the road. Pack a jump rope and walk a lot instead.

The "pick an anchor" principle

Most CFER members come in with a stack already. Powerlifting, MMA, running, yoga, you name it. The ones who stick around aren't the ones who drop everything else. They pick CrossFit as the anchor and let the other stuff orbit around it. Pick your anchor. Everything else is a sidecar.

All Members

The Operations Manual

The stuff that's true no matter what your toggle says. Admin, injuries, travel, events, gear, pricing, the coaching team, and the house rules. Bookmark this part.

Gear

Equipment: the minimalist philosophy

The gym has everything you need to walk in and train for the rest of your life. This is what's worth owning, what's worth waiting on, and what's a waste.

What you actually need

  • Athletic clothes you can squat inThat's it. Bring water. Show up.
  • A pair of training shoesWhatever you own. Cushy running shoes are not ideal but won't stop you.

True answer: nothing. Your first six months don't require buying anything.

After class ~20 (helps)

  • A flat-sole training shoeNike Metcon, Reebok Nano, NoBull Trainer, or any model from these lines. About $130. Lasts 1 to 2 years.
  • A jump rope sized to youRX Smart Gear or similar. About $40. Double-unders are 10x easier with a rope cut to your height.
  • Knee sleeves (5mm or 7mm)Rehband or SBD. About $60. Squat support and warmth, not a brace. Optional even at this stage.
  • A small gym bagYou'll want to keep your sleeves, rope, and tape in one place.

The CFER philosophy: fitness comes from training, not from gear. Most equipment trends are coping mechanisms for missing reps. We'd rather you spend $200 on three months of class than on a single piece of equipment.

Go Deeper

Resources

Free reading and watching that'll make you a smarter athlete. Curated from the CrossFit Journal and our own bench.

Foundational reads

"What is Fitness?" (2002)

Greg Glassman's founding essay. The 10 general skills, the three standards, the hopper test. 8 pages. Required reading.

CFJ →

"Foundations" (2002)

The 9 foundational movements explained. Points of performance for each. Use this as your at-home movement library.

CFJ →

The CrossFit Movement Library

Short video demonstrations of every movement you'll see on the whiteboard. Reference before any new movement.

crossfit.com →

Going deeper

"Understanding CrossFit" (Glassman)

Why CrossFit works. The theoretical basis. Slightly more advanced than "What is Fitness?"

CFJ →

The CrossFit Journal (full)

Articles, video, demonstrations across nutrition, programming, methodology. Free since 2018.

journal.crossfit.com →

"Scaling CrossFit" (CFJ)

How and why to scale. The single most useful skill for staying healthy and improving.

CFJ →

PRVN Programming

The programming we run at CFER. Read their notes on each cycle to understand why we do what we do.

prvnfitness.com →

The Zone Diet (Glassman's primer)

The nutrition framework CrossFit was founded on. Block-based, simple, works.

CFJ →

For competitors

CrossFit Competitor's Training Guide

The full reference for training-to-test. Evaluating weaknesses, programming cycles, recovery, comp prep.

CFJ →

"Evaluating Strengths and Weaknesses"

The framework behind the tool above. Use after each comp cycle to recalibrate your plan.

CFJ §1 →

The CrossFit Open

3-week global qualifier, every February. Register at games.crossfit.com. Every CFER member does the Open — scaled or RX.

games.crossfit.com →

HYROX (Thursdays at CFER)

Race-style hybrid format. Strength and endurance combined. We're a HYROX365 affiliate, so you can train and qualify here.

hyrox.com →
Admin & Logistics

The admin questions

Everything we get asked over and over, in one place. Search or browse.

Hours, location, getting in
Where are you and how do I get there?

647 East 9th Street, NY, NY 10009, between Avenue B and Avenue C in the East Village. Subway: L to 1st Ave (5-min walk), or 6 to Astor Place (10-min walk). Citi Bike racks on Avenue B. Street parking after 7 PM.

What are your class hours?

Mon to Fri: AM block (early), lunch block (around noon), PM block (early evening plus late evening). Saturday: 9 AM Partner WOD. Sunday: open gym hours. Check Wodify for the live schedule. It's always current.

Extra Hours members can access the gym between 9 AM and 9:30 PM with a Kwikset key code, no coach.

How do I book a class?

Through Wodify, our booking platform. You can reserve up to 48 hours in advance. Use the website or the Wodify app on your phone.

How do I cancel a class?

Through Wodify, up to 30 minutes before class starts. Cancel later than that and it counts as a no-show. Chronic no-shows get a friendly note from the Athlete Lead.

What if the class is full? How does the waitlist work?

Join the waitlist in Wodify. If a spot opens, Wodify auto-emails you, first come first served. Set your notifications so you actually see the alert.

Membership, billing, holds
How do I put my membership on hold?

Fill out the hold form on our website. You can hold for up to 3 months at no cost. Anything longer than that and we'll need to cancel and reactivate.

The hold starts on your next billing date. So if you ask mid-month, you finish out your current cycle and the pause begins after.

How do I cancel my membership?

Fill out the cancel form on our website. We require 30 days notice. Your last billed cycle completes, then you're done. No contract, no termination fee. We'll be sad to see you go. Don't be a stranger.

Can I change my plan?

Yes. Email team@beastriver.com with what you'd like to switch to. The Athlete Lead handles plan changes within a business day. Changes take effect on your next billing cycle.

Where do I see my billing history?

Log into Wodify, then Profile, then Billing. You'll see every charge with date and description. If something looks wrong, email team@beastriver.com and the Athlete Lead can run a refund or correction.

Do you offer drop-ins?

Yes. Drop-in rate is on the website. Travelers welcome. Bring your home affiliate name and we'll often comp the first one. Saturday Partner WOD is the most popular slot for first-timers.

Bringing friends, first-timers
Can I bring a friend?

Yes, and please do. The Saturday 9 AM Partner WOD is the easiest entry point. Friends can attend up to 3 free Partner WODs before they need to either drop in or sign up. It's also our most fun class.

If they want a regular weekday class, point them to "TRY THREE FOR FREE!", our 7-day, up-to-3-classes free trial. Sign up on the website.

I want to try CrossFit but I've never done it. How do I start?

Two ways. Easier: Saturday 9 AM Partner WOD. You'll be paired with a regular, the workout is approachable, and you'll meet 15+ members.

Or: book a regular class via Wodify after signing up for "TRY THREE FOR FREE." Mention to the coach it's your first time. They'll give you a 5-minute scaling brief before class.

In the gym — etiquette & logistics
Is there a dress code?

No. Wear clothes you can squat, jump, and sweat in. Shirts on, shoes on (no barefoot during workouts — barefoot okay for Olympic lifting/skill work). That's it.

Do you have showers and lockers?

Yes. Showers (basic but functional) and a locker area. Bring your own lock. Towels are BYO. Soap and shampoo are stocked but treat it as backup, not primary.

What's the class etiquette?
  • Arrive 5 to 10 minutes early. Late arrivals miss the brief and the warm-up.
  • Re-rack and wipe down everything you used.
  • Cheer for the last finisher. Always.
  • Stay for the cool-down. It's part of the class.
  • Phones away during the workout. Photos before or after only.
What's open gym? Can I use the space outside of class?

If you're on the Extra Hours add-on, yes. Between 9 AM and 9:30 PM, Kwikset key code access. No coach on the floor during open gym, so it's for self-directed work: skill, mobility, accessory.

If you're not on Extra Hours and want it, email team@beastriver.com. Easy add to your plan.

Injuries, scaling, pregnancy
Got a tweak or a chronic issue? Pregnant? Coming back from a layoff?

The full playbook for all of this lives in the Injuries & Mobility section below. Quick version: tell the coach before class, almost everything can be scaled around, and a movement-based PT beats a generic ortho one every time.

I'm new and the workout looks scary. What do I do?

Tell the coach. "Coach, I'm new, what should I do for this?" is the smartest sentence in CrossFit. Every WOD has scaling options (Level 1, Level 2, Masters, and so on) and your coach will pick the right one for you. No one cares what you lift on day one. Show up. Move well. The rest follows.

Special programming: HYROX, Strength, Saturdays
What's HYROX and who is it for?

HYROX is a race-style hybrid format: 8 x 1km runs plus 8 functional stations (sled push and pull, burpee broad jumps, rowing, sandbag lunges, wall balls). It's growing fast. We run a HYROX-specific class every Thursday. We're also a HYROX365 affiliated training facility, which means we can prep you to qualify for an event. Anyone can drop into the Thursday class.

What's the Friday Strength Specialty class?

Friday PM rotation: Weightlifting, then Gymnastics, then BodyBuilding, rotating monthly. If you want to bring up a specific area, this is the class. Started Sept 2025. Best paired with the weakness tool above.

Tell me more about Saturday Partner WOD

Saturday 9 AM. The highest-energy class of the week. You're paired with another member (or bring a friend, see "Can I bring a friend?"). Workouts are longer and harder than weekdays, designed to be split between two people. It's where the CFER community lives. Coffee after, often.

How does the CrossFit Open work?

3 weeks every February and March. CrossFit HQ releases one workout per week (Thursday night) and you have until Monday to do it and submit your score. Everyone in the world does the same workouts. There's a Scaled, RX, and Masters division. We run it as a gym event every Friday. The most fun three weeks of the year. Sign up at games.crossfit.com/open.

Reaching us
What's the fastest way to get an answer?

Email team@beastriver.com. Replies within a business day, usually faster. Phone (347-352-7154) works for time-sensitive stuff. The WhatsApp group is members-only and community-run, not a support channel.

Who do I talk to about ____?
  • Membership, billing, holds, plan changes: Athlete Lead via team@beastriver.com
  • Programming, schedule, coach assignments: a Manager via team@beastriver.com
  • Events, Open, partner days: a Manager via team@beastriver.com
  • Partnership, sponsorship, big-picture: Owner. Let a Manager loop them in.
Body Maintenance

Injuries & Mobility

The K-Starr playbook, CFER edition. The same principles your favorite movement-based PT uses, condensed into one page you can act on this week.

Four principles to run on

Pain is lagging

By the time something hurts, it started weeks or months ago. The thing you did yesterday rarely caused it. The fix lives upstream.

One joint above, one joint below

Knee pain is usually a hip or ankle problem. Lower-back pain is usually a hip or T-spine problem. Shoulder pain is usually a T-spine or wrist problem. Treat the chain, not the spot.

Position before load

If you can't get into the position with an empty bar, you don't get to load it. Mobility limits dictate mechanics. Always.

Test, intervene, retest

Do a movement test. Do 90 seconds of mobility. Re-do the test. If it didn't change, the drill wasn't the right one. Stop spending time on stuff that doesn't move the needle.

Sore, hurt, or injured?

Sore

Symmetric, fades in 24 to 48 hours, warms up out of it. Train through it. The class warm-up is the answer.

Hurt

Localized, sharp on certain reps, fades with rest. Modify in class. Attack the upstream mobility daily. Re-test in a week.

Injured

Sharp pain, doesn't fade after 48 hours, hurts at rest, or you heard a pop. Stop. Email the gym. See a movement-based PT this week.

Midline organization: the bracing sequence

Half of the tweaks we see come from poor bracing. The sequence is the same whether you're picking up a deadlift, a kid, or a Whole Foods bag:

  1. Squeeze the glutes. Sets the pelvis.
  2. Brace the abs like someone's about to punch you. Sets the spine.
  3. Pull the ribs down. Kills the rib flare and shortens the lever.
  4. Breathe behind that brace. Don't let go for the duration of the rep.

Every loaded movement. Every time. If your low back is the thing that gets sore, this is usually the fix.

Joint-by-joint diagnostics

Where it shows up, where it actually lives, what to do about it.

Pain shows up atActual problem usually lives atTwo daily fixes
Lower back Tight hip flexors, weak glutes, bracing fail Couch stretch (1 min per side) plus the bracing sequence on every loaded rep
Shoulders Locked T-spine, forward head, weak external rotators T-spine extension on a foam roller (1 min) plus 10 PVC pass-throughs
Wrists Missing shoulder and T-spine range forcing wrist compensation Front-rack mobility drill (1 min per side) plus wrist circles after warm-up
Knees Missing ankle dorsiflexion, tight hip flexors, weak glute med Wall ankle test plus couch stretch (1 min per side)
Achilles Tight calves, poor dorsiflexion Slow heel drops off a plate (3 x 10) plus calf smash on a lacrosse ball

The daily 10-minute routine

Five positions, not exercises. About 10 minutes. Prevents most of what would otherwise send you to a PT.

  1. 1Bottom of a squatKelly's classic test. Just sit there.2 min
  2. 2Couch stretchBack foot up on a couch or bench, square the hips, breathe.1 min / side
  3. 3PVC pass-throughsStraight arms, no bend at the elbow.10 reps
  4. 4T-spine smash on a foam rollerRoller across the upper back, slow extension over it.1 min
  5. 5Banded hip distractionAnchor a band to a rack, loop it on your hip, lean away.1 min / side

The self-maintenance toolkit

Under $80 for the lot. Lasts forever. Lives in a corner of your apartment.

  1. 1Lacrosse ballFor everything (glutes, lats, calves, pecs).$3
  2. 2Foam rollerBasic, not the textured one. T-spine and quads.$25
  3. 3Heavy resistance band1/2 to 1 inch wide. Hip distractions and assistance work.$20
  4. 4PVC pipe4 feet, 3/4 inch diameter. Pass-throughs, snatch warm-up.$8

Coming back from a layoff

1 week off

Walk in, no modifications. Your first class will feel humbling. By session two you're back.

2 to 4 weeks off

Scale loads 20% for the first three classes. Run the daily 10-minute routine for two weeks straight.

1+ month off

First week at first-30-classes intensity. Volume back to normal in week 2 if nothing flares. Skip benchmark days for two weeks.

Pregnancy & postpartum

Many CFER members have trained through all three trimesters and come back to PRs after. The framework:

  • Get OB clearance first and tell every coach you train with.
  • First trimester: mostly business as usual. Scale on feel. Skip Valsalva and heavy bracing as the bump grows.
  • Second trimester: drop supine work (no back-on-the-floor sit-ups, no flat bench). Reduce intensity, keep movement.
  • Third trimester: bodyweight, light dumbbells, walking, swimming. Daily routine still applies.
  • Postpartum: 6 weeks minimum before any loaded return, longer for C-section. Start with the bracing sequence, work up over 8 to 12 weeks. A pelvic-floor PT is non-negotiable.

When to see a PT (and what kind)

A movement-based PT (someone who treats the diagnostic chain, not just the painful joint) is worth twice what a generic ortho PT is. What to look for: they should watch you move before they touch you. They should give you homework. They should care about your back squat as much as your shoulder.

Our EV/LES referral list:

  • TODO: add 2 to 4 trusted movement-based PT names. Email the Athlete Lead for the current list and we'll drop them in here.

Framework adapted from Kelly Starrett's Becoming a Supple Leopard and The Ready State. If you want the full reference, it's the single most useful book a CrossFitter can own.

On The Road

Travel & Drop-Ins

There are 15,000+ CrossFit affiliates worldwide. Almost all of them welcome visitors. Travel is the most forgiving variable in CrossFit.

How dropping in actually works

Find a box at map.crossfit.com. Email them a day or two ahead. Show up 10 minutes early. Pay the drop-in fee (usually $25 to $35). Introduce yourself to the coach. Have a great time.

Dropping in is one of the better parts of being in this community. We encourage it. The members who travel the most usually become the best CFER members because they bring back what they learn.

The hotel WOD kit

When there's no affiliate nearby, these three workouts cover most situations. No equipment beyond what fits in your bag.

Cindy (scaled)

20-minute AMRAP: 5 doorframe ring rows (or pull-ups if the room has a bar), 10 push-ups, 15 squats.

Annie (scaled)

50-40-30-20-10 single-unders and sit-ups, for time. Needs a jump rope and 6 feet of floor.

Bodyweight chipper

For time: 50 burpees, 100 sit-ups, 150 air squats. The classic hotel-floor workout. No excuses.

Boxes worth planning a trip around

  • CrossFit Mayhem (Cookeville, TN). Rich Froning's gym. Pilgrimage destination.
  • MisFit Athletics (Portland, ME). Programming gym, beautiful Maine coast.
  • NorCal HQ-adjacent affiliates. CrossFit San Carlos and the cluster around Santa Cruz where the whole thing started.
  • CrossFit Invictus (San Diego). Comp coaching heritage, year-round outdoor rig.

For members on a long trip

Stay logged in to Wodify. We're not going anywhere. If you're gone more than 3 weeks and want to pause, use the hold form (up to 3 months at no cost).

For visitors to NYC

Yes, you can drop in. Email team@beastriver.com a day ahead with your home affiliate, what days you're around, and any movements you can't do. Saturday 9 AM Partner WOD is the easiest entry. Drop-in rate is on the website.

The Year

Annual Events Calendar

CFER runs on a few annual rhythms. Put these on your calendar in January and they'll structure your training year.

The year at a glance

Jan
New Year throwdown
Light, social, sets the tone.
Feb
The Open begins
Three weeks of Friday Night Lights.
Mar
The Open ends
Final week. Gym-wide party.
Apr
Build phase
Back to base work.
May
Murph
Memorial Day. The rite of passage.
Jun
Beach Days kick off
Saturdays at the FDR.
Jul
Lift-A-Thon
In-house strength comp.
Aug
Summer training
Lighter week around Labor Day.
Sep
Comp prep cycles begin
Strength Specialty back in full swing.
Oct
Fall Throwdown
In-house team comp.
Nov
NYC Marathon weekend
We cheer at mile 16.
Dec
12 Days of CFER
Holiday party plus the "12 Days" WOD.

The big ones

The CrossFit Open

Late Feb to mid-March

The global qualifier. Three weeks, one workout per week. Everyone does it, scaled or RX. We run it as Friday Night Lights every Friday of the Open. Sign up at games.crossfit.com. About $25 to register. The single best three weeks of the gym year.

Murph

Memorial Day, every year

1-mile run, 100 pull-ups, 200 push-ups, 300 squats, 1-mile run. Named after Lt. Michael Murphy, killed in action in 2005. We do it together, all heats, all morning. Scaled options get cheered just as loud as RX. No sign-up, just show up.

Lift-A-Thon

Mid-summer

One day, three lifts (back squat, deadlift, push press), find a max in each. Members judge members, the music is good, the energy is high. A fun in-house event with no pressure beyond your own bar.

Saturday Beach Days

June through August

Once a month or so we trade the Saturday 9 AM class for an outdoor session. Tompkins Square, or a run-and-WOD that ends somewhere with coffee. Watch WhatsApp for dates.

Fall Throwdown

October

In-house team comp. Three or four workouts over a Saturday, mixed teams, lots of food. The most fun day of the year if you've never done a comp before.

The weekly rhythms

  • Thursday: HYROX class
  • Friday PM: Strength Specialty (rotating monthly: weightlifting, gymnastics, bodybuilding)
  • Saturday 9 AM: Partner WOD. The social anchor of the week.
Money

Pricing & Plans

The honest version. Live rates are always on the website so this section stays evergreen.

Plan structure

Unlimited
All classes, all hours. The plan most members are on. Includes Saturday Partner WOD and Friday Strength Specialty.
Limited (8 or 12 / month)
For members who can't make it 4+ times a week. Same access, just capped.
Off-Peak
Mid-morning and early afternoon classes only. Cheapest membership we offer.
Extra Hours (add-on)
Kwikset key code access between 9 AM and 9:30 PM for self-directed work. No coach on the floor.
Personal Training (add-on)
One-on-one with a coach. Best for skill work, post-injury return, or comp prep. Email the Athlete Lead.
Drop-in
Single-class rate. Visitors welcome. Bring your home affiliate name.

The policies

  • Holds: up to 3 months at no cost. Use the hold form.
  • Cancellation: 30 days notice via the cancel form. No contract, no termination fee.
  • Plan changes: email the Athlete Lead. Change takes effect next billing cycle.
  • Referral credit: when a friend you brought signs up, you get a month credit. No cap.
  • Free friend Saturdays: bring a friend to up to 3 Partner WODs before they need to drop in or sign up.

Specific numbers move once or twice a year so we don't list them here. Always current on the website. Questions on any of it: team@beastriver.com.

The Team

Coach Roster

The people on the floor. Every CFER coach holds a CrossFit Level 1 minimum. Most hold Level 2 or higher. The specialty leads bring their own credentials.

How the team is structured

The Owner sets vision and writes the rare email you should answer fast. Managers run day-to-day, the schedule, and the programming. The Athlete Lead handles everything member-facing (billing, holds, plan changes, your first-class onboarding). Coaches coach. If you don't know who to ask, ask any of them.

The current roster

TODO Coach Name
Head Coach

One-line "known for" (the Olympic lifting specialist, the gymnastics nerd, the 6 AM whisperer).

CF-L2 · Years at CFER: TODO
TODO Coach Name
Coach

One-line "known for."

CF-L1 · Years at CFER: TODO
TODO Coach Name
Athlete Lead

One-line "known for." Handles membership, billing, holds, plan changes.

CF-L1 · Years at CFER: TODO
TODO Coach Name
Manager

One-line "known for." Programming and schedule.

CF-L2 · Years at CFER: TODO

Roster placeholder. Send the current names, roles, certs, and a one-line "known for" each and we'll drop them in.

House Rules

The CFER Code

Eight things. Not a sermon. The non-negotiables that keep this gym the gym it is.

  1. Re-rack what you used. Wipe it down. The gym is everyone's gym.
  2. Phones away during the WOD. Photos before or after, never during a working set.
  3. Cheer the last finisher. Loudest. Always.
  4. Don't drop an empty bar. The bar costs more than your time.
  5. Let coaches coach. Don't coach your neighbor unless they ask.
  6. Tell the coach about any injury or tweak before class starts. Not mid-WOD.
  7. More than 10 minutes late, catch the next class. The warm-up isn't optional.
  8. Log your scores in Wodify. Future-you needs the data more than you think.
The Community

The community

The gym is where you train. The community is why you stay.

Instagram

Daily member spotlights, PRs, event recaps.

@crossfiteastriver →

WhatsApp Group

The CFER member chat. Ride-or-die. Ask a coach to add you after your first month.

Request to join →

Saturday Partner WOD

9 AM. Bring a friend. The week's social anchor.

Reserve →

The CrossFit Open

February and March. Gym-wide event. Don't miss it.

games.crossfit.com →

"It feels more like working out with a bunch of friends in a garage. The atmosphere is almost the opposite of intimidating."

CrossFit East River · A Community Of Fitness · The East Village's Fittest Gym

647 East 9th Street, NY 10009 · (347) 352-7154 · team@beastriver.com

Member Guide v1.0 · June 2026 · Built with the CrossFit Level 1, Level 2, and Competitor's Training Guides as references.