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Articles by Greg Everett on weight lifting, Olympic weightlifting, strength and conditioning, fitness, paleo diet, nutrition
Greg Everett


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When to Move on, and When to Punch Your Missed Lift in its Stupid Little Mouth, Greg Everett
When to Move on, and When to Punch Your Missed Lift in its Stupid Little Mouth
Greg Everett  |  May 28 2012  |  Training: Weightlifting
There are times in a lifter’s life when lifts aren’t made. These times are, of course, the absolute worst, and in those moments following a missed lift, athletes can generally find indisputable proof that they’ll never again succeed, why their abilities have already peaked and they’re finally and terminally on the decline, and why, being in such a stage of life, they no longer have any value to the world. There are two basic responses following a missed lift: To accep......
Starter Program for Catalyst Athletics Online Workouts, Greg Everett
Starter Program for Catalyst Athletics Online Workouts
Greg Everett  |  May 21 2012  |  Training Programs
The following is a 4-week training program that can be used to get started with the training program posted on this website. This is a good cycle to start with if you have not previously been doing the Olympic lifts frequently in your training. Ab work should be done every training day, along with any supplemental work, e.g. back extensions, upper body beach work, etc that you want to do. If you plan to do the conditioning portion of the program, add brief conditioning workouts 2 times per ......
Grip Strength Program for Weightlifting, Greg Everett
Grip Strength Program for Weightlifting
Greg Everett  |  April 30 2012  |  Training Programs
I've written about grip strength for weightlifting before, but have remained fairly vague with regard to actual training protocols. This time, I’m going to give you a simple program that you can start using right away as is, or modify a bit to suit your training schedule or individual needs. When it comes to grip strength for weightlifting, really what we’re talking about is the snatch. It’s unlikely that anyone would be able to hang on to the bar well in the snatch but not ......
Six Truths of Olympic Weightlifting Technique, Greg Everett
Six Truths of Olympic Weightlifting Technique
Greg Everett  |  February 14 2012  |  Training: Weightlifting
When it comes to weightlifting technique, there are disagreements. Some are legitimate, some are questionable, and a few are downright silly. But when you sift through it all, there are a few universal Truths when it comes to the snatch and clean. If you can make these following six things happen with a given technical style, you can probably make it work for you. Truth 1: The lifter and barbell system must remain balanced over the feet. This is pretty simple. If the balance of the system do......
Catalyst Athletics: Our Warm-up is a Warm-up, Greg Everett
Catalyst Athletics: Our Warm-up is a Warm-up
Greg Everett  |  November 8 2011  |  Training: General
Somewhere along the line, warming up became remarkably complicated. And for some, the line between warming up and training has faded to the point that I find myself compelled to say things like the title of this post. Whenever you start getting confused about what to do, a reliable course of action is to ask yourself a simple question: Why? What is the purpose of this? What am I trying to accomplish? If you can answer those questions, chances are you’ll be able to work it all out just f......
The Power Snatch: Uses & Cautions, Greg Everett
The Power Snatch: Uses & Cautions
Greg Everett  |  October 5 2011  |  Training: Weightlifting
I’ve nearly always defined a power snatch (or clean) by a receipt above a parallel squat. This is how I was taught. For the most part, I continue to use this definition because it’s served me fine. However, at times I change my expectations based on what I want achieved. My other definition is no less than a 90-degree angle at the knee. This is a considerably higher receiving position—there is no question at this height of whether or not a lift can be classified as power. You w......
Hips, Meet Bar: The Extension of the Snatch and Clean, Greg Everett
Hips, Meet Bar: The Extension of the Snatch and Clean
Greg Everett  |  September 9 2011  |  Training: Weightlifting
Some topics seem to generate more heat that others, and for some reason, the question of how a barbell should come into contact with the body during the snatch and clean seems to get some people extraordinarily wound up. I personally don’t lose any sleep over how anyone else lifts or teaches the lifts. I may agree or disagree, but I don’t let it upset me too much. The following will undoubtedly further upset the same people who are already upset. In my humble opinion, there is mor......
Hook Grip or Not Overhead in the Snatch, Greg Everett
Hook Grip or Not Overhead in the Snatch
Greg Everett  |  August 20 2011  |  Training: Weightlifting
A common question is whether or not a lifter should keep the hook grip overhead in the snatch. This is one of those issues that doesn''t have a simple answer: it depends. The main issue while holding a barbell overhead is stability: obviously the athlete needs to be able to support the weight. The hand and wrist need to be able to settle in under the weight of the bar to create a cradle that balances the weight properly and doesn''t cause injury. Lifters need to condition the joints over time to......
Improving the Clean through a Better Turnover, Greg Everett
Improving the Clean through a Better Turnover
Greg Everett  |  August 12 2011  |  Training: Weightlifting
A lot more attention tends to be paid to the third pull or turnover of the snatch than the clean, likely because the consequences of poor execution tend to be more dramatic and obvious, but the turnover of the clean deserves its own share of attention. The timing and precision of the turnover in the clean can be the difference between a make and a miss, or can prevent the recovery from being so taxing that a subsequent jerk fails. An idea I commonly talk about with my lifters is attempting to......
The Jerk for Sports, Greg Everett
The Jerk for Sports
Greg Everett  |  August 5 2011  |  Training: General
Mike Asks: In most sports full extension and the "follow through" are important - you drive through your legs, hips, torso, shoulders, and arms with a "follow through" after making contact with the ball, or the jaw. In doing the jerk you pull away from, or drop under, the bar as it is driven upward, so the maximum effort comes before the full extension - I can think of no other sports in which this happens. Wouldn''t then the "push press" where the drive cont......
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Weightlifting Programming: A Winning Coach's Guide
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Bones of Iron: Collected Articles on the Life of the Strength Athlete
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Weightlifting Programming: A Winning Coach's Guide (E-Book)
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Olympic Weightlifting for Sports (E-Book)
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