March 1, 2018
Nicole Carroll's Tips for Open Workout 18.2

You get two workouts in 12 minutes—18.2 and 18.2a—for the price of one!

Open Workout 18.2 starts with an ascending ladder of dumbbell front squats and bar-facing burpees that combine into a nastier-than-it-looks little couplet. The workout ends with 18.2a, a separately scored heavy barbell clean, the heaviest you can get with your remaining time.

Warm-Up

After a short general warm-up, focus on the clean. Start with some PVC progressions, working into empty barbell drills. Keep an eye on the CrossFit Training Instagram feed, as there will be a post with an option for a warm-up progression.

Build up to your opening lift and maybe even a little beyond. Concentrate on moving well. Don’t just go through the motions! The first clean after the couplet will feel heavier than it did during your warm-up—trust me on this! This means you should open with the heaviest load that you are confident you can hit successfully.

Set-Up

Practice a few rounds of the couplet to get your footwork organized and find a nice tight set-up for the dumbbells and barbell. My set-up was so-so, and I will look to finesse it for my redo.

Also, have all your weights laid out in advance for your anticipated clean attempts. You should even ensure that you have the appropriate change plates available for last-minute fine-tuning or that extra little bonus in case you get into it and surprise yourself.

Executing the Couplet

For pacing, I recommend maintaining a deliberate pace through the beginning rounds and then trying to increase momentum in rounds 6 through 10. Smooth and crisp transitions, especially during the initial low rep scheme, are key. And be sure to mentally prepare for things to get harder as you progress. This is absolutely one of those workouts you look at and think, “Hmm, not too bad,” and then are surprised by its bite.

For the front squats, clean the dumbbells up to the shoulders, but remember not to shortchange the initial full hip extension. You must start every rep from full extension at the top and then pass below parallel before standing back up fully. The faster you go, the more these will start to burn, especially in the later rounds. Stay steady anyway, and do your damnedest not to break these up.

Side note: I fooled around too much with the dumbbells on my shoulders, gripping and un-gripping. Grip is a minimal factor with this workout, so don’t worry too much about saving it. Just grab the dumbbells in a way that is expedient and comfortable.

About the burpees: There’s a new burpee standard for Rx’d athletes. You must do a two-footed jump back and a two-footed jump forward. These cannot look like lunges or lunge jumps, and the days of stepping into or out of the burpee are over. As per usual, the jump over the bar is also a two-footed jump.

Fundamentally, you’re trying to get the couplet finished in as little time as possible to:

Leave yourself time to recover for the cleans.

Get a great score. The couplet is scored independently and is a tiebreak in the likely event that you clean the same weight as another athlete.

of course, devastating yourself on the couplet is not smart. You do not want to be forced to take an excess amount of recovery time at the expense of having enough time to get to your best clean. This is the crux of the challenge in this workout.

The Clean

Your strategy for the clean will be determined, in large part, by how much time you anticipate having left after the couplet and how heavy you want to go.

Be sure you have a set load in mind that you would like to post for your score. If you know your PR, anticipate hitting that. Even have the change plates available for a bump up from there. Why not, right? Every year we amaze ourselves with our performances during the Open—be ready to amaze yourself!

Of note: The first lift following the couplet was noticeably harder than the heavier second lift. Because of this, I think making a slightly larger jump on the second lift could be smart, especially if you’re limited on time and might only get two or three lifts. My first lift was 165 lb., and my second was 170. Next time I will try a 10-lb. jump—from 165 lb. to 175—and likely be fine.

experience was that muscle fatigue was never really an issue after that first clean. I felt more composed and recovered as I addressed my second lift. I had time for seven lifts, and shortening the rest between attempts while making small jumps in load worked well. My rest time between lifts was roughly 40 seconds, and I didn’t increase by more than 5 lb. between attempts. I had one miss at my goal weight of 185 lb., but I was able to come back and nail it. I actually had nearly 30 seconds left before the 12-min. cap and went for 190 lb. on 10 seconds of rest. Even though I missed it and forgot to add the collars, which would have made it a no rep anyway, I’m glad I tried.

Open Workout 18.2 perfectly expresses and tests one of CrossFit’s core tenets: being balanced across capacities. This also means there should be something a little fun for everyone, so enjoy yourself, and good luck!

Watch the full demo of Nicole executing 18.2 and 18.2a here