05/26/2026
Individuals who are naturally more powerful often fatigue faster during intense activity and recover more slowly between bouts.
A few common reasons why:
1. Greater proportion of fast-twitch muscle fibers
2. Greater W prime
3. Slower recovery kinetics
4. Poor pacing and effort regulation
In a sport like CrossFit, where work capacity matters, powerful athletes often need to become more enduring.
One useful tool for building this is work:work intervals.
The goal is simple:
Increase training volume while improving both physiology and pacing.
Complete:
5 rounds:
3 min Echo Bike @ Easy Pace/Easy Effort
(Into)
Fast:
5 RMU
5 Power Cleans - singles, Start @ 155lbs, add 5lbs per round
25’ Handstand Walk
+
5-7 min Rest
+
5 rounds:
3 min Row @ Easy Pace/Easy Effort
(Into)
Fast:
50 Double Unders
10 Bar Facing Burpees
5 Overhead Squats - Start @ 135lbs, add 5lbs per round
The beauty of this approach is its flexibility.
You can use it with gymnastics, loaded movements, or mixed combinations while developing both the “hardware” (physiology) and “software” (pacing, decision-making, RPE regulation).
A good starting rule:
Make the active recovery period 3–4x longer than the work bout.
Work intervals are challenging at first, especially for powerful athletes.
Signals adaptation is occurring:
• Recovery improves between bouts
• Speed and aggressiveness are maintained
• Overall RPE drops over time