Did that lift sound good to you? – The Power of Rhythm and Timing

When rhythm and timing is the difference between a National title

It has all come down to this moment… The third clean and jerk in the National Championship for the title of National Champion. However, before we get to the ending lets look at the last half a year…

Training has been good. Coming off the normal tweaks and pains of training weightlifting our athlete is getting into quite the routine. She has her eyes set on performing well on the National stage, and you are very aware as her coach that she has a good shot at the podium. Let the work ensue.

Through six months of training, you cycle through two strength programs, and weekly customize her training specific to issues she is having in her technique. She is strong and she likes to depend on that strength in her movements often by muscling weights off her hip. When she muscles weights it really affects how she receives the weight in both the snatch and clean and jerk. She doesn’t seem to be able to smoothly transition out of the hole.

Finally, Nationals arrive and the cards are playing out in your favor. Where you knew your athlete had a good shot at the podium it has played out that she has a shot at gold. It all comes down to that last lift… Her third clean and jerk.

As she walks out there tension is high. As you remind your athlete to breathe you realize you need to breathe yourself. She approaches the bar. She is set in a good position… all the points you look for are there in her start position. She pushes through the floor… She muscles at the hip. The weight pounds her in the hole like a hammer hitting a nail. She is at a dead stop sitting in the hole but she is strong… she grinds through the clean standing up. She pants trying to get just a little more oxygen. She sets… she misses the jerk. She was just out of juice.

For weeks you replay the moment in your head. You think, “If standing with that weight wasn’t so hard she could have had more energy for the jerk”… But she is strong. Stronger than most of her competitors, and that clean wasn’t close to her max front squat. What else could I have done…

How Rhythm and Timing Fit into Weightlifting Technique

What is rhythm and timing? Let me define my interpretation of “rhythm and timing” – A timed sequence of the movements in either the snatch or clean and jerk that have a distinct rhythm.

Snatch – You can see and hear the “rhythm and timing” in the snatch at the top of the second pull and execution of the third pull. Another way to say this is the point of extension of the hip and immediate closing of the hip as you pull under the bar.

Clean – Just like the snatch, you can see and hear the “rhythm and timing” in the clean at the top of the second pull and execution of the third pull.

Jerk – There is a distinct “rhythm and timing” in the jerk at the start. The point of unlocking the legs to dip and then driving.

The snatch and clean rhythm and timing can be heard. This was taught to me by Olympic coach Mark Cannella who learn it from Olympic Coach Wenbin of China. It goes like this… “Pop-Pop”.

“Pop-Pop” and how to apply it to our technique training

This drill or cue I’ve found can do a few things. It can slow a lifter down when they’re pulling too soon, and it can cut a lifters pull who may be pulling too long. Both of these are great corrections.

The first “pop” is the bar brushing the hip and the second “pop” is the sound of the feet connecting to the floor. If an athlete does this correctly there will be a distinct rhythm you can hear, and if an athlete does this incorrectly you’ll be able to hear how that rhythm changes.

Here is a quick video I put together for our 60 Day Challenge that explains this:

Watch the video on YouTube

Why You Should Start Thinking More about Rhythm and Timing

When an athlete executes good rhythm and timing one major thing happens that is VITAL to weightlifting…

The weight will be going UP as the athlete is traveling DOWN.

This has a few huge benefits for the athlete.

1. The athlete will have an opportunity to receive the weight correctly. In the snatch this means they’ll have more opportunity to punch and lockout on the weight, in the clean they’ll be setup to “kick” out of the hole rather than “grind”, and in the jerk they’ll have an opportunity to have the weight help them rather than “heave” it up there.
2. The athlete will be moving more efficiently and thus saving energy
3. This is the crazy speed we see when we watch great weightlifters

Here is one of my favorite examples… Mark Cannella filmed this at the 2011 World Championship in the training hall. This is the 85kg lifter from Poland who won the gold medal in the 2012 Olympic Games, Adrian Zielinski. LISTEN to the “Pop-Pop”

Watch the video on YouTube

Update: My friend Walt Maken make a quick slow-mo of the video above if you’d like to see it watch below:

All I can do is encourage you to think a little more about the rhythm and timing involved in weightlifting. I hope both my videos in the article help and give you a good starting point. If you want more information we’ve put together a video series from Olympic coach Mark Cannella and Olympian Holley Mangold on a cue that can help with rhythm and timing.

My story at the start of this article is a heart breaker that we all know can happen for more reasons than just rhythm and timing… but… if that athlete would have “kicked” out of the hole rather than grind from a dead stop… we all know there would have been more energy for the jerk.

Give your athletes the best opportunity. Help them with rhythm and timing.

When Technique Breaks Down

Have you ever said, “It’s normal for technique to breakdown”?

It is a normal process for athletes to become exhausted, and in return their technique will start to fail. However, an athlete who truly understands Olympic weightlifting technique to the point of not having to think much about it will ALWAYS out last someone who hasn’t received or taken the time for the same training. I’m making this point thinking about heavy weight. I want to remind everyone about the two different videos… 303 lbs Grace – Zach Krych and Rob Orlando.

I encourage you to watch both.


(Click Here for Video of Zach Krych)


(Click Here for Video of Rob Orlando)

Because Zach was able to operate under much better technique he was able to cut his time SIGNIFICANTLY! Also, if you watch the full version there were no misses. I’m not picking on Rob Orlando by any means. Strong athlete and notable performance. I’m only highlighting the benefit of build a strong foundation of good weightlifting technique. I feel the point to make as coaches is to not let athlete scrum to lazy thinking.

Bad thought:
“I just can’t get this… Poor technique happens and its normal.”

Replace it with:
“This won’t happen over night, but if I put in the work I’ll move better, safer, and weights will feel better than ever!”

In this thought we’ve put together a learning resource to support gyms with this belief.

It is due to launch very soon!

Stay tuned… more updates to come!

Mobility for Weightlifting

Mobility for weightlifting has been over looked. Maybe because most new lifters come in to the sport young and have great mobility just from their age (In most other countries lifters meet weightlifting between 6 and 10 years old). Or maybe the glaring mobility issues we see are do to the influx of lifters of all ages thanks to CrossFit. Not just age but individuals who have been through the ringer, and as most of us do, never put in the work to correct our bodies. Specifically, I’m thinking of those who have sprained their ankles multiple times only to be left with ankle joint mobility of the worst kind.

Athletes of all shapes and sizes with various mobility impingements are getting barbells in their hands. For where “mobility for weightlifting” may have never been emphasized before we are making a new emphasis now!

Lat Mobility for WeightliftingLat Mobility for Weightlifting Extream

As we travel the world with the opportunity to teach information hungry athletes what we know about good weightlifting technique. We find that understanding the technique isn’t the barrier for most athletes. It is simply getting into the correct positions.

Now yes, it is not uncommon for a new young athlete to have a learning or ability curve. Everyone has to teach their body a new motor pattern. It doesn’t just happen in the first minute. However, we’re highlighting those individuals who have MONTHS of work just to be able to enter a full squat, MONTHS of work to go from the floor to the power position smoothly, and MONTHS of work to hold the bar overhead safely and securely!

What we have done is found some of the best mobility knowledge in Aaron Jannetti, owner of Endeavor Defense and Fitness and combined it with Columbus Weightlifting’s knowledge of weightlifting. The result = MOBILITY FOR WEIGHTLIFTING!

Mobility for Weightlifting Clinicmobility

As I have emphasized above this is a MUST for the athletes who can’t get into correct positions, but it is also an opportunity for the athlete who can hit positions. Through training you will get tweaks, strains, and pulls. This class will give you a foundation as to why and what you can do to get lifting again faster!  Without having to make an appointment to see a PT or massage therapist! Are we saying PT’s and massage therapist are not needed? By no means, however, most recovery consists of tasks you can work on yourself and that is hard earned money saved. Our athletes at Columbus Weightlifting have implemented it fully without looking back!!

We have a two hour Mobility for Weightlifting clinic coming up on June 1st at Coca CrossFit. In addition, there will also be a 2 hour weightlifting clinic right after the mobility work. We hope to see you there. You’ll leave this course with a ton of action you can implement right away! To register click here.

5 Keys to Hitting Bigger Weights Right Now

As individual lifters we all have issues that are specific to us. The path to correcting these issues can be long and tedious. Hell, you can even have the same problem for a number of year, which then you might start to accept as just being part of you. Here is an opportunity to avoid that. To proactively approach your issues and start on a path of working through your issues and hitting bigger weights.

Take every opportunity to learn new cues from different coaches. One may just trigger the epiphany you’ve needed.

Mark Cannella and Dan Bell

I have an unfair advantage. Working with Mark Cannella brings a lot of knowledge and experience to the table, but there are times that I have had a flaw in my technique that even challenged him. We were able to get through these issues by reaching out to other coaches in Mark’s network, and when we do identify the correction we both get to learn from it!

Zygmunt USA

Here are 5 keys to hitting bigger weight right now by fixing issues in your technique:

1. One cue does not work for every lifter – There are a number of ways to say the same thing. However, no lifter will be able to respond if they don’t connect to what you are saying. Different cue can help coaches reach different lifters and help the athletes understand different issues and corrections.

2. As different coaches describe what they see you will see it differently – I could easily get into a discussion on paradigms and being in other individuals shoes. For this to work you need to be open to looking at things in a new light, and trying to understand what that coach is seeing. Its not all on the coach… you need to listen… ACTIVELY!

3. Its how you discover new drills – Ever wonder how experienced coaches and athletes learn a number of great drills and know which ones to work on when certain issues happen? I’m willing to bet it wasn’t all from one source!

4. The opportunity to see how others use the drills you know – I have seen a number of coaches and athletes use drills to work on issues completely different from what I may use them to do. Again, just more ways you can fix things.

5. Multiple approaches give you multiple opportunities for success – They say the definition of insanity is doing the same thing and expecting different results. Having a few different approaches enables you to setup a few different plan. *PLEASE NOTE* you must give each approach a significant amount of time to evaluate the results. Don’t change something every week and wonder why it isn’t working!!

When it comes down to fixing issues I would never say there is one right way, but multiple approaches that will vary depending on individual issues. Become a better coach… become a better athlete… be open, listen, learn, and lift big weights!

Now help us all by sharing what is the newest cue you have learned that helped with an issue? Why not share and learn right now!