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Inside the Punishing World of Kettlebell Sport — Where Strength Endurance Reaches New Limits

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Inside the Punishing World of Kettlebell Sport — Where Strength Endurance Reaches New Limits

Nobody trains at Wolfpack Fitness because it’s easy to get to. The first thing you see when you enter the lane that eventually leads to one of the country’s finest kettlebell gyms is a place called The Dog Paddocks, a doggy playground that according to the promo is ‘the perfect place for dogs to safely run, sniff, play and relax’.

Wolfpack is a further 50 yards back from the road and is essentially a couple of old stables – one housing functional fitness equipment and one specifically for kettlebells – located in a rural part of Nantwich, England. You know you’re in the right place thanks to sign with a picture of a kettlebell, next to a stern message warning people to switch off the lights and lock the gate if they’re last out of the gym. Even once I’ve reach Wolfpack, I somehow take another wrong turn and, instead of heading inside, I am treated to an impromptu solo tour around a small outdoor workout space. It’s stocked with battle ropes and rustic equipment (a barbell constructed from what looks like car wheel rims connected by a steel bar). It’s the middle of January; everything has been left out and has been softly dusted with snow. So far, consider me charmed.

When I finally make my way inside Wolfpack’s kettlebell space, I’m greeted by Oliver ‘Oli’ Mell, 41, a former Royal Marine turned kettlebell athlete, who’s waiting alongside a couple of his most decorated lifters. He’s warned me that the temperature is below freezing in Nantwich right now, and as I walk through the door, I see that he already has a few kettlebells warming next to an open fire for later use. Again, I’m charmed.

Mell is a practitioner of kettlebell sport, a little known ‘sport of reps’ where athletes aim to keep their ‘bell in the air for as long as they can and for as many repetitions as possible. Depending on their exact discipline that could mean snatching a heavy, 40kg kettlebell overhead for 10 minutes or it could mean lifting a slightly lighter, but still heavy, ‘bell for an hour (marathon) or two (supermarathon). In the marathon discipline, drop the ‘bell at any point and your score is null and void – meaning you may as well not have bothered picking it up in the first place. That makes it less about repping more than your opponent and more about doing battle with your own psyche.

Today, Mell has agreed to teach me some of the sport’s basic techniques, how to lift a kettlebell correctly and where to rest it to catch your breath. In just over a week’s time, he’ll be putting these techniques to the test himself when he attempts to beat his own world record of 1,227 reps of clean and press with a 24kg weight over the course of two hours. It’s an ambitious target, and he knows only too well that with a live event like kettlebell sport anything can go wrong.

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At last year’s World Champs in Denmark, Mell was also in pursuit of kettlebell glory, competing in four lifts: 30 minutes’ half snatch, 30 minutes’ long cycle, 10 minutes’ long cycle with a 40kg bell and 10 minutes’ half snatch. It was a hot day and before the first event he made the rookie error of over chalking his ‘bell. Within 10 minutes, he knew he was in trouble. ‘The state my hands were in, the fight changed,’ Mell says. ‘I knew straight away the task would be to not quit and to not put the ‘bell down. I might be remembered for that set more than anything else, which is why I feel like I’ve got to go back and prove that I can do it.’

His two-hour set is an opportunity for kettlebell redemption. It’s also, he hopes, crazy enough to draw attention to a sport that few people know exist and even fewer are willing to have a go at.

kettlebell training

A Brief History of ‘bells

It’s difficult to ascertain exactly who started swinging kettlebells first. Some people suggest the Ancient Greeks were the first people to use a weighted tool with a handle as a piece of exercise equipment. But everyone from Chinese Shaolin monks, Indian Kushti wrestlers and Scottish Highland Games athletes have trained using something akin to a kettlebell since.

In 1704, the term Girya, referring to a kettlebell, first appeared in the Russian dictionary. Back then it wasn’t describing a training tool but rather a counterweight, which was used by farmers to measure grains and goods. The tale goes that the men who used these weights soon began swinging and lifting them to show off their strength and the practice became a party trick they used at farming festivals.

Fast forward to the 19th century and Dr Vladislav Krajewski, personal physician to the Russian czar, who is also known as the ‘father of heavy athletics’, developed a system of weight training which included the use of kettlebells. Recent research by journalist Nick English and sociocultural sports historian Victoria Felkar suggests that he could have been inspired by a German lifter, with Germany now also being credited as one of the first places to employ kettlebell training.

Whatever its exact history, we do know the point that kettlebells started to move from training methodology to sport. In 1948, Russia, then the Soviet Union, abstained from the first post-war Olympic Games held in London. Later that same year, the nation held its own kettlebell sport competition where the champions from 15 Soviet republics travelled to Moscow to compete against each other in two events: the ‘long jerk’, which is a clean and jerk with two bells, and the ‘biathlon’, a set of jerks with two ‘bells followed by a set of snatches.

It took almost another half century for the kettlebell to gain international recognition. In 1998, the man widely credited with introducing the kettlebell to the United States, Pavel Tsatsouline published an article called ‘Vodka, Pickle Juice, Kettlebell Lifting and other Russian Pastimes’ in the US journal, MILO: Journal for Serious Strength Athletes. That paper, and Tsatsouline’s ability to sell kettlebell training, went a long way to swinging the kettlebell into the Western world’s consciousness. A few years later, in 2002, Rolling Stone magazine named it the ‘hot weight of the year’.

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Whether they know it or not, many lifters have been influenced by Tsatsouline since. Mell, for example, was working as a personal trainer when he first began to train with kettlebells, using them to train in the ‘hardstyle’ of kettlebell lifting popularised by Tsatsouline. Hardstyle uses many of the same exercises as kettlebell sport but instead of requiring athletes to be fluid and relaxed with the ‘bell, hardstyle practitioners rely on tension and ‘the grind’.

Mell discovered kettlebell sport a few years later, just as he was set to leave his PT career and join the Royal Marines. Four years on from that, after becoming one of the oldest people to pass out from Commando Training Centre, Lymstone and being deployed around the world, he left the Marines and began seriously competing, first as an amateur and then as a professional. Wolfpack Fitness started because he wanted somewhere to train that allowed him to share the mentality he forged while serving.

‘I was teaching kettlebells in various gyms, and I just couldn’t find somewhere that brought me back to that feeling of being in the open, doing different forms of very challenging physical fitness that weren’t as formatted as three sets of 10 reps type of thing,’ says Mell. ‘When I wanted to open my own place, my job was to create a gym I’d want to join and see if other people would want to join it, too.’

Why it Appeals to All Lifters Great and Small

What’s amazing and very noticeable about Wolfpack Fitness specifically, and kettlebell sport more generally, is the variety of lifters it attracts. As Mell says, ‘You don’t have to be athletic or 6ft. You don’t have to have incredibly long hamstrings. You don’t have to have a perfect lever for a press. You just have to put the time into the ‘bell.’

Łukasz ‘Luki’ Danielski, 41, is a former powerlifter from Poland. At 100kg, he’s a big, hulking man. His began powerlifting at age to 17 and by the time he’d finished, aged 30, he’d achieved a bronze medal in the 2003 Polish Championships, as well as a 250kg deadlift, a 250kg squat and a 187kg bench.

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Between finishing powerlifting and beginning kettlebell sports, Danielski took on an 80-mile ultra marathon around Loch Ness to prove that big guys like him can run too. ‘It’s not big challenge if your skinny,’ he says. ‘But if you have 100kg and more, this is a challenge for you.’ That’s his idea of ‘fun’.

Despite his obvious sporting prowess, the transition to kettlebell sport wasn’t easy. ‘When I tried my first lift in kettlebell, a 24kg ‘bell, it killed me. I say, “How is this fucking possible?” I know I’m strong, and this is only 24kg. It smashed me to the ground. You can be strong, but you need to know how you can use this power. If you don’t know how to breathe, you die.’

With Mell’s help, he learned how to use his power and has since won gold medals in the International Kettlebell Marathon Federation’s (IKMF) pentathlon (five lifts each performed for six minutes with a five-minute break between each) and World Games (a 10-minute one-arm half snatch using a 40kg ‘bell).

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His story and personality couldn’t be more different to those of Alistair Lee, 40, who found the sport as a final throw of the dice before major weightloss surgery. Before kettlebells, Lee had spent most of his adult life at around 172kg. Over the years he’d put himself through various crash diets and tried everything from triathlon to Muay Thai to psychiatry to help him lose weight. Four years ago, he was on the NHS waitlist for gastric band surgery – something that he desperately wanted to avoid. Giving lifting a go was his final attempt at losing the weight himself.

Once they started training together, Mell guessed that Lee’s strength may translate well to kettlebells and helped him get started, at this point for fitness not for sport. Three years later, he was the captain of the England team for the World Championship in Poland. He’s now a seven-times world champion, as well as a world and British record-holder. He’ s also got his weight down to a stable and manageable 115kg. He didn’t need the gastric band.

‘I always struggled with team sports because I always felt like I was letting the team down. I wasn’t good enough,’ he says. ‘This sport is a team sport. There’s a team around you. There’s a social group that you do it with. But equally, no one’s dependent on you to deliver anything. You just do your absolute best. That’s what I love about it.’

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Jonathan ‘Johnny’ Skinner and Del Wilson meanwhile are more friends of Wolfpack Fitness than regular members. Again, in terms of personality, they couldn’t be more different. Skinner is 42, brash, confident and cocky. He’s also one of the, if not the, best in the world at single arm jerk, who has won gold medals at competitions around the world and has a personal record of 172 reps in 10 minutes with a 40kg kettlebell. Wilson, 58, meanwhile is a mild-mannered former formula one race car technician who took up the sport in his mid 40s and has won world championships in Denmark (twice) Hungary, Spain, Belgium (twice) and Poland since.

How to Get Better at Kettlebell Sport

Most of the people who started their kettlebell sport journey at Wolfpack Fitness didn’t start off as athletes. In most cases, Mell explains, ‘They’ve been very average people and quite late in their life.’ But what they do all have in common is a willingness to work hard and a shared mentality.

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Mell brings up the term ‘beast mode’. He isn’t a fan. During his forthcoming two-hour attempt, he will have to go into a zone, but it’s not a place of anger, it’s a ‘mentally relaxed and peaceful place’. He won’t get to that place of zen by ‘flicking a switch’ or activating beast mode, he’ll get there by doing a little more each and every day in preparation.

‘It took 32 weeks of military training to turn me from a civilian into somebody capable of going and doing what Royal Marine commandos do,’ he says. ‘They’re never looking for someone who from the start can be this really hardened creature that will just destroy what’s in its path and operate in extreme mental circumstances. You do it in phases. And each time you do it, the phase gets more difficult.’

During my own training at Wolfpack Fitness, I progressed from a three-minute kettlebell set to a five-minute set. For Mell’s supermarathon, he’s been doing hour-long sets with a 36kg kettlebell (8kg heavier than the ‘bell he’ll be using for his record attempt). His speed sets, meanwhile, are done later in the week, when his hands have recovered, and with a 24kg kettlebell. Mell adds 15 minutes to his training duration each week, staring at an hour of lifting and ending, on week four, at 1 hour 45 minutes. His other athletes train similarly and alongside all of their ‘bell work they all put time into endurance cardio – running and rowing – and strength endurance doing 25-30 rep sets of deadlifts, leg press, squats, lat pull downs and shoulder press. Flexibility work is encouraged but optional.

It’s a demanding schedule, especially when you consider that the athletes are all older, with families, work commitments and are competing in a sport with little to no funding. Mell has a partner and two daughters. It’s not uncommon for his days to start at 4:30am and finish at 10pm. Bringing new blood in the sport is a definite goal and part of the reason why he chooses to out himself though challenging supermarathon attempts – for the spectacle and interest it brings to the sport.

Just before my piece on Wolfpack Fitness and kettlebell sport is due to be finished, I receive a text from Mell. It reads simply: ‘1,249 new world record’. A short statement of fact, which belies the blood sweat and tears that went into achieving it. One of the best endurance athletes you’ve never heard of has proved, once again, that he can still do it.

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The Best Kettlebell Exercises

If you’re considering giving kettlebell sport a go, build your foundations with these lifts, explained by athlete and coach Oliver Mell.

Snatch

Swing the ‘bell from between your legs in one motion to an overhead fixation. When the ‘bell is overhead and completely still the judge awards the rep. Drop the weight back between your legs in a single motion and repeat.

Jerk

The ‘bell is cleaned into the rack position and then jerked with a double dip. When the judge has awarded the rep the athlete lowers back into the rack position ready for the next rep.

Long Cycle

The kettlebell is swung between the legs and cleaned into the rack position and then must be fixed for the judge to see before the athlete performs a jerk repetition. Once the rep is awarded the athlete returns the kettlebell into rack position and finally back into the swing.

Push Press

Similar to the jerk, the athlete cleans the kettlebell into the rack position and then pushes the kettlebell overhead, using their legs to assist. Once the kettlebell is still overhead and the judge awards the rep, return the ‘bell to the rack position for the next rep.

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A 3-Step Plan to Give Your Diet, Fitness Routine and Mindset a Reset for Spring

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A 3-Step Plan to Give Your Diet, Fitness Routine and Mindset a Reset for Spring

To help you do this, we’ve tapped our Start TODAY experts for simple tips to lighten up meals, move in ways that boost metabolism and and refocus our mindset to get motivated to keep working toward your goals. Apply their strategies and finish the month feeling lighter, more energized and motivated to move forward. Here’s the plan to make it happen:

>>Download the 31-day calendar here

31-Day HIIT & Walking Challenge

This month’s workout plan is focused on short workouts that pack a punch. “HIIT workouts give you a bigger bang for your workout buck! They provide a more efficient workout because you’re alternating the pace and intensity rather than sticking to a steady, moderate pace,” says Mansour. “Changing things up with HIIT prevents boredom and keeps your muscles guessing. This is how we can get the body to change — whether that change is speeding up your metabolism, burning more calories, building muscle, losing weight, or just improving overall health — keeping your body guessing is the magic ticket to seeing results!”

Active recovery days include stretching to improve flexibility and walking for a cardiovascular workout that aids muscle recovery. When weather permits, Mansour encourages people to get outside on walking days. “Walking outdoors isn’t just a workout, it’s a chance to breathe in fresh air and get out of the house to change your environment,” she says. “Each time you go outside on a walk, even if you go on the same path, you’ll see or feel something different. Maybe it’s a change in weather, plants or flowers, people or things. Prioritizing taking your walk outside can hugely benefit your mental health. Getting out of your regular environment and into nature can be a form of meditation, too.”

Get the full 31-day workout plan with unique workouts sent to you daily — plus, walking podcasts, healthy spring recipes and mindfulness tools — in the Start TODAY app!

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Start TODAY Spring Asparagus Pasta recipe
Lighten up comfort food favorites by adding seasonal ingredients, like in this Spring Asparagus Pasta.

3 Simple Spring Diet Tips

In addition to mixing up your workout routine, use spring as an opportunity to start lightening up your meals by packing them with seasonal ingredients. Start TODAY dietitian Natalie Rizzo shares her top tips:

  1. Incorporate more seasonal foods. After a long winter of eating the same foods, your palate is ready for a change! Aim to add at least one spring fruit or vegetable to your meals each day, like asparagus, peas, spinach, radishes, citrus or strawberries. This Spring Asparagus Pasta is a simple weeknight dinner that feels both light and comforting. Seasonal produce is fresher, more flavorful, and an easy way to naturally boost vitamins and fiber. Plus, seasonal produce is more affordable than other items in the produce section.
  2. Use fresh herbs to brighten up your dishes. Fresh herbs like basil, cilantro, parsley, mint, or dill can instantly upgrade simple meals without extra salt or heavy sauces. Sprinkle them on salads, roasted veggies, eggs, soups, or grain bowls for a burst of spring flavor. Cilantro is the perfect finish to this Mexican Stuffed Sweet Potato, while herbs are blended into cottage cheese in this Herby Cottage Cheese Toast with Tomato recipe for a pop of fresh flavor.
  3. Shift from heavy comfort meals to balanced plates. As the weather warms up, it’s time to move away from heavy comfort foods and embrace lightened up spring dishes. Build plates with a mix of lean protein, whole grains or starchy veggies, and plenty of colorful produce. Think roasted veggie grain bowls, hearty salads like this BBQ Chicken Quinoa Salad, or simple stir-fries instead of creamy casseroles or heavy stews.
Start TODAY Mexican Stuffed Sweet Potato
A sprinkle of fresh cilantro is the perfect finish to this Mexican Stuffed Sweet Potato.

Spring Clean Your Mindset with This Mental Health Exercise

Yes, we are working to propel ourselves forward toward our health goals, but an important part of that process is slowing down and reflecting.

Getting permission not to rush in a world that feels like it’s moving faster than we can keep up is a reminder that most of us need.

Yasmine Cheyenne, start TODAY mindfulness expert

“Getting permission not to rush in a world that feels like it’s moving faster than we can keep up is a reminder that most of us need, but how often would we admit that?” says Cheyenne. “ When the to-do list feels long, and we’re trying to get everything done, we often say the opposite, disregarding how we feel, and push ourselves. Yes, we all have deadlines and things that need to be done. But we also need the reminder to take care while handling our responsibilities.”

This can be easier said than done. So Cheyenne offers up a simple exercise to help: Write down the words you need to hear each day to make yourself a priority and work toward your goals. Put them somewhere you see often, like your fridge or bathroom mirror, and recite them out loud daily.

“This is a perfect example of a reminder that seems small, but can come at the perfect time and help us care for ourselves,” she explains. “One of my favorite examples is: Take it slow and don’t rush, your nervous system deserves peace.”

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“When you tell yourself the thing you’ve been needing to hear, it allows you to admit the quiet rumbling within you and take the steps you need. It might be admitting ‘I’m tired and will give myself an early night this week.’ Or you’re saying ‘I’m so proud of the way I’ve committed to moving my body everyday.’ Whether you’re cheering yourself on or reminding yourself of what you need, we don’t always slow down enough to hear what we need from ourselves, and this practice is a great way to start.”

Talking out loud to yourself may feel strange at first, but Cheyenne says over time it will help shift your mindset and translate those words into action. “When we hear ourselves recite these words, it’s like we’re planting positive seeds within us. The more we say what we need, the more we remember it, and we’re more likely to follow through and care for ourselves,” she says. “Our actions really start with the words we say to ourselves. Reading them out loud helps us rewire the way we talk to ourselves and that inner shift is exactly what opens the door to transformation.”

Join our live “Spring Reset Workshop” on March 22 to get one-on-one coaching from Yasmine Cheyenne and connect with other Start TODAY members. Sign up here!

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Exercise scientist says ‘eating more’ is key to losing weight in perimenopause – here’s why

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Exercise scientist says ‘eating more’ is key to losing weight in perimenopause – here’s why

If you’ve ever wanted to lose weight, you’ve probably heard the phrase ‘calories in versus calories out’. While it’s true to a degree, losing weight in menopause isn’t about eating less, but rather eating differently.

Speaking to fitness coach Loretta Hogg, Dr Stacy Sims says: “One of the first things that women often do, because we grew up in an era of calories in, calories out, less calories means fat loss. That is not true because if you are not eating enough, your body holds on to fat.”

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Building the No Neck Army: The Army’s Holistic Health and Fitness Program – Modern War Institute

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Building the No Neck Army: The Army’s Holistic Health and Fitness Program – Modern War Institute

Editor’s note: This article is the seventh in an eight-part series led by retired General James Mingus, the thirty-ninth vice chief of staff of the Army, on transforming the Army to meet the challenges of tomorrow’s battlefield. You can read other articles in the series here.


The battlefield in America’s next war will offer no sanctuary. The war won’t be fought from forward operating bases equipped with elaborate gyms, contractor-provided dining facilities, or coffee shops. The battlefield will be austere, harsh, and unrelentingly violent, with victory only possible by combining physical strength, endurance, and a will to prepare.

The Army’s Holistic Health and Fitness (H2F) program is the bedrock upon which this preparation begins. Winning America’s next war requires an Army that can get to the fight, win the fight, and get home from the fight—a mission profile that demands not just fit soldiers built for endurance, but warrior athletes built for endurance and able to leverage strength, speed, and power, and grounded in sound sleep and nutrition.

Culture Shift Begins with Mindset Shift

For the last several decades, the Army took pride in fielding formations rooted in a physical fitness culture relying heavily on push-ups, sit-ups, and miles of running and ruck marching. Physical training began predictably after saluting the flag at 0630 and ended promptly when the basic exercises, calisthenics, and formation run were complete. It was one-dimensional, unimaginative, boring, and, ironically, lazy. Army fitness during this period was solely focused on physical endurance.

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In the early 2000s, however, Army fitness began to change, led by special operations units like the 75th Ranger Regiment, which began experimenting with trending fitness regimens like Gym Jones, CrossFit, and Mountain Athlete. By combining emerging principles from several of these programs, special operations units began designing their own programs, such as the Ranger Athlete Warrior program. The rest of the active Army quickly started to model these programs, and the first H2F pilot kicked off in 2018.

Advances in exercise science and twenty years of war helped reframe the Army’s fitness mindset to encompass mental, physical, nutritional, and sleep dimensions. This mindset shift forms the basis of the H2F culture, changing how we train and care for soldiers. The focus is now on building strength and resilience like professional athletes—or more fittingly, warrior athletes. Where mission endurance was the goal before, tactical athleticism is now the goal, with an emphasis on strength, speed, power, and agility.

You Can’t Fake Results

A key part of any fitness program is the ability to measure its effectiveness, and in only a few short years, the return on investment for the H2F program has been profound. Currently sixty-six brigades have an H2F performance team, which consists of twenty-two professionals: a program director, dietitian, physical therapist, and occupational therapist; seven strength and conditioning coaches; four athletic trainers; one cognitive performance specialist; and six military personnel. By 2029, the program will expand to cover the entire active Army, as well as four states of Army National Guard and two Army Reserve commands.

According to analysis from the US Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, if H2F had been implemented across the entire Army, over a five-year period it would have added 1,080 deployable soldiers to the fighting force. If that’s not compelling enough, also consider these complementary H2F data points compiled by the Center for Initial Military Training Research and Analysis team after analyzing data from 2019 to 2023:

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  • 61 percent decrease in musculoskeletal injury referrals
  • 44 percent decrease in behavioral health profiles
  • 79 percent decrease in substance abuse cases
  • 22 percent decrease in fitness test failures
  • 33 percent increase in expert rifle marksmanship qualification

Expanding the Tools

As part of continuous transformation, the Army is looking for unique ways to leverage technology to enhance the H2F program. Several units are experimenting with wearables like rings and watches that measure sleep efficiency, heart rate variability, and blood oxygen saturation—providing rich data to inform approaches to physical, nutritional, and sleep aspects of fitness. Today, entire Army divisions are turning physiological data into leader decision-making information. A company commander who knows his or her soldiers’ sleep scores, for example, is equipped with data to combine with other information to help select the most well-rested platoon to lead a dangerous mission. Individual soldiers will also learn the correlations that exist between their fueling, recovery, and performance habits, which will help in multiple facets of their personal lives.

The Army is also continually working to improve facilities and services that support H2F. Most units now have access to twenty-four-hour functional fitness gyms on post and many units utilize fitness containers—effectively, gyms in a box. Plans are also in place to build additional facilities to ensure soldiers at every post have adequate equipment to train. To improve nutrition, the Army is experimenting with campus-style dining facilities that will supplement, and in some cases replace, traditional dining facilities—affording soldiers a myriad of quick, 24/7 accessible healthy food options. A no excuse not to work out and no excuse not to eat healthy mentality now abounds across the Army.

Soldiering has no offseason and no time-outs, and wars wait on no one. When America calls, the Army responds. Unlike professional athletes who can vary training volume, intensity, and specific exercises over planned cycles or offseasons, a practice known as performance periodization, soldiers have no such luxury. Tactical athleticism via compound periodization is the goal for soldiers—ensuring peak performance at all times by developing key physical attributes (e.g., strength, endurance, and power) year-round to maximize efficiency, prevent burnout, and improve overall warfighting readiness. The H2F tools highlighted above aid in measuring and maximizing this readiness.

What’s Next?

Imagine two Army squads ascending Colorado’s Pikes Peak carrying fifty-pound fighting loads. Squad A trained to get to the top through push-ups, sit-ups, and miles of running. The soldiers of Squad B are warrior athletes who took the H2F approach. When Squad A’s soldiers finally struggle to the top, they’re just happy to be mission complete and they flop on the ground. The soldiers of Squad B assault the mountain, and when they get to the top, they still have enough juice to rip the arms off their adversaries and steamroll into the next mission. In their post-hike squad photo, they’re all standing tall—straight backs, satisfied smiles, and trap muscles extending inches above their shoulders so they almost appear to have no necks. For them the mission is just getting started, and their smirks seem to say, “Is that it? What’s next?”

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Welcome to the No Neck Army.

Retired General James Mingus served as the thirty-ninth vice chief of staff of the Army.

Colonel Graham White is an infantry officer and the executive officer to the vice chief of staff of the Army.

The views expressed are those of the authors and do not reflect the official position of the United States Military Academy, Department of the Army, or Department of Defense.

Image credit: KCpl. GeonWoo Park, US Army

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