The Sevan Podcast - #41 - Travis Mayer
Episode Date: June 1, 20212021 CrossFit Games Talk @THETRAVISMAYER @BRIANFRIENDCROSSFIT @SEVANMATOSSIAN The Sevan Podcast is sponsored by http://www.barbelljobs.com Follow us on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/therealsev...anpodcast/ Sevan's Stuff: https://www.instagram.com/sevanmatossian/?hl=en https://app.sugarwod.com/marketplace/3-playing-brothers Support the show Partners: https://cahormones.com/ - CODE "SEVAN" FOR FREE CONSULTATION https://www.paperstcoffee.com/ - THE COFFEE I DRINK! https://asrx.com/collections/the-real... - OUR TSHIRTS ... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Make your nights unforgettable with American Express.
Unmissable show coming up?
Good news.
We've got access to pre-sale tickets so you don't miss it.
Meeting with friends before the show?
We can book your reservation.
And when you get to the main event,
skip to the good bit using the card member entrance.
Let's go seize the night.
That's the powerful backing of American Express.
Visit amex.ca slash yamex.
Benefits vary by car and other conditions apply.
Makes me feel uncomfortable that you guys know each other.
Oh, yeah.
Way back.
Way back, man.
Seven, we met in 2018 at the Atlanta airport, really.
Yeah.
And now it has brought us back to old Santa Claus's beard over here.
I look 30 years older since the last time you saw me, huh?
Yeah.
I mean, there's a little bit more there.
But hey, I'm catching up to you.
Probably with each kid.
Do you have grays, Travis?
Yeah, this is all gray.
Time to retire. Nah, man man we're just getting started i wonder how many competitors have gray hair
uh oh well depending on what division are we talking masters are we talking
we're talking about the the 30 and under what is masters now?
30 to 35.
Nah, man.
35, 35.
How old are you?
30.
Travis, what is the goal?
In life?
What are we talking?
We're talking CrossFit.
We're talking fitness.
Yeah.
I know you don't know what the goals are for life.
I'm talking about like what, what you do know about. Yeah. I know what the goals are for life i'm talking about like what what you do know about yeah no goal i mean the goals are to win i mean go to the games and
win the games that's ultimately what i'm training for and what i
kind of do every day and what that's focused on is getting to that point
but i feel like i heard you say that somewhere I read that you were not going to – that there were certain goals you wanted to achieve.
And it was a little ambiguous, and I started thinking, oh, is this his goal to get on the podium?
Is this his goal to – like what's his goal?
Like is there –
Yeah, I mean I think each year it's always kind of varied and changed based off of circumstances, how I feel like my training has progressed,
how I feel like I am as an athlete, how I've developed over the years.
And I mean, at each point, like right now,
I'm going into it with the mindset of I'm going to win.
And I think over the last probably six, seven months,
things have just started to click for me and kind of feel dialed in. And I think this weekend showed me a few more areas to work on to improve. But at the end of the
day, the goal going in is to win. Are you tempted? Have you been tempted to take any performance
enhancing drugs? No, never. Have you? Yeah, yeah, I have. not in the water uh not when ricky gerard popped and i and i that
was the first time i gerard gerard i that was the first times i heard about sarms yeah so you
actually went online i actually went online with the intention of ordering them but fucking like
the kind whatever the kind that was people were saying he took like i looked everywhere and they
were out of stock and then you know one week later that was off kind of like my to-do list so i never got
around so now you're bringing it back up to the forefront of actually trying now i just think i
just think when i when i hear you'll help your beard i i i would just do it just for the experience
but um when i hear people say like when I hear Matt say on the podcast,
I would win it, the goal was to win at any cost,
I think, holy shit, like, you've dedicated your entire fucking life to this.
I mean, how long have you been messing with CrossFit?
2011.
So in 2011, I got into it at the end of October 2010.
And then so technically like my first open was the first year they had it in 2011.
And I took 61st.
So I missed it by one.
And then in 2012, I fractured my L5.
And then 2013 was like my first like full year of being healthy and then qualified in 13.
Yeah. So at some point, you're just like, okay, I'm 11 or 12 years into this.
I'm going to do whatever it takes to win, but that doesn't.
Not drugs. Yeah. Drugs has never crossed my mind to get to a point of,
of that. Um, I mean, if you can't tell by ever looking at me i look like i'm a janitor at
a high school so from that side of things i mean i'm definitely not looking like it if i was i
don't know maybe maybe you always keep your shirt on to hide those spider veins and shit oh yeah
can't you tell man you're the janitor at the high school in the movie,
but then halfway through the movie we find out you have this other life.
And you're just phenomenal in some domain.
There's something there.
Yeah, I really just keep my shirt on because I don't want to blind people
with how pale I am.
And wasn't the janitor on The Simpsons, wasn't that old guy just yoked his shit
like he takes off his shirt and he's just obviously abusing.
Do you think anyone you train with uses them?
No, at least not to my knowledge of not knowing.
I mean, I don't personally know anybody that is on anything or at least been vocal enough to say,
Hey,
I'm on something I've heard of people after they've gotten out of their
career,
admit that they were on stuff,
but nobody during the,
like right now,
like I have no clue.
It like,
no one has said anything to me.
Yeah.
And all the years that I've,
I was involved.
I never heard anyone ever talk about
doing them or never why are you so quiet and am i quiet i think it's your headphones because i'm
registering good on the podcast can you hear me okay travis yeah that's all that matters
yeah i never i never knew i never knew any i never knew i never saw or heard anyone either
and um i'm trying to think of anyone prominent.
The only person I ever know who popped was Ricky.
Yeah, I mean, I feel like that's, of course,
the main one that everybody knows about,
just based off how everything kind of went down with that situation.
But, I mean, I don't know anybody personally
or anybody that has mentioned anything, at least been vocal about it while they're in their career.
I've heard of people when they got out, they were like, yeah, I was on something.
Do you get drug tested?
Have you ever had one of those surprise drug tests?
Yeah, I think it was a week and a half ago.
And then at the end of the Mid-Atlantic, I was just tested again.
Which was like 24 hours ago.
Yeah, I mean, yeah.
I got home.
We drove home this morning at like 9 o'clock, so I got in at like 1.
But yeah, we were tested last night pretty much at this time.
I was tested.
24 hours.
I would never test you.
If I was in charge, I would never test you.
Thank you, man.
I appreciate that.
Thank you.
I just wish they would do that.
It would be a waste of a test.
It takes me forever because I literally empty the tank before I'm done or before I go on to the floor for the final workout.
And then I knew immediately when we were done we were going to be drug tested.
And then I was like, wow, this is going to take forever.
So then it takes me an hour and something before I got to pee again, because I got nothing in my system. We got to be able to do it beforehand. I've never worked out so hard that I couldn't
pee. I think I could pee on demand. Like I could pee and then you could be like seven on pee again
and I could just pee again. No, I'm totally not with Travis on this. And then you – I mean, the last event, you leave everything there.
You've sweat the rest of it out anyway.
I think they should –
I'm trying to be as light as I can going out on the floor.
Yeah.
Do you –
Say that again?
I said I don't need any extra weight in my body, so I'm going to get it all out.
And it's the nervous piece
yeah what's the most memorable moment from uh this week for me this match that for me was like a big
milestone of hitting and i've hit 295 a few times and it's always just been so close at 300 and i
think to be able to hit it under the lights and like capture that setting like max was always like save it for the competition save it for the competition
and to be able to actually like hit it trusting my jumps where i was going the numbers i was going
to try to do and then just see what everybody else in the field kind of hit and then made a
last minute decision instead of going 295 to go to 300. And then along with 12 other people,
apparently that can snatch 300 pounds now. Um, it, uh, that, that for me was like something that
I've worked a lot on over the past few years of like getting that movement specifically dialed in
and to be able to do that was, uh, I was pretty pumped up about that.
Travis. I mean, for me, for me, yeah, seven, seven, sorry, Brian,
watching that snatch, the last heat of the snatch workout at home was, I mean, it was crazy because
not, you know, not every guy hit 300, but I feel like even the guys that did it, like hit the
number they wanted. Like, I think two 85 was a big deal for Madero's and a couple other guys.
And he like hit the number that was like, if everything goes perfectly, I want this lift.
And it literally seemed like every guy did that. What was it? What was the energy on the
floor at that point? I mean, so I just tried not to watch anybody like I can hear. And I was like,
just stay focused on like actually hitting this. So what I told myself was to not watch anybody.
So Max was like straight behind me, riding everybody's lifts down,
like saying go up or go whatever the number kind of was.
And I originally,
after I hit 285 through 295 on,
and then I hear the crowd and I can like,
see,
I saw Ben Smith had 300 and I was like,
I,
then you hear the crowd roar and I was like,
okay,
so he hit it.
And then like,
apparently four other people in my same lane had 300 on the bar.
And I look back at Max and I said, go for it. And he's like, can you hit it? And I just kind of shrugged my shoulders. I then like, apparently four other people in my same lane had 300 on the bar. And I look
back at Max and I said, go for it. And he's like, can you hit it? And I just kind of shrugged my
shoulders. I'm like, I don't know. I've never hit it before. Um, so I literally threw two and a
half on. And then when they were like lift, I just ripped it and stuck it. But I mean, it was pretty,
everybody was screaming. It was a, it was a good feeling, uh, to be able to hit that in that moment.
When did you know you were going to stand up with it?
Did you know right away?
No.
You know what's funny is I feel like I blacked out for the whole thing
because I don't remember any of it.
Don't remember any of it.
I just know I was like, all right, get set, get set.
And I pulled and the next thing I know, it almost felt like I opened my eyes and I was like standing up and then I
just screamed and threw the bar down.
But like in the moment, I feel like I don't even remember it.
Like I got done and I looked at Max. I was like,
I have no clue what just happened.
Well, I just, I just, even when you watch the video back now,
you don't remember it.
I mean, bits and pieces. I mean, not really. Like I remember catching i mean bits and pieces i mean not really like i remember
catching in the bottom and like feeling the bar start to press down on my right side and just
fighting with everything i had and then i like looked up and then everybody was standing and
then i just threw the bar down it was very weird brian what's the legality if he would have put it two and a half pounds more on one side
and gone and gone for 302.5 is that the smallest fractional there is no they didn't have anything
two and a half for the small dad so you only could go up five pound jumps so there was nothing
smaller than that so could but but five pound jumps would be two and a half pounds right
yeah but it would have to be on both sides.
You couldn't just put it on one side?
Yeah.
Oh, like if I went five and then one, two and a half on one side?
What if you did it on accident?
What would they have counted?
Yeah, I don't know.
So you had 107.5 on the side.
What made me think about that is that you specifically said you felt it in your right side.
So maybe if your left side is stronger, that's a tactic to use at the games.
Yeah, but I feel like at the games they give us smaller plates sometimes when we get max lifts.
But I'll keep that in mind.
I'm going to remember that next time.
So when I go out on the floor, I'll just sneak one plate on the inside of the left side.
And then say you did
three. I mean, is it legal? Can you do that?
What are the rules on that? People have done it on
accident in competition before, but I'm not
actually sure what they scored. Didn't
Alessandra Pacelli happen to her?
And she went from winning the event to getting second at the
event one year?
I think I'm remembering. I want to hear a story
where someone won the event doing that.
I think she had won the event.
I'm pretty sure this is right.
And then they realized.
I feel like it's the other way around.
Like people are lifting it and they think it's one weight, but it's less than what they're ideally going for.
So when they enter it, it's wrong. not ideally going up and saying I did hit 302.5 versus 300.
Yeah, he's right.
I was watching the event, and obviously when I was a football fan,
I watched just Raider games and Niner games,
and when I was a basketball fan, I just watched Laker games.
So I wasn't really a basketball fan or a football fan.
I was a fan of the teams.
And when I was watching the games, I just wanted to see this year,
the semifinals, I just wanted to see the heats you were in.
And I did watch some teams and stuff,
but I really just wanted to see your events.
And I was really surprised at how much,
how little screen time you, Ben Smith, and Scott Panchik got.
Welcome to my world of the media.
Travis, can I –
I mean you're the best-looking dude out there.
I mean you had your shirt on.
That's a fuck-up on your part.
Yeah, I'll –
I mean –
Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, I feel like, dude, if I went to the zoo and they had a sweater on the giraffe, I'd ask for my fucking money back.
Because I went there to see his fucking neck.
I mean, you know what I mean?
Like, come on, man.
I'll remember that.
How about this?
I'll be sure at most events of the games, I'll rock it with the shirt off now.
But other than that, I mean, it was bad was bad i mean there were times you were in first
place someone dm me i didn't see this but they were saying in one of the events that ben smith
won and they didn't have the camera on as he crossed the finish line uh what there's um i've
i've this is something that i've been involved only if you agree with me brian only if you agree
with me you have to wait you have to wait for the conclusion.
This is something that I've been involved with. The conclusion is you're right, Simone.
You're right, Simone.
And at a lot of the sanctional events.
And there's a problem with – the big problem is the floor layout and the inability for the companies that are covering the events to adapt to the floor layout, in my opinion.
the companies that are covering the events to adapt to the floor layout, in my opinion.
So the traditional layout of the regional floors is the long floor that's very easy to shoot and to capture the width of the floor. But events like Guadalupalooza and the Mid-Atlantic CrossFit
Challenge this weekend on Lectorium Pro didn't have that long setup. They had the wide setup.
And then it's much more difficult to capture the totality of what's happening on the floor.
So you have to approach it with a different plan. The team that was working there at the games or at mid Atlantic is the
games team.
Like they're the ones who cover the games,
but they're so used to that long competition floor.
Cause that's what Dave always wants.
They need to,
I'm telling you,
they need to adapt their,
their approach.
You don't think it's a try.
You don't think it's a bias on Travis.
100%.
No, I'm just kidding.
I think there should be one screen that shows everybody.
That is just the floor and it shows every single person going at one time.
And then if you want the option to see how the actual whatever second camera person is doing that is following around whatever with the announcers and how they're communicating that then you have that option because i think even for like
people at home that couldn't come watch so like my whole family in those moments when it's like
i want to see what's actually happening you can still pan out and seeing every single person
which i'm like that can't be that hard to figure out like you just have one camera that's but how
would i do that on youtube how would i do that on YouTube? How would I do that on YouTube? I'm watching YouTube.
That ain't my problem.
I'm not the,
I'm not the guy to figure that out.
Well,
you're just the idea guy.
There are ways to do it.
And,
and,
um,
loud and live did it for that,
uh,
online competition last,
uh,
in like the fall winter area.
Um,
they had the opportunity for,
to select which athlete you wanted to watch,
or you could watch all of them at once.
Oh yeah. I do remember that. Yeah. Either way, they, they had the opportunity to select which athlete you wanted to watch or you could watch all of them at once.
Oh, yeah.
I do remember that.
Either way, they could have cut to you more.
There was a lot of times when you were in first place or tied for first place during the events,
and it was driving me fucking nuts.
I know.
I saw your stories.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.
I didn't tag you in some of those because I was using a lot of profanity.
And I think of you as sort of like a more clean cut guy.
I'm like, I don't want to see this.
Let it rip.
Let it rip.
I love it.
Fires me up.
Gets me going.
I mean, it's definitely my side because I mean, I've been in the I've been in this game for a long time now.
And like legitimately, Sean Woodley called me travis williams on the podcast
or on the announcement like travis williams takes the heat okay like there's multiple like i get it
the dude dropped out of the competition because he had to go work or something but like he's not
even in the event and you're getting the name wrong like i mean it's it's one of the morning
chalk up has messed it up about 10 times.
And I think I'm finally to the point of like, at first it was kind of funny.
Like, oh, they're just doing this out of like spite and as a joke.
But now it's just to the point of like, all right, this is kind of really annoying.
And then even my wife, when I got home, she did like a whole.
So when I got home, all the kids were outside and then there was like a podium
and then it gave me and she wrote on a sheet of paper hello my name is travis mayor and then like
created a whole video out of it like oh maybe they'll remember your name now and all this stuff
like when i got home like literally as soon as i got out of the car it was great um but yeah it's just the kids annoying uh to be honest on my side
did the kids watch it yeah
someone someone goes hey what's your hard-on for travis and here's the deal there's there's
two reasons why um one because i gave you hard time
one i don't i haven't met any of the new guys so I haven't met any of the new guys, so I don't know any of the new guys,
but I spent a lot, I spent a lot of really intimate time with the athletes over the years
doing the behind the scenes and good times, man. I'm bummed you're not. And, um,
and, uh, I really, whenever I hung out with you and who's your coach, Max,
Max, whenever I hung out with you and who's your coach? Max.
Max.
Whenever I hung out with you and Max, it was just easy.
I was like, holy shit, this is so fucking easy.
I'm going to hang out here and get content.
These dudes are just so chill. That was the year you like captured all the clown nose and all the other stuff that we
joked about and Brooke Wells losing more followers than I had.
And it was great.
Yeah, yeah.
That was awesome. And we just really bonded. And there's just some people back there
where, you know, they're sort of, they're letting you into their world. Josh would let me do that.
You would let me do that. Noah was really great. There were just some people who were really,
really rich, rich was usually not day one one but by day two or three rich was always
really really great and the women the women that really weren't yeah and besides like the women
there's really no women like that i shouldn't say that there's a handful but the women are a little
more the women are a little more intense they're like uh they are they're not ready to bullshit
and make jokes and and i mean i feel like that's
literally all we do the whole time we're like at the gym is do that is just pick on each other and
like have a good time about it i mean it keeps it light-hearted and fun um and i mean i remember
that that year specifically like one of the goals max had was like let's keep it light-hearted as
possible and just have a good time and the dude literally brought a clown nose to the games to just joke around and put it on to
loosen the situation up um and one year i was with noah and he was awesome and then another year he
was a little a little more uptight and then on the last day he got all loose again and i'm like
hey what's going on with you he goes i was just trying something new this year, and it was stupid.
I was trying to be more serious.
That was dumb.
I should have never done that.
I'd fuck everything up and be more serious.
That's definitely not him at all.
He's just definitely not that kind of person.
He's always, hey, he's happy and hungry, baby.
Happy and hungry.
Travis, that crew out there has grown quite a bit this year.
Yeah.
I mean, we have, I don't know, there's probably 10 to 12 people that are all high-level regional competitors.
So you have myself, Noah, Jake, Berman, Kyle Bernier, Cedric, Lauren Fisher, Alessandra Pacelli,is raptus and jordan adcock are all there right now
isn't brin there also yeah brin's there sorry i mean there's a lot of freaking people
plus your team just did great
yeah and then the team qualified yeah so i, it's definitely a really good training environment and we're all kind of following the same structure and plan. So we all get to do most of the sessions together and then like our independent skill work and stuff we do separately. But as like a whole, you're all doing every single workout together. So you're just getting that next level of push that you're not kind of getting anywhere else. And I think that even
translated over to like this past weekend where I feel completely fine right now with just like
my body, like my back's a little tight, but in the grand scheme of things, like usually finishing a
competition, I'm like trashed, but feel completely fine. But I think that's based off of how the
intensity has been going into this year
with that many people doing workouts that we're all just pushing it to another level i think on
each day max is the head coach for all those people no let's see so noah me kyle Noah, me, Kyle, Alessandra, Lauren.
That might be it.
And then other coaches under him have Alexis, Bryn.
And then another coach has like Kyle and Jake.
And then so there's all the coaches that were all there. Um, but yeah,
so everybody there has at least max kind of oversees the whole thing.
And then the independent training comes from the specific coach,
but then the major group sessions that we do together is kind of like max
writing and overseeing it all.
Do you ever have people come in and, and, and like, I have a friend who's, who's just went to
a super high level, um, jujitsu Academy in San Jose and it's, it's competition jujitsu. And he
basically has to go there and attend the class. But as you're attending the class, the whole time,
you're really just waiting to be invited in. you're not really part of the class until you get the invite is it like that with you let's say let's say brian
showed up how long to be part of your comp team how long would it take before like max be like
hey dude you can't be here you're not you're not you know hey you i mean you can come try
you can come do at least the first day and see how far into the workouts you get. And then you'd probably be given
some adjustments to make sure you're healthy. And I mean, the thing is most people, if they're
doing general CrossFit, they're coming to like my gym, which like, so everything is at the hub of my
gym. And then part of the other side of the gym, Max, like out from me um and then if you're like specifically
wanting that or have those goals then it's kind of a you go to them more or less but if every if
it's pretty much just like pure crossfit general health and fitness they come to me um so i would
bring finally with my people thank you you. But, but is there,
but I guess what I'm saying is,
is there an application process?
Like how do you get into that?
How do you know?
So I mean like be with a coach,
you have to go through like their whole questionnaire process,
meeting with a coach,
getting an assessment,
movement analysis,
movement screens.
And then,
because most of their stuff is all virtual. So most of their business
is not here. Just the people that are trying to be at that high, high level. Most of them have
moved here to be able to train in that environment every single day. But they've also been with Max
for X amount of time. So then it's already taking away that guesswork. Like it's not like some
random person is going to come in and we're going to allow that to allow them to come train
unless they were someone established yeah and even that i mean i feel like you have to like still
be smart about how you do it and just not allowing like hey yeah all you guys can come
because like we're still we have our training group and how we run things and do things where it's not
like, it's not an open gym to literally every person that wants to just come work out. Um,
but yeah, that's kind of how it works.
I think I get it. You guys are elitist.
Yeah, man.
Um, so how,. So how is that?
So what's the name of your gym?
United Performance Now. So it used to be CrossFit Passion, and then we switched it to United Performance when initially the whole CrossFit situation happened.
And then so our affiliation is now CrossFit United through HQ and stuff.
CrossFit United.
So that's what your shirt is. You want to talk about your shirt a little bit i have some issues with your shirt what shirt the shirt i have on
no the united shirt you work out in looks like you're fucking like you like your dad works at
united airlines and he gave you that shirt i'm always like what the fuck is this shirt he's
wearing united what what are they sponsoring him like yeah and i United Airlines. And I can't read the small print. Can we get a –
Yeah, I'll get you a big one. It says performance underneath it.
Yeah, can we work on that for the game?
Oh, you probably can't wear your own shirt at the games, huh?
No, definitely not.
We've got to wear the old – we've got to wear Noble.
Let's talk about in the future about like a little –
so people know it's your gym
and you're not just like that's like that's not your favorite it looks like that's just like your
favorite lucky t-shirt you've had since the eighth grade hey it worked the first time you were on a
flight it worked it worked it worked on not getting me any coverage huh
southwest was the official sponsor and you got a United shirt on.
You got,
yeah,
Delta was the new sponsor.
I didn't have a Delta shirt on Travis.
There were a bunch of guys that did pretty well there that a lot of people
don't know about.
Do you know about these guys?
Nope.
You didn't know about it.
To be honest.
No.
I mean,
the guy that won Jason Hopper,
that was the first time I've met him and talked to him or anything.
Say again?
Jake competed against him in South Carolina within the last year, and Jason won that competition.
Jake got third.
Kyle was there, too.
Well, come on, guys.
They didn't tell me nothing.
I mean, and I didn't really ask.
So maybe that was on me.
But, I mean, I feel like in competition, the other people.
It feels like you're very dialed into what you're doing,
and that's really good for you, obviously.
Yeah.
Pretty much following what they're doing is not beneficial to me whatsoever.
is not beneficial to me whatsoever.
So, I mean, he did very well on all the tests,
and I was impressed.
But yeah, we'll see what happens in Madison.
I feel like the games is always a completely different environment for everybody, and it's way more exciting
when you get to do 12 to 14 tests versus six over the span
of four or five days so i mean the games is what i always enjoy training for just the different
tests that you get to see the biking the running the swimming that you don't ever get to test
at regionals or these other events.
It's just not capable to do.
So that's what I really look forward to is at the games or doing those events
because that's what I have fun training and enjoying doing
versus like 21-15-9 all the time and all these other rep schemes
of doing random stuff, pushing a pig, sandbags over the hay, all that kind of
stuff. Like that's the stuff that I think gets CrossFit even further out of its kind of like
barracks of just doing like the traditional stuff that you get to see how elite the people are by
doing these different tests and different kind of avenues of fitness, more or less.
test in different kind of avenues of fitness more or less.
You, you win the quarterfinals. That's gotta be like just a great,
like just confidence booster, right? Yeah. Well, I mean, I think it was good to just based off of like the podcast you did with Matt and
Josh about how I not very fit and wasn't doing very good. I'm just kidding.
No, they didn't say that at all.
I was maybe going to correct you. I'm like, fit and wasn't doing very good. I'm just kidding. No, they didn't say that at all. I was maybe going to correct you.
I'm like, should I correct him?
No, I'm just kidding.
They didn't say that at all.
No.
Yeah, during the Open, I was just sick, and it was kind of frustrating that I've been working a lot on things on my own, on the mental side of things.
And I wasn't able to really showcase that in the open and then when the
quarterfinals came around feeling healthy and feeling good to be able to win that was
just a good confidence booster kind of going forward into the semis now and then now knowing
like all right the tickets punched now keep the main thing the main thing and training for the
game so it definitely was a good feeling to win that and go out kind of knowing there's some good confidence there going forward this year
trevor so the inverse to that when you i mean you did fantastic you did fantastic sorry ron this
would be quick the inverse to that is you so you do great at the quarterfinals and you get a little
high and then you don't win the semifinals
is that does that get in your head then does it do the inverse is it like oh fuck no i mean i think
i just had a few mistakes that i knew were kind of there um that it didn't let me i don't think
it brought me down in any way or had the inverse effect i mean
each set of tests are completely different each workouts are completely different like the way the
test for the quarterfinal set up like a lot of those were kind of my jam and things i really
enjoyed and so were some of these that we got this past weekend and i think it's just still being
able to adapt and become the best version of myself that I can on each of these workouts and get the most out of them. And I think I keep doing
that for each of these events and learning new things about myself, the better I keep getting.
And for me, this event, being in person was probably one of the best I've done. Execution
wise gone into just kind of like how I focused, how I handled some things that
didn't go as planned or whatever, was able to let it go, kind of move on.
And even though it was like frustrating dropping on the leaderboard to fourth when it could have
been a possible second or even first, just those points, like it's frustrating, but then it's like,
okay, no, take this as like a lesson learned. And now make sure you don't do that in Madison.
And how can I learn and grow from that versus like beating myself up about it?
So for me, I think it's kind of like it happened for a reason and I'm not going to beat myself up about it.
Of course, I want to win, but we're not all Matt Frazier and we can't all win every single competition and event.
And you got to still
be on top of your A game and learn from it and be able to grow. And so that's what I'm kind of
focused on doing and excited to take a few days off and then get back to it to dial those things
in. Personally, I think that you have a ton of positive to take away from the weekend. I mean,
the four of you guys that were in the top four spots, to me,
just look at the point margin and the consistency across the weekend,
are guys that are legit top ten contenders at the games, like all of them.
And a couple of them have been third and fourth before there. Even Zach? Even Zach Watts?
No, I said one through four. One through four.
Oh, okay, good.
Watts was almost 100 points behind Travis.
Travis is just 20 points behind Scott.
And Jason had an incredible weekend.
And we'll see, like Travis said, what he can do.
So, I think
very positive takeaways.
Yeah. I mean, it definitely was.
I mean, I think everybody did a really good job
and they all showed up and performed that
day. I mean, at the end of the day
it was fun to be able to just be back
in an in-person event. I mean, I think
all of us were
just excited to, at least for me, I was just excited to be like around people,
doing event, having fans and screaming and yelling. Like that's, what's fun. So to be
able to hopefully Madison will be fully packed and have that excitement. That's what's fun.
And I think that's what a lot you could hear those 35
people that were in the stands when you were out there yeah i did i think it was like 36 awesome
my bad um are you gonna have a fifth kid no nope how do you know are you how do you know
nope nope here's here's my here's my um just total you know like you. Nope. Here's my just total – you know, like you just – I just – oh, you did?
No, I haven't.
I haven't.
I haven't.
Yeah, don't do that.
Don't do that.
Well, I mean, what other way?
Come on, man.
I can't.
Sing us some other contraception.
Listen, I figure – this is what I figure.
This is how I imagine you.
You're like this pretty hardcore religious dude,
This is what I figure.
This is how I imagine you. You're like this pretty hardcore religious dude, and you believe that God is just giving you kids just that will only give you what you can handle, and you and your wife just let it fly.
And you're just rolling.
You're just rolling with it.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm definitely not having more.
uh i'm definitely not having more uh the only i'll tell you what you i'll tell you this is the travis this is the travis travis family contraception method well i guess you can't
get pregnant when you're pregnant i mean that technically that's so as long as you're pregnant
honey this is some fantastic uh that's definitely not happening so no we we're done no more uh four
is a great number uh four is a great i think we're both we're both tapped out of four that's uh
i mean originally when we started talking about and having kids the plan was to originally have
two maybe three and then we had our second one and then i was like oh well this isn't too bad
and then we had our third one and then it was was like, oh, well, this isn't too bad. And then we had our third one. And then it was like, all right, one more.
And I said, okay.
And then.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
So the fourth one was even planned.
Yeah, they were all planned.
Oh, wow.
That's incredible.
All of them.
That's incredible.
Because.
You're saying yours weren't?
Not really.
The first one was.
I mean, like we never wanted kids to get married or any of that stuff.
I'm on the whole other side of you. But then we had, then all of us,
she saw some women breastfeeding. She's like, I want one of those.
I want to, I want to experience that. So we had one and then, and then,
and then that's why I'm, yeah.
And that's why I'm projecting on you when she was pregnant.
And I was just like, Holy shit, this is the greatest contraception ever.
This pregnant woman is the greatest thing ever.
And then and then the other two, she was like, hey, you need to be.
I'll tell you the whole story real quick.
So we were doing it in the living room because the first baby is asleep in our room.
And she goes, hey, be careful.
I'm ovulating.
I'm like, all right, cool.
So then the next night in the living room. What room so then the next night we're in the living room
doing it and she says
she goes
what the fuck did you just do
I go what do you mean she goes I told you I was ovulating
I go that was last night
she's like you fucking idiot
and then two weeks later we got twins
yeah that's a no no it was great it's great and if we were definitely if
we were younger i would probably i mean i would take a hundred kids now i can't even
it's fine you know but i mean i don't i don't think people really understand the
that you don't understand it until you have them but i feel like when you grow up everybody
always talks very negative about just children in general and how they ruin your life you don't
get to go do with these things they never sleep and never do all these things but then you never
talk about all the great memories and the fun things that actually go down and happen and the
growth and seeing them learn new skills and develop into literally little humans that's what's fun and an enjoyment
um i mean i think people always just get caught off and they're pissed off maybe because they
didn't want to have a child or something else but i mean i love it i love being a parent it's fun
yeah i imagine i mean i definitely don't i'm not gonna say i don't want another one or 100 like you, but I'm very content with my four.
Yeah.
The thing that people also probably don't realize that you can speak to is two is harder than one but more than twice as hard, and three is way more harder than two.
And I can't speak to four.
But it's like having three
dogs like one dog's hard two dogs is kind of hard three dogs is like holy shit yeah and i had three
dogs once but three kids now they now they i mean they in all honesty they have you outnumbered
yeah yeah so there's just well i mean when you have one you can hand it off like you get this
one that's fine two it's like all right we got man to man you just handle this one i'll handle this one three you got to kind of juggle a little bit more four it's just all right
it's chaos i mean thankfully like so i have a five and a half and three and a half year old
and they kind of can fend for themselves it's just our 18 month old he's reckless and we'll just
tear the house apart he's a little terror, but that's the one you got to watch out for.
So it's really just those two that we're like, you always got to keep your eye on.
Do you think you'd be a better CrossFitter if you didn't have kids?
Do you think you would be, you've been able to dedicate more time to your, to your training
or do you think your training is right where it should be?
No, I think it's right where it should be. No, I think it's right where it should be. I mean, I think it also helps give me a better reason to push and drive and moments and workouts.
And it just gives me a different motivation than not having them.
I mean, do I think?
Yeah, I don't know.
I guess I've never really thought about it.
Because, I mean, I was married at 24.
I had my first kid at 25
so i mean kind of i don't recommend the games what'd you say i said i don't recommend that
people i don't recommend that yeah that definitely doesn't seem to be the case anymore now um
but i don't know if it i feel like it's just kind of been, that's how it always naturally has just gone.
And I've just kind of accepted it and learned how to train and adapt around that.
And I mean, I'm usually at the gym at eight o'clock in the morning until roughly three.
And then, so I mean, I'm getting two full sessions in there, possibly the third one.
And then depending on what my training is like, do another one at home. Cause I have like a full setup at home. So,
I mean, I have time to get all my workouts in and not ever feel like I'm being taken away from
my goal of the games to being a parent and stuff. Like I feel like the timing of
how my training and things are structured works pretty well.
Are you honest with yourself? Do you think about your age? Yeah. In terms of your career?
What do you think? I'm not 30 years old. No, I believe I believe you're 30. You took a second, a 10th, a first, a second, and then two sixths. And I know this is a bit of a stretch to say this,
but the guys ahead of you
in first, second and third place, their finishes in the last two workouts were first, third,
fifth, second, second, first, and you have two sixths. And one of the things that we see in
older athletes is that they can compete, they can compete, but their recovery is becomes the first sign of um uh-oh something like that that that's the first
thing to go is their recovery you know so they just still do great in the open they still but
but when it comes to multiple day but then what what what does it say that how i feel completely
fine right now what does that mean you're lying to us i don't know i ain't lying to you man
i got no benefit in lying to you no i mean i think i get what you're lying to us i don't know i ain't lying to you man i got no benefit in line to you
no i mean i think i get what you're saying i mean the fact that they're 21 years old
and 22 that's definitely uh scott panch benefit on their side but then you also have
the experience on my side and the fact that this isn't my first rodeo and the fact that I have done this for a long time. And I know that if you go back and look at other regionals and then you were
saying who won, I mean,
Brian would probably actually know this if I actually did say it,
but it was like, who won the 2017 regional? You'd be like, Oh,
I don't know. But then when you say who won the games,
that's where it ultimately matters. Right. So, I mean,
I think there's a lot of things that happen from now until the games.
And I think across every single regional will, or semi, whatever it's called now,
but for each semi, you'll see differences from athletes last year that competed to then
how they perform in the semis this year. And I think just because I'm 30 years old,
I actually feel like I'm recovering better now than I was back then because
I'm taking a smarter approach on how I recover,
how I cool down after workouts.
Then when I was younger,
it would just be like,
okay,
I'll just go drink a shake and I'll be completely fine.
Where now I'm like,
okay,
I'll cool down for 10 minutes,
then do some stretching.
And then I feel completely fine.
So I'm just finding different ways around it to suit me and better me for my circumstances.
And then things that happen, just I don't base all of that off of what everybody sees because that's based off the leaderboard is what you see is the sixth and sixth.
But what other people don't see is like, okay, did I have a sickness? Did I have something else come up? But I don't ever,
I'm not going to sit there and complain about something that might've happened to me or
whatever. It's just, it is what it is. And I gave my best effort for that. And are there
rooms for improvement? Yes, I think so. And that's what I'm going to be working on and training on
towards the games. Um, so I mean, I don't.
And I'm not saying I see it.
I'm not saying I see it in you just, you know,
I know it's a bit of a stretch,
but it's always an interesting component to talk about because I know that's true with training also.
I know the younger guys,
I'll never forget Spiel saying this in a, I don't know, 2009 or 10,
that the big thing about getting old in your training is,
is that you can't work,
you don't have as much time to work on the technical stuff like double unders, handstand walks because you're older and your recovery is not what you used to be.
Yeah, I mean I think part of that is back then people didn't have the smart enough coach and approach to how they did things.
Where I did the reverse where all I focused on is I used to do three to four hours of movement work a day to improve
position to keep myself healthy. I mean, you look at the athletes that have been in the game since
I was in it still competing at elite level is a very slim margin of athletes. One, I've still
feel like I'm completely healthy. My body's healthy. I feel like I'm stronger than I've
ever been. I'm recovering faster and so
from that side of things i think instead of having my one breakout year in 2012 or whatever and then
done not being able to compete anymore because i buried my body into the ground with not training
smart max is very intelligent with the way we did things early on to keep me healthy so that I do have this longevity in the sport.
And now I'm making my seventh trip.
So I think the times of back then when people in 2009, it was really just, hey, let's do whatever we can to like jam as many CrossFit workouts as we can into it.
Like there wasn't as much thought and process behind it as a, like a coaching aspect of
things and how you approach this.
What's the, how much squat volumes accumulating in the week?
How much pressing, how much time are you upside down?
Like that's not really looked at.
I feel like back then as now it's a professional sport and people get paid to do this.
So then you require that knowledge from other people.
Like we have a sprint coach we
do sprint work with once a week we have a swimming coach we do swim work we have a marathon runner
that we do merit like uh speed work and long distance work and then you have your movement
analysis and pt guy that does the stuff so i think for us as like an organization and TTT itself is like it's a much smarter approach than just
pure CrossFit like it's about being healthy moving better and doing those things so
for me I think it's allowed me to stay healthy and in this sport for as long as I have because
of him from an early age in the sport of being 20 years old and like, Hey, no, you need to fix your squat.
That's horrible. Like your knees cave in. This is this, this sucks. Your overhead position is
worthless and garbage. And he's very honest with that. When I was very early on, like,
yeah, you can't get a bar overhead without your rib cage and then finding ways to improve it.
And then now here we are, but I think you have to do that at an early age.
And now I think as the sport keeps evolving,
you have these guys that did start in like the old school CrossFit,
but now they're getting into like focusing more on movement, moving better.
And we'll kind of see what happens with the sport in the next like 10 years
with someone who's had a coach that long. But I mean,
Max and I have been together since 2013 2012 he lives in georgia he lives in marietta uh alfreda alfreda yeah
did you and you guys met through crossfit yeah so i used to work with do you remember nate schrader
Yeah. So I used to work with, do you remember Nate Schrader?
Yeah. The dude that just shredded beyond belief.
Yeah. So he used to like write programs for me and then he worked with OPT at the time.
And so then I reached out to OPEX OPT at that point in time and Max was a coach there.
So then I had a call with him about working together.
And then immediately after that call, I was like, this is the guy I want to work with. I just knew immediately he was a genius in that side of we pitched him the idea of like, Hey,
this part of our gym is not used. The offices up front are not used. Do you want to move your
business down here? Atlanta is a bigger airport. More people can get into it easier than they
could in Utah at that point. Um, so the day after my wedding, he's like, Hey, can you take me to go
look at this house?
I took him to look at the house and then he ended up getting it.
And then he's been here ever since.
Damn.
It's amazing that you guys have maintained a relationship, to be honest, that's both business and friendship and coach.
Yeah, I mean, it's definitely been.
That's that's juggling a lot. Yeah, I mean, it's definitely been a... That's juggling a lot. Yeah, I mean, it's definitely... We've both started to really figure all that out
and then help each other on the business side of things.
And like, that's its own one thing.
And then you have the athlete and coach side.
That's its own.
And being able...
And then you also have the shit talking between both of us
of like being able to pick those two apart
because sometimes those lines would get a little blurry.
But then at the end of the day, we've now got kind of like a good routine where I'm like,
hey, you can't talk about this when we're trading.
And then when we're done, you can let it rip and go for it.
But during these times, we have our ground rules of how much trash talking can go on about certain things.
So you guys have a very honest relationship. Yeah.
I mean, he's honestly like a brother healthy. Say again. Wow. Awesome.
So, and that is, is that the secret to keeping it healthy?
Just being just super. Yeah. I mean, I think early on,
like I've never been a very, uh,
share my feelings kind of guy and I would hold things in.
And then I remember there'd be
times he'd be like, so what do you want to do? Like, how was this? And then he'd like,
we would just sit in his office and I just wouldn't say anything. Cause I just,
I was like, whatever, like, I don't want to talk. And he'd be like, all right,
you have to tell me what's going on, how you feel, what's the structure like.
And then over the years I've started to develop like, oh, like when you start explaining things
and getting that out, then they, he understands it better then we can program better get a better structure going forward um but yeah
there was definitely almost like having two wives it's almost like having two wives yeah
it is seriously but i'm he's not married so then it's better does um does your wife ever get jealous of him no no all the time you spend with him no definitely
i mean you see that shit i mean i'm asking no i mean the amount of times like at the gym is just
me at the gym the main times we're like fully together like at events like we were this past
weekend but no she's not jealous of max at least i don't think so i'll go ask her when we're done
awesome thank you yeah you're welcome send me a text i'll let you know
brian i'm gonna let him go we're approaching an hour is there anything you want to
it's really been an hour wow i know time flies how uh how difficult was the torque tank? It wasn't.
The prowler was harder.
I love it.
Like the prowler in our gym is harder.
I mean, I think – Which workout was that before you talk about it?
Because I don't see one called the torque tank on here.
Which workout was it?
Number two.
It was the –
Eight miles?
No.
No, the second one.
Skier or torque tank, skier, chest to bar, skier, torque tank, back, forth, back and forth.
And then it's like the harder you push, the more the magnetic field kicks up.
And so it's almost like not bending fitting you to go faster kind of thing.
So like if you full sprint at it, it doesn't help it.
Versus if you just kind of
push slow and methodical with it then it's almost better so it just kind of i feel like it's one of
those things that like doesn't benefit you to actually be faster um it's almost like you just
are kind of smooth with it better which is kind of a weird tool to do but i mean really
do you want to buy this and i was like no because i mean i feel like
we have 12 prowlers at the gym and i'm like i don't like it the prowler when we push that
feels harder than the way when i push that what i think is like a stupid device for testing fitness
you just described a stupid device for testing fitness. You're punished for working harder? I don't understand how that would – that sounds lame.
Hey, don't ask me. I didn't invent it.
I mean not lame to work out with, but lame to test fitness with. seems i would say in a competition that's a better tool than a prowler because it's the
same resistance it's the same for everybody like on the level of like with the turf field or grass
field when you are pushing there definitely are i know the whole dave castro and there aren't
lanes that are different and whatnot and fields sloped in different ways. Designed to go the whatever.
But with this.
It at least makes it fair.
Like it's all on wheels.
It's all going to roll the same.
And then just however you maneuver it.
And push it is on you.
So I think from that side of things.
It at least makes it an even playing field.
On the device you're using versus
the prowler which can be indicated by it got stuck on the tape and now it won't actually push like
those kind of decisions of like the fact that's come out like three or four times and people have
had issues with it it's like all right well maybe this will be the new way to kind of solve that problem going forward.
Do you have any bitching about the prize money?
I mean, I just hope Dubai and those other events come back.
I mean, yeah, it's just one of those things where I get it, but then at a professional level when you're like, all right, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.
Okay, that paid for what?
My hotel while I was there.
And then food and gas.
All right, that's all gone.
So it's like I get it's supposed to contribute towards the trip of the games, but that money is already gone just based off of how it was just put forward to this weekend and paying the registration to get there then you have the hotel all these other things that go into it um i mean of course i
would like to see it higher i mean i think everybody would just based off of the amount
of time and energy we're putting into this and then for those that don't even make it
like okay you just lost a bunch of money. Like for the guy that took six, all right, well, sorry, man, that's a bummer.
But then, I mean, I think Dubai has done a very good job with it.
I think at the games, they have it the right way.
But I mean, I think there could be a better scenario for the athletes
to at least make money doing it right because then the only other
opportunity is the games which i mean makes sense like that should be the big one but i also think
there should still be those opportunities like dubai you get paid out for each workout then
legitimately everybody gets paid every single person so if you took dead last you at least
walk away with a thousand bucks so them, that's great for them.
And then you're capitalized the higher up you, of course, finish.
And at least that's a very substantial amount of money at that point, even if it's not that far.
Even if it's like $10,000, $9,000, $8,000, $7,000, $6,000, $5,000, $4,000, $3,000, $2,000, $1,000, $500 for everybody else, however you want to look at it.
But at least you're making money on the weekend versus like, I just lost money. If you have like a $2,000, um, place to stay, then if you have your
flight, then all your food. And then if you have family and other stuff coming and then you're
helping pay for that, like, okay, well they're just wanting your $5,000 like that. Um, all of
this is predicated on the presupposition that this is like,
I want to say a professional sport, but even most professional sports are like that. Like
once you fall to the top 150 golfers in the world, they're all paying to try to be professional
golfers. They're all trying to pay, they're all paying to be on the tour. And it's,
here's what's weird to me just from the inside of working at CrossFit,
the games were
just supposed to be a party they were just supposed to be a place to celebrate fitness 2007 and then
2008 it got bigger and it just kept growing and growing and growing and maybe the lack of prize
money from some people's perspective and they're complaining is just hey well then it's um i mean
it's predicated on capitalism it's the same reason why uh the wmba doesn't
get paid as much as the nba right yeah if if so part of me like when i hear people complain
they think and you're complaining by the way i think the thing for me is i'm not
you're and you're not complaining i'm not complaining because i don't do no i don't
do it for the money yes the money's right of course, what pays my bills and does that set of things.
But I compete because I love the sport in CrossFit.
And I wouldn't dedicate this much time if I didn't get to try to prove myself and what I was capable of doing.
That's what I enjoy doing and the unknown of knowing what we're getting into every day.
That's the stuff to me that is fun.
I mean, of course, getting paid for it and compensated for the amount of time and effort we're putting into it.
And then when you're looking at like, okay, so there are only 40 people in the world that are qualifying out of this, having some, or at least helping the athletes out when they get to Madison.
Hey, half your room's covered.
hey half your room's covered here's some food like some other way than like not for me personally but other athletes of like they're having to pay for their entire room they're
having to play for legitimately everything to get to that point and then can still walk away with
absolutely nothing and you're looking at the top 40 athletes in the world in our sport. I get it came from a party,
but it's also developed into a pretty major thing now of having these massive
companies involved to be able to put money into the athlete as well.
Charles Olivera just won the,
I think it's lightweight 155 pound division at the UFC.
Yeah.
And,
and he jumped over the
fence and he looked at Dana White and he said, thank you so much. I love you so much. You've
given me the greatest opportunity in my life and you've changed my life where we're only five or
six more fights away from him. If he continues to defend the championship belt before he's talking
shit about Dana, cause he wants to make more money. And so there's also that too. I feel like
all the bitching comes from the guys who've made it into the top three and then they taste that and they want more. They taste that. I mean there's no question people who are – like Matt selling his programming is making a fucking killing because he won the games five times yes and it's just it's just a really part of me thinks that you almost have to be stupid i mean you would have
you have to be stupid to enter to try to become a croc to become any professional athlete and
think it's going to make you rich it's got to be the hardest way in the world to do it
and especially a crossfit athlete yeah so. So I get a little annoyed by it.
So that's why I bring it up.
You know, it's like.
So you're in the side of saying it should be where it's at.
Shouldn't be.
I have no idea.
I have no idea.
But I think it's predicated on capitalism, right?
If we were selling golf balls and golf tees and golf clubs and, and you know i i heard that um in a single weekend
golf courses make more money than all the revenue in the entire year for the nfl you know what i
mean the the whole golf ecosystem switches more money hands than the nfl does and it's like yeah
well like crossfit's huge and tiny at the same time oh yeah i mean you're looking at me fucking hard
and it's fucking hard yeah you know and same with the ufc it's huge but also tiny
yeah you know and it's like and it's hard yeah so i don't i don't know that are at our level
that are doing this is because they love it right you know like and the reason I do it every day and I wake up is because I genuinely enjoy what I get to do every single day.
I mean, the people that I think like the LeBrons and the Tom Brady's like they probably love what they do, but they're also getting compensated extremely well.
And that even makes the like, OK, this is even better, you know, but at the end of the day, like they still love what they do.
okay, this is even better, you know, but at the end of the day, like they still love what they do.
So yeah, I don't know. And there's people who parlayed it into becoming millionaires. I mean, I mean,
I just recently spoke to Ryan Fisher and Marcus Philly. They, I don't even think Ryan Fisher
ever went to the games and he's, he's fucking killing it. And then you got people like Marcus
Philly and look at Miranda Alvarez. And that you got people like Mark Sleeve. And look at Miranda.
Alvarez.
That might be the biggest success story coming out of CrossFit.
Street parking.
Oh.
Oh, yeah.
She was good back in the day, right?
Well, I mean, maybe she was.
It was so long ago, I don't even remember.
I mean, I know she was on teams.
Yeah.
And then, of course, Matt and Rich and those guys don't look like they're hurting for money either yeah i mean as long as you perform yeah and
and and and parlay the opportunity into something yeah but you'll never do that if you don't get
camera time yeah well although ryan and marcus did it without i said you'll never do it without
camera time yeah but although marcus and ryan did and you have a very beautiful house so you must not be doing
too bad a ton of stuff yeah marcus is literally non-stop with legitimately everything it'll be
like 15 videos in a day of all you opex guys have like something about you.
You know that?
You guys who came sort of through somehow,
who were attracted to James Fitzgerald.
Like you guys probably go through soap faster than people who didn't,
who just did regular CrossFit and never went the OPEX route.
You guys like a little more fastidious, clean.
You probably get your hair cut more often.
You know what I mean?
We definitely keep ourselves clean. You see that?
Yeah.
Yeah, like the Marcus Philly, you.
Yeah.
Not Brian.
Brian went through the OPEX route too,
but he's fucking missed the bar of soap classes
that James must have been teaching over there
and the shaving classes.
Travis, how accurate do you think the true form runners are?
To normal running?
Not at all.
Why use them in a live competition i don't know man i just want to run outside i mean that's what i think everyone wants to see too yeah i mean yes we do
want to see you run outside i think everybody i mean i think for for that scenario inside like the way the whole stadium is
and what not I guess like that is the best
they could do but I mean I feel like you could also
save a bunch of money by having everybody run outside
and not pay for the true forms
how about just inside
everyone wants to
the best part about the games is when you fuckers
are forced to start at the starting line together and we get
to just laugh at you it's like
just bulls fighting and we know someone's going down and there's gonna be
pushing and there's gonna be a story at the end about how travis pulled my hair or some shit
that's a great point yeah the only good point about the air runner is this it makes regular
running all of a sudden more interesting like if you see regular running like this sucks you're
like oh no you want us to show you what really sucks we're gonna put 20 guys on air
runners yeah i mean i think you want to complain next time we're gonna make them jog in place
what like the timing of like the running like we have two assault runners and in a true form in the
gym and that if you're like hey let's all run 400 meters they're all completely different
every single one of them you're like oh this one let's all run 400 meters, they're all completely different.
Every single one of them.
You're like, oh, this one's faster.
This one's a little slower.
The true form, you pull way more with your hamstring.
The Assault Runner's more like natural running, it kind of feels like.
But, yeah, it's just that it – I mean, I don't know.
I guess it's just to be able – I mean, at least they had running in it. So for me, I'm like, I'd rather have...
If it's running on that or no running at all,
I would rather run on that than not have anything at those events
because I feel like that is a big separator on these events
that when you do get to the games where there's six running events
and then you never tested running in any of the stages to get up to that point,
you can have different top five finishers
based on that it was great in la when you guys would run in the stadium up over the top awesome
that shit the crowds love that and you guys are running inside the stadium and we get to watch
you climb that hill and then come down and you guys kind of jockey for position as you come down
that long flight of stairs i mean that was a lot of gaming too that i mean i love that that was a lot of fun
yeah you just made me hate you just gave me a new uh hang up brian i hate those those those
runners you just you just gave me a sickness you gave me a disease i hate those runners now
it's pointless i see that as lazy programming now. Did you hear? I heard there's a cease and desist on assault fitness for the treadmills.
Is that true?
Say that again?
Like a cease and desist from Woodway.
What's Woodway?
They were like the first original runner.
Oh, and now they're telling assault to stop making him i think so are they going to tell um who makes the true form true form are they going to tell did they
tell true form to stop making him too i don't know well the yeah i don't know i don't know i
think i feel like all those guys i saw something something on, on like morning chalk up. It was just like a quick little paragraph and I read and I was like, huh?
I wonder how true that is.
All those guys.
Echo bike is the official sponsor of the games.
Yeah. So not a fan of the echo bike, not a fan of the echo bike.
Why not?
It just doesn't feel like a real bike to me it feels like a 19
the first 30 seconds are great you're like man this has an amazing build man this is really smooth
and then all of a sudden i start having flashbacks of those 1970s bikes where they have the rubber
stopper and you squeeze it tighter under the wheel to add resistance i'm like oh there's something
like that going on here that's creating the resistance i'm not enjoying this yeah i mean
see my thing from an affiliate owner standpoint is that withstands a
class way better we so i just bought 12 of them and they that makes sense hold up way better so
then i had 15 assault bikes and i replaced five monitors in one week oh wow and so i'm like the amount of money i was putting back into the assault bikes i had
guaranteed at least one pedal snap off probably every four to five days maybe every week and a
half one pedal would snap off so then oh i just have the assault bike in my garage it's just me
and it's easy to move around yeah when it's just one person like i have one in the garage and it's great but when you have 200 people in a gym non-stop the echo
bike just is way better for a class structure yeah it's a tank yeah all those people in that
space are making more money than god right now oh yeah, yeah. Salt Bike, Rowe. Peloton.
Peloton, the C2.
I've been hearing some of the numbers,
and you can just see how many employees.
I mean, I don't think anyone in Ohio works for anyone else besides Bill.
I mean, that company has taken over.
Yeah.
I mean, he's killing it.
And it all started with CrossFit.
Did you see what,
uh,
what Sam Quant said today?
Say that again.
Sorry.
I didn't hear you.
Do you see what Sam Quant said today?
Has anyone told you about it?
I just was,
uh,
he,
he put up,
he put up a post on Instagram about some,
uh,
chronic illnesses that he's been having for on and off for the last five years, actually, that he's been hesitant to share with anyone.
Shouldn't have got the vaccine then.
Sorry, I couldn't resist.
But I was only asking because...
How's that?
Did it go into detail or it just said...
It's a little vague.
I think it reads as if it was hard for him to write it, but he felt like it was an appropriate time to.
But he also made it very abundantly clear that he didn't want to advertise this. He doesn't like excuses.
So my guess is that none of you guys had any idea about it either.
Like he wasn't talking about or letting on in the in the athlete area at all.
No. Yeah, I don't know.
This weekend, this weekend didn't turn out
the way I had hoped
I know that many people
have been asking why
and as hard as it may be
I do feel like I owe
an explanation
I hate excuses
I feel like there is always
an excuse to be said
about why a performance
wasn't its best
which is why I've kept quiet
throughout my CrossFit career
about various things
even to the point
that my coach
didn't have the full story
until very recently
however
I've realized that I've been holding myself back from my true potential for years
by not fully acknowledging this.
Since the 2017 season, I've had an erection that will not go away,
which makes it very hard for me to run long distances.
I made that part up.
Dude, no.
When you read that part, I was like, what?
Since the 2017 season, just before my worst crossfit games finish i have been dealing
with various forms of chronic illness the flare-ups the flare-ups come without any apparent
cause and have been pretty big a pretty big hurdle for me over the past five years seemingly unrelated
leading up to the mac i don't know what that is i started having trouble breathing during exercise
and following workouts we thought it was just seasonal allergies, but it was clearly more.
When I got to Tennessee, I had a pretty severe outbreak in hives that put me in urgent care
for a couple of days before the competition and was given medication that left me feeling
super drained.
So he's saying that right before this competition, he was in the hospital?
Yeah.
My God.
Each day of competition, I debated whether i should withdraw but decided
to finish it despite how i felt god he's a savage he took 12th right each day of uh i just didn't
want to go down without a fight it may seem like a setback for me not to make it to the games this
year but i think it may end up being the opportunity i need that will force me to really buckle down
and get these things resolved moving to boston to train with the comp train crew has been the best possible
move for my career.
And my coach Harry and for my coach,
Harry has been amazingly supportive since I've opened up about what's been
going on.
Thank you to everyone who has believed in me and a huge thank you to my coach
and comp train team for the support as I figure this out.
No,
I didn't know about any of that.
Well,
hopefully it's the, you got to say something more than that. I just read a lot's still you got to say something more than that i just read a lot of shit you
better say something more than that what i said you got to say more than that i just read a lot
of shit you got like at least give me 30 40 seconds was he a nice guy no he's a super nice
guy i mean from the communication i've had with him i mean i feel like most of us when we're all
back there anyway it's very just kind of. Everybody's kind of doing their own thing and getting warmed up their way and everybody
kind of gets in the zone. So the amount of talking from the time I was there, like I would show up
probably an hour before and then I would leave and then go back to the house in between events.
So it's not like I was really even there hanging out. But I mean, for like the few minutes like,
hey, how you doing?
Doing well?
Good.
Yourself?
How are your kids?
Like that kind of talk.
I mean, he's always been super nice and I've competed against him for a while now.
But I definitely did not know about any of that.
And I mean, hopefully that he gets that kind of situated. I'd be curious to know actually like what it is that's causing it.
And then to break out in like hives and stuff, I'd be like, just to actually like, no.
I mean, that's definitely a bummer going into the weekend, having to go to urgent care and not feel well.
I mean, you don't want that.
You want to compete against everybody at their best to see how you actually stack up and do.
And you hope that the best for everybody.
So hopefully he gets all that kind of squared away and comes back healthier than ever.
Shellfish.
It's the thing that, um, that Fraser talks about, you know, with the, with this format,
you only have that one weekend, that one opportunity to qualify.
And if something just happens, unfortunately that lines up up with that weekend, better luck next year.
And he always thought that that was a risky game.
Yeah, I mean, I think it is.
I mean, I definitely agree with that.
The way the whole structure of it does line up is that,
I mean, I think in that situation,
it's hard because he legitimately had something
and it affected his performance.
But then I think though I will give CrossFit the benefit of the doubt of
adding that six through eight spot to add a last chance qualifier was a good
idea to give those people,
like if something did happen or coming up slightly short,
like it still gives them an opportunity to still qualify.
I mean,
in his situation,
just having something legitimately happen right before the event,
that's a complete bummer.
And all the work he put in to not actually be able to be shown is very frustrating.
Like, thankfully for me, it happened during the Open, and I just needed to place top 10%.
So it kind of, you know,
like it's a bummer for him that it happened at that point in time. So, I mean,
yeah, it's definitely frustrating, but I don't know. I mean, hopefully, I mean,
I don't know how you would figure that out to be fair for kind of everybody,
you know, like,
cause sometimes that just is the nature of the game is things do happen.
And that's just like,
you're not going to change the Olympics because the like the way you try to
qualify, like, and it just didn't work for that weekend. You know, like,
I feel like that's just the name of the game sometimes. And
it's extremely frustrating, but I also think it teaches you a lot about yourself.
And for him,
maybe this was like best case scenario.
It allows him to actually figure out what is going on,
how he can fix it and then come back stronger and then not have something
like that happen.
I mean,
it's just a,
I mean,
it really is a bummer that it did happen.
So yeah,
I don't know.
Peace.
Damn, I wish I was cool enough to do that.
Peace.
And then just sign up.
That's it.
Yeah, just sign off.
I thought you did, actually.
I did, right?