Just looked at for an hour or so.
If you haven't been to the RKC it's a definite buy. Lot's of the best form "tips" are all there for each lift. Also good stuff off the forum. So even if you have the RKC book, there's way more in terms of form and problem spotting here.
It's "limited" in terms of drills, which I think is good and on purpose. It's supposed to be how to do swing, snatch, clean, press and TGU right. Pretty much like the cert. There's plenty of other resources for everything else.
Lot's of program design stuff. I had an oppurtunity to put my 2 cents in on this when Pavel was writing it and I think it's really good for the guy training w/o a trainer. High rep ballistics and low rep grinds, some dice throwing ideas, intensity cycling etc...
There's an RKC "Rite of Passage" 200 snatches with 24kg in 10 minutes and press the KB closest to 1/2 BW w/ both arms, and how to train for it. Seems like a pretty good combo to me.
I would say it's not as good as BBB, but that's no insult. BBB to me is just unbelievalbly loaded. This is a more like a much better RKC manual. If someone's using mostly KBs to train I don't see how you don't buy it. If you're getting into KBs it's way better then the RKC book and I'd have to assume the DVD is way better.
Does someone like me "learn" anything from it, no, maybe a reminder or two. But for someone who has hasn't been to any seminars or the RKC there's good stuff.
Bill
Enter the Kettlebell
Moderator: Dux
Enter the Kettlebell
"my body stayin' vicious, I be up in the gym, just workin' on my fitness"
Fergie
Fergie
DB
If anything I'm guilty of being a little too "absorb everything". What I meant by "someone like me" was this, the guy who's been to the RKC, and/or a Mahler/Cotter/Pavel/Maxwell seminar, or all of the above, been on the forum, is going to have seen most of this stuff before and isn't going to get a "gee whiz" reaction to the book.
Bill
If anything I'm guilty of being a little too "absorb everything". What I meant by "someone like me" was this, the guy who's been to the RKC, and/or a Mahler/Cotter/Pavel/Maxwell seminar, or all of the above, been on the forum, is going to have seen most of this stuff before and isn't going to get a "gee whiz" reaction to the book.
Bill
"my body stayin' vicious, I be up in the gym, just workin' on my fitness"
Fergie
Fergie
Bill,
I think the content and progressions of this book should be the focus of the RKC cert course . The way it's laid out and the logical progressions and restrictions would help a lot of newbies coming into kb'ing as well as prepare for the cert.Keep the certs focus on the basic moves and obtaining real numbers before getting "fancy".
And I agree this book, which now supercedes the original manual will probably be too slow for advanced people but still good to have.
hope you are well.
rif
I think the content and progressions of this book should be the focus of the RKC cert course . The way it's laid out and the logical progressions and restrictions would help a lot of newbies coming into kb'ing as well as prepare for the cert.Keep the certs focus on the basic moves and obtaining real numbers before getting "fancy".
And I agree this book, which now supercedes the original manual will probably be too slow for advanced people but still good to have.
hope you are well.
rif
"it's all easy til it's heavy"
Re: Enter the Kettlebell
M@rio, please move this thread to the KB forum.