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Fitness

How to Simultaneously Succeed in Competitive Sport and CrossFit

This is the third year I've competed in both CrossFit and beach volleyball. I've learned some lessons in that time.

Christie Jenkins

Written by Christie Jenkins Last updated on Nov 22, 2021

Although CrossFit is now a sport in its own right, there are still plenty of people who take it up in order to supplement their other athletic pursuits. That’s how I got into it – I was playing elite-level beach volleyball and went looking for a more interesting way to be strong and fit than just going to the gym.

Athletes are naturally competitive and that’s one of the reasons we are so attracted to CrossFit. So it’s natural that many of us end up competing not just in our chosen sport, but also in CrossFit. The chance to measure ourselves against thousands of others is too tempting to resist.

“You have to decide what your priority is for the season. Do you want the best result in CrossFit that you are capable of? Or the best result in your sport?”

But when it comes to juggling sport and Crossfit at the same time, you can’t expect to win at both. This is the third year I’ve done the Open whilst in the midst of the Australian beach volleyball tournament season. And I can tell you, it’s not easy competing in two things at once.

Here are a few things I’ve learnt along the way that will help if you are doing more than just CrossFit this season.

Decide on Your Priority

With the upper levels of CrossFit improving each year, being at the top is now a full-time endeavor. And it is the same in any other sport. Talent is no longer enough to be the best at any athletic pursuit. Hours and hours of training are required.

You have to decide what your priority is for the season. Do you want the best result in CrossFit that you are capable of? Or the best result in your sport? Trying for both is a sure way to fail at both. Unless you are permanently transitioning into CrossFit, most athletes should focus on their sport.

Set Big Goals, But Have Realistic Expectations

After you decide your priorities for the season, set some realistic expectations. I find the best way to do this is to pick a challenging, but achievable target before you do each WOD. If you reach your target, then you have to be happy with yourself.

“Talent is no longer enough to be the best at any athletic pursuit. Hours and hours of training are required.”

You can also set yourself a stretch goal – a number of reps or a weight that seems almost impossible, but may be achievable if everything goes right. Your target is your expectation. You should be disappointed if you don’t hit it. But your stretch goal has to be exempt from expectation.

Forget Stalking the Leaderboard

That competitive streak that athletes have means you constantly want to see how you compare to others. I’ve caught myself thinking, “If I wasn’t so focused on my sport, imagine what place I’d be sitting in on the leaderboard.” But if CrossFit isn’t your main sport, this is your chance to enjoy a bit of competition, without the stress on results that comes with your priority sport. Focus on your performance, not your placing.

Cut Out Extra Training

If you are doing another sport, then chances are you’ll only have space for a limited number of CrossFit sessions each week. Use that time to focus solely on what is likely to appear in the WODs. The variety of CrossFit is now your enemy, but over the past four years of the Open, only fourteen different movements have actually been used. So, you should be doing thousands of reps of these and not too much else.

Focus on What You Will Lose First

Studies have shown that you lose strength and power less quickly than you lose aerobic conditioning and muscular endurance. I once stopped CrossFitting for six months and just played beach volleyball every day. At the end of the six months, my max lifts remained almost unchanged, but my performance in metabolic conditioning WODs was dramatically worse. If, because of your other sport, you don’t have the time or energy to do full CrossFit sessions, then skip the lifting, but not the metcons.

Rest Is More Important Than Another Session

It’s tempting to squeeze in “just one more” training session to help you prepare for the next WOD. But being rested and fresh will probably help your performance more. Make sure you also look after your body. Spend plenty of time stretching, getting massages, and eating right to ensure you are at your physical peak.

Be Mentally Tougher Than Everyone Else

You’re an athlete. You know the pain of losing by the smallest of margins. You know how to maintain composure under pressure. You know how to push through physical exhaustion for a bigger goal.

“You may not have trained CrossFit as much as others, you may not be as technically perfect in all the movements, but you can be the mentally toughest.”

Bring the mental game you’ve developed in your sport. You may not have trained CrossFit as much as others, you may not be as technically perfect in all the movements, but you can be the mentally toughest. In CrossFit, that counts for a lot.

The Best You Can Be

It’s certainly not easy being both an athlete and a CrossFitter. It is tough to juggle training and competition commitments – and manage your performance expectations. Whilst the tips above will help you get the best performance you can, in the end, it’s the work you’ve done all year that will be reflected on the leaderboard.

More Like This:

  • What the CrossFit Games 2015 Changes Mean for You
  • 3 Lessons We Can All Learn From the CrossFit Games
  • 5 Athletes to Watch in CrossFit and the NPFL
  • What’s New on Breaking Muscle Today

Photo 1 courtesy of Shutterstock.

Photos 2 and 3 courtesy of Jorge Huerta Photography

Christie Jenkins

About Christie Jenkins

Christie Jenkins is a world-class athlete in three different sports, has spoken to groups of over 500 people, has written articles for a number of magazines, has appeared on TV, is a certified life coach, and has worked in strategy consulting since 2011.

In her spare time, she has run away and joined the circus for a year; hiked Mt. Fuji, Mt. Kilimanjaro, the Annapurna circuit, and the Grand Canyon; skydived and bungee jumped; volunteered in Africa; sponsored a child in Nepal; studied abroad in China; and performed in the closing ceremony of the Commonwealth Games.

Her achievements include:

Trampolining

National Trampoline Champion for twelve years (1998-2010)
Ranked in the top ten in the world (2009-2011)
Pan Pacific dual gold medalist
Bronze at the Youth Olympics
One of just five athletes part of the AIS program, and the only female (2006-2007)

Beach Volleyball

Gold in the $50,000 Hermosa Open in 2013, the most prestigious event of the USA National Volleyball League calendar
Fifth place, 2014 Australian Beach Volleyball Championships

CrossFit

Eleventh at the World CrossFit Championships, 2014
National CrossFit Champion, 2014, as part of the CrossFit Athletic team

Academic

ENTER score of 99.85
Awarded one of only 500 Australian Students Prizes
Dux of Firbank Grammar school (2005) and full scholarship (1998-2005)
Economics / Chinese double degree from Monash University, graduating with Distinction (2010)

Professional

Only graduate of thousands of applicants selected for ANZ’s strategy graduate program (2011)
ANZ Group Strategy team (2011-2013)
CBA internal strategy consulting team (2014)

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