Quarterfinals Prep: Train Smart, Not Just Hard
If you’re heading into the CrossFit Quarterfinals, here’s the reality: this stage is designed to separate athletes.
The Open tests fitness.
Quarterfinals test skill, execution, and composure under fatigue.
Let’s break down how I approach it as a coach…
What Actually Shows Up in Quarterfinals
Looking at past trends, the movement pool isn’t random—it’s just more demanding versions of the commonly tested themes and movement pairings:
- High-skill gymnastics (ring muscle-ups, handstand walking, strict HSPU)
- Heavier barbells
- High “expense” movements (GHD sit-ups, pistols, chest-to-bars)
- Expanded movement selection
- More varieties in time domains and workout formats
The Biggest Mistake Athletes Make
Trying to predict the test instead of preparing for the demands.
Yes, trends exist. But programming can—and will—change.
A better approach:
- Cover the high-probability movements
- Build general readiness
- Sprinkle in “what-if” exposure without overcommitting
Think of it like this:
Don’t gamble your training on guesses. Build a system that wins no matter what shows up.
Step 1: Know Your Athlete Bucket
Before programming anything, define the goal.
1. “Just Doing It” Athletes
- Not chasing Semifinals
- Goal = experience + data
Focus:
- Clean execution
- Avoid injury
- Build confidence
2. “Below the Bubble” Athletes
- Want to improve placement
- Likely not advancing
Focus:
- Attack limiters
- Increase exposure to fatigue-based scenarios
- Improve pacing + strategy
3. Semifinals-Caliber Athletes
- Legit shot to advance
Focus:
- Highly specific training
- Precision under fatigue
- Peaking at the right time
Step 2: Train the Limiter—The Right Way
Let’s say ring muscle-ups are your weakness.
Most athletes do this:
“I suck at RMU → I’ll just do more RMU.”
That’s how you stall—or get hurt.
Instead, use a layered approach:
1. Isolated Development
- Clean reps
- Controlled volume
- Focus on mechanics + efficiency
2. Controlled Fatigue (Intervals)
- Example:
- Bike → RMU
- Rest
- Repeat
Goal: Maintain movement quality under fatigue
3. Sport Integration
- Mix into workouts
- Add interference (pressing, pulling, core)
Goal: Transfer to competition
Step 3: Protect Movement Quality
Here’s a hard truth:
If you always train movements while exhausted, you’re training them to be slow and inefficient.
This shows up as:
- Chicken-wing muscle-ups
- Grindy HSPU Reps
- These reps don’t translate
Fix it with constraints:
- AMRAP -2 or -3 (leave X reps in reserve)
- Some intervals instead of daily all-out efforts
- Clear pacing guidelines
You’re not just building capacity—you’re building repeatable, competition-ready movement.
Step 4: Don’t Lose the Sport
You still need to feel the sport.
That means regular exposure to:
- Traditional MetCons
- Higher intensity efforts in a variety of time domains
- Learning to pace novel scenarios
But how often depends on the athlete:
High-Level Athletes
- Train 2x/day
- Frequent sport exposure
- Multiple intense pieces per week
Intermediate Athletes
- Balance is key
- 2–4 sport pieces/week
- Avoid constant redlining
Newer Athletes
- Class-style MetCons work well to gain experience
- Broad exposure matters more than specificity
Step 5: Use Quarterfinals as a Tool
Even if you’re not advancing, Quarterfinals are still valuable.
They provide:
- Real competition pressure
- Honest effort levels
- Clear data on strengths/weaknesses
You’ll learn more from one well-executed competition than weeks of guessing in training.
Final Takeaways
If you want to perform your best at Quarterfinals:
- Train for demands, not predictions
- Address limiters with structure—not chaos
- Protect movement quality at all costs
- Keep one foot in “sport” training
- Match your training to your actual goals
At the end of the day, this stage rewards athletes who can:
Move well, under fatigue, with intention.
Do that—and you give yourself the best shot, no matter what shows up.
