“The Secret to being Lean, Strong and Healthy is out!”
What is a ‘kettlebell’?
A ‘kettlebell’ or girya (Russ.) is a traditional Russian cast iron weight that looks
like a cannonball with a handle. As the
1986 Soviet Weightlifting Yearbook
put it, “It is hard to find a sport that has deeper roots in the history of our
people than kettlebell lifting.” So popular were kettlebells in Tsarist Russia
that any strongman or weightlifter was referred to as a girevik, or ‘a kettlebell man.’ “Not a single sport develops our
muscular strength and bodies as well as kettlebell athletics,” wrote Ludvig
Chaplinskiy in Russian magazine Hercules
in 1913.
In the Soviet times weightlifting legends
such as Vlasov, Zhabotinskiy, and Alexeyev, started their Olympic careers with
kettlebells. Yuri Vlasov who defeated mighty Paul Anderson once interrupted an
interview he was giving to a Western journalist and proceeded to press a pair
of kettlebells. “A wonderful exercise,” commented the world champion lifter. “.
. . It is hard to find an exercise better suited for developing strength and
flexibility simultaneously.”
The Russian Special Forces personnel owe much
of their wiry strength, lethal agility, and never-quitting stamina to
kettlebells. Soldier, Be Strong!, the
official Soviet armed forces strength training manual pronounced kettlebell
drills to be “one of the most effective means of strength development”
representing “a new era in the development of human strength-potential.”
Who uses kettlebells in the United States?
The
extreme kettlebell workout would have remained the exclusive domain of Russian
spec ops, had former Spetsnaz instructor
Pavel not immigrated to the U.S. The
elite of the U.S. military and law enforcement instantly recognized the power
of the Russian kettlebell, ruggedly simple and deadly effective as an AK-47.
You can find Pavel’s certified kettlebell instructors in outfits such as the Force Recon Marines, the FBI Hostage Rescue Team, and the Secret Service Counter Assault Team.
Once the Russian kettlebell became a hit
among those whose life depends on their strength and conditioning, it took off
among hard people from all walks of life: martial artists, athletes, and
regular tough guys. There is no stopping the Russian kettlebell invasion. Men’s Journal called
it ‘a
workout with balls.’ Rolling
Stone pronounced Pavel ‘The
Hot Trainer of the Year’ and
his Russian kettlebell ‘The Hot Weight of the Year.’ “Resistance
is futile. You will be assimilated.”
Kettlebells deliver xtreme all around
fitness
Voropayev
(1983) observed two groups of subjects over a period of a few years and tested
them with a standard battery of armed forces PT tests: pullups, a standing
broad jump, a 100m sprint, and a 1k run. The control group followed a typical
university physical education program that emphasized the above. The
experimental group just lifted kettlebells. In spite of the lack of practice on
the tested exercises, the kettlebell group showed better scores in every one of
them!
Researchers at the Lesgaft Physical Culture
Institute in Leningrad (Vinogradov & Lukyanov, 1986) found a very high
correlation between the results posted in a kettlebell lifting competition and
a great range of dissimilar tests: strength, measured with the three powerlifts
and grip strength; strength endurance, measured with pullups and parallel bar
dips; general endurance, determined by a 1000 meter run; and work capacity and
balance, measured with special tests!
Shevtsova (1993) discovered that kettlebell
training lowers the heart rate and the blood pressure.
Gomonov (1998) concluded that “Exercises with
kettlebells enable one to quickly build strength, endurance, achieve a balanced
development of all muscle groups, fix particular deficiencies of build, and
they also promote health.” Most methods that claim ‘all around fitness’ deliver
no more than compromises. Accept no
compromises – choose the Russian kettlebell!
Get your kettlebell from
937-212-8083 or oldschool-fitness.com.
Power to you!
The kettlebell
body
Russian
kettlebells are not for Kens and Barbies who want to look like ‘a collection of
body parts.’ K-bells forge doers’ physiques along the lines of antique statues:
broad shoulders with just a hint of pecs, back muscles standing out in bold
relief, wiry arms, rugged forearms, a cut midsection, and strong legs without a
hint of squat-induced chafing. Kettlebells melt fat without the dishonor of
dieting or aerobics; losing 1% of bodyfat a week for weeks is not uncommon. If
you are overweight, you will lean out. If you are skinny, you will get built
up. According to Voropayev (1997) who
studied top Russian gireviks, 21.2% increased their bodyweight since taking up
kettlebelling and 21.2% (the exact same percentage, not a typo), mostly
heavyweights, decreased it. The Russian
kettlebell is a powerful tool for fixing your body comp, whichever way it needs
fixing.
Read
101 kettlebell testimonials and talk to kettlebell lifters on oldschool-fitness.com
Are
kettlebells dangerous? Am I too young or too old?
Only
8.8% of top Russian gireviks, members of the Russian National Team and regional
teams, reported injuries in training or competition (Voropayev, 1997). A
remarkably low number, isn’t it? Note that these were not regular guys but
elite athletes who push their bodies to the edge. Which does not give you an
excuse to lift kettlebells flippantly; any type of strength training can be
dangerous if you use bad judgment.
As for the age, at the 1995 Russian Championship the youngest contestant
was 16, the oldest 53! And we are
talking elite competition here; the range is even wider if you are training for
yourself rather than for the gold.
What kettlebell size is right for me?
Oldschool-fitness.com offers 9, 18,
26, 35, 53, 70, and 88-pound kettlebells, designed in Russia and made with pride in the USA. Kettlebells were designed to give you a
super workout with just one or two fixed weights. An average man should start with a 35-pounder. It does not sound
like a lot but believe it; it feels a lot heavier than it should! Most men will
eventually progress to a 53-pounder, the standard issue size in the Russian
military. Although available in most units, 70-pounders are used only by few
advanced guys and in elite competitions. 88-pounders are for mutants. An
average woman should start with an 18-pounder. A strong woman can go for a
26-pounder. A few hard women will go beyond.
Where can I buy a kettlebell and how do I
learn how to use it?
Call 937-212-8083
or go to oldschool-fitness.com.
Learn the drills from Pavel’s Russian
Kettlebell Challenge: Xtreme Fitness for Hard Living Comrades book and
video. Women will prefer his other kettlebell program, From Russia with Tough Love: Pavel’s Kettlebell Workout for a Femme
Fatale.
Contact your local certified
kettlebell instructor for workshops and personal training:
Kurt D. Kindred 937-212-8083 or kurt@oldschool-fitness.com. Power to you!
Oldschool-fitness.com
When we
say ‘kettlebell’ we mean ‘strength.’