Today is a sad day for me. It is the 5th anniversary of a great man’s death. On this day in 2012, Rich Angelo died tragically in a triathlon. Rich was more than a friend, he was a mentor and a brother. I have written about him and how he affected my and countless others lives in a manner that cannot be paid justice.

I just wanted to start this column off with a nod of respect to a man who will never be forgotten. Rest I peace Rich. I’ve also written a few times on training with lumbar disc injuries and how it’s not the end of your training. See:
Disc Injury? It's Not the End! See Why.
and
The Edema Press: How, Why, WTF: Bench with a Brokeback
for more background on this. This article is the culmination of over a year of hard work and dedication by one of my lifters, Sabra Mitchell as she returned to the platform last week and made her multi-ply debut. Sabra, or The Chief, has made it a mission to not let injury stop her and with a 100% level of commitment it didn’t. We came up with a long term training plan with the following goals: - Get healthy and symptom free
- Get lifting again
- Build strength
- Prevent reinjury
- Return to competing: only now multi-ply, not raw
- Destroy records
Disc Injury? It's Not the End!: Meet Day
We were at the RPS Maine Push/Pull Championships which was run by Jamie Matta with the help of Mike Lawrence and his crew. I can’t say enough about Jamie, Mike and all the crew. They ran an outstanding meet. It was typical RPS; smooth, efficient and fun. What more can you ask in a meet? I decided to keep her conservative at this meet as we were not doing anything other than getting a total to base the next training cycle off and to see how the body responded to competing after a severe disc injury. The Chief competed in the Master’s 148 division Multi-Ply division inMetal gear of course. We went through warm ups and she was firing on all cylinders. We opened the bench at 155-smokeshow. Stick to the plan and go to 165. Again, smokeshow. Third attempt: 175. This looked like a solid third. It was hard, but solid. On to the pulls. We switched her from conventional to Sumo after the disc injury as the Sumo is easier on the back. (no big science words here) We opened at 365 which is a weight she can almost hit raw. Not too hard, actually easy. Learning to pull in a suit is challenging and I wanted to keep it on the easy side as the suit can push you out of position. I wanted her to go 3 for 3 on the deadlift. 365 was a smoker. Second attempt: 390. Again; another smokeshow. Third attempt: 405. She has never hit 405 in the gym but I knew she could here. I was confident she could do it, and almost deviated from the plan and put her in for 415. I wrangled myself in and stuck to the plan. I trusted the process. 405 was another smokeshow. All three deadlifts were World Records in her class for RPS. For all of you who have an injury, let this be a model to work from. We have a Master’s class lifter who has a full time job, kids and a hectic schedule with a one hour commute to the gym for training. Add to that a debilitating injury and you can see, it would have been easy to quit. With patience, dedication, a trust in the process and a never give up attitude, you can return to lifting and set PR’s just like she did, and will continue to do! Watch her performance here. More stuff: I just finished my second training block as I build my bench back one plate at a time. The goal of the first block was to touch and press a light weight with no increase in hip pain/problems. I did that and hit a super hard to touch but easy to press 315. I’ve dropped a shit ton of weight so I had to switch to a new smaller Jack bench shirt for this training cycle. The goal here was to touch 365 and then 405 in the next block. Yesterday was my test day. Warmups went well and nothing hurt for a change. The plan was to take 365 to a touch in the
Jack shirt. After 4 attempts I called it a day on the touch. I just could not get it to touch, and it probably shouldn’t have as it was pretty light. I was about 1” away on my last attempt. All the attempts pressed fast and easy. Just couldn’t get the touch. I decided to end on a good note and switched to a one board. That went down and up FAST. So, while I didn’t reach my goal of the 365 touch, I don’t know if I could have in the smaller shirt. I am confident that I’ll touch and press the 405 at the end of the next block. I am pretty psyched that I am benching again, and will now start to handle more weight. I’ll keep you posted. And, for your enjoyment, here’s a few pics from Comic Con.


I take my son every year and it’s actually a really good time. I’m not really a comic book nerd, but it’s still fun.



I think we can take a lesson in lifting from Comic Con. In lifting there are a ton of federations, there is Raw, Single Ply, and Multi-Ply and a lot of bullshit that comes with it. At Comic Con, there are all kinds of different nerds (no offense) with different likes, but there is no bullshit. Everyone goes, everyone is respectful and everyone has a good time. Isn’t that what we should do? Outside of Powerlifting, no one cares about it. We are all we have. We all share the love for the sport. Just like the Comic Con people. Can we try and be more like Comic Con people and stop the bullshit about federations, gear, raw and everything else and just love the sport? TPS needs your vote. We’ve been nominated on the Boston A List in three categories:
- Best Gym
- Best Personal Trainers
- Best Boot Camp
VOTE HERE
Best Gym
Best Personal Trainer
Best Boot Camp
Ask me a question-Be sure and Type to Murph in the header Find me on Google-search for Total Performance Sports Malden, Mass. The Best Gym in Boston, Facebook too. Oh, yeah, follow us on Instagram too. TPSMalden SHARE THIS! #bostonsstrongest Vincere vel mori






























































































