Tag: mobility

Kelly Starrett with text CROSSFIT IS THE PATH TO LONGEVITY thumbnail

The World Is Finally Ready for Us: Kelly Starrett on CrossFit’s Potential

Dr. Kelly Starrett joins the CrossFit Podcast to look back on the early days of CrossFit and ahead to what the next 20 years can become. From finding CrossFit through a grainy GIF in the early 2000s to opening one of the first affiliates in the world, Starrett reflects on the ideas that shaped the methodology and the lessons learned through decades of coaching athletes, Olympians, and everyday people.

This conversation explores durability over time, why pain is not a failure but a request for change, and how movement quality, range of motion, and basic strength set the foundation for performance at every age.

Starrett and host Jocelyn Rylee dig into the future of CrossFit, from longevity and conditioning to the irreplaceable value of affiliates as places built around coaching and community. This episode is an honest look at what CrossFit has always been about and what it can become if we apply what we have learned.

Topics Covered

  • The early days of CrossFit and the original affiliate culture
  • Mobility, durability, and reframing pain in training
  • Why youth athletes need movement literacy before specialization
  • Training for sport versus training only for fitness
  • The future of CrossFit and longevity-focused strength and conditioning

Resources Mentioned

Community Highlight

Kristin Savage grew up around autoimmune disease. By age 5, she was dealing with joint inflammation, and years later, she was formally diagnosed with lupus.

She found CrossFit in 2012 and later trained and coached at CrossFit Gambit, where she was mentored by Kelly Jackson. Kristin earned her Level 1 and Level 2 Trainer credentials and now has aspirations to pursue her Level 4.

After a severe flare-up forced her to reassess how she trained, Kristin shifted her focus to nutrition, recovery, and scaled training — learning to work in rhythm with her body instead of against it. Within a year, she qualified for Desert City.

Today, Kristin coaches CrossFit in Las Vegas and spends much of her energy helping others navigate training and chronic illness — sharing what she’s learned through experience.

Know someone you think deserves to be highlighted? Nominate them here.

Thumbnail of CrossFit Podcast Episode #35 asking Will You Get Injured Doing CrossFit? featuring Dr. Zach Long the Barbell Physio and an image of him coaching a client in a CrossFit gym

‘CrossFit is Dangerous’: How Junk Science Sabotages Public Health (EP. 035)

Zach Long, DPT, better known as The Barbell Physio, joins Jocelyn Rylee to dig into the myths and realities around CrossFit injuries, mobility, programming, and long-term health. They unpack the latest research, expose scientific bias, and share practical strategies for athletes, coaches, and affiliate owners.

Read Zach’s point-by-point refutation of misleading CrossFit research here.

Zach brings his perspective as a physical therapist and longtime member of the CrossFit community to explain how to train through injury, why less is often more in mobility and programming, and how CrossFit has and continues to evolve.

Topics Covered

  • Is CrossFit dangerous? Injury data vs. public perception
  • How mobility training should actually work
  • Scientific integrity and fighting back against biased research
  • Training through injury vs. taking time off
  • Building medical-professional networks around affiliates
  • Programming pitfalls: volume vs. intensity and coaching time
  • Why complex skills (like the snatch) belong in CrossFit
  • Older adults as a critical growth area for affiliates
  • Zach’s advice for athletes, coaches, and the future of CrossFit

Resources Mentioned

Community Highlight

Trevor Pogue started CrossFit in 2020 with no lifting background and no plans to stick around. But it flipped everything.

He was working in medical research at the University of Florida, first in cancer, then anesthesiology, when he realized something: many of the problems hospitals treat could be prevented through lifestyle.⠀

In 2023, he bought CrossFit 1088, a small affiliate in Ocala, Florida that was about to shut down. The name comes from the gym’s youngest and oldest original members: 10 and 88. That spirit — CrossFit for everyone — is what Trevor is rebuilding.⠀

He took over with 32 members. A year later, they’re at 120 and growing.⠀

At their last anniversary party, Trevor watched 88-year-old Martha climb a massive water slide and fly down it while younger members stood by saying, “No way.”⠀

“That’s why we do CrossFit,” he said.

Know someone you think deserves to be highlighted? Nominate them here.

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