Tag: Performance

Image of Dr. Allison Brager with Caption PLACEBO OR NO?

The Truth About Caffeine for CrossFit Athletes

Caffeine is the most widely used psychoactive substance in the world, and it is deeply embedded in fitness culture. Coffee, pre-workout, and energy drinks are often treated as essential tools for training and performance.

But what does the science actually say?

In this episode of the CrossFit Podcast, host Jocelyn Rylee sits down with sleep scientist and active duty Army neuroscientist Dr. Allison Brager to examine the relationship between caffeine, sleep, recovery, and performance.

Brager explains how caffeine works in the brain, why tolerance changes its effectiveness, and why the perceived boost athletes feel during workouts does not always translate into measurable performance gains. The conversation explores research on caffeine and CrossFit workouts, the role of sleep deprivation in caffeine effectiveness, and why energy drinks may carry neurological risks when used chronically.

They also discuss strategic caffeine use for athletes, military personnel, and first responders who face sleep disruption.

If you train hard, rely on caffeine, or want to improve performance without compromising recovery, this conversation will challenge what you think you know.

Topics Covered

  • How caffeine blocks adenosine and promotes alertness in the brain
  • Research on caffeine and CrossFit workouts
  • Why perceived effort improves with caffeine even when performance does not
  • The neurological and mental health risks linked to heavy energy drink use
  • Strategic caffeine dosing for athletes, military personnel, and shift workers

Resources Mentioned

Community Highlight 

Michael Atkinson grew up in Napa, California, the son of immigrants from Trinidad and Mexico, in a neighborhood where gangs often filled the gaps that opportunity didn’t.

At 19, he was facing charges that could’ve meant life in prison. Instead, he was given one last option: complete a court-ordered recovery program or serve eight years.

That program introduced him to CrossFit.

After watching a regional event, the men in the program tried the workout themselves. It wrecked them … and hooked them. For Michael, it became the identity that replaced the one he was trying to leave behind.

He wrote down two goals: become a competitor and become a coach.

Years later, he bought the very affiliate where he once showed up asking for an internship — CrossFit Novato.

Today, he coaches firefighters, local teams, and everyday adults, and offers scholarship memberships for people who need a second chance because he knows exactly what that can mean.

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.

Mark England and Denise Thomas with the text The Secret Power of Words Thumbnail

How to Get Out of Your Own Way with Mark England

In this episode, Denise Thomas sits down with Mark England, co-founder of Enlifted Coaching, to unpack the real meaning of “mindset,” not as a buzzword, but as the story you tell yourself.

A former MMA fighter turned educator, Mark shares how injuries and failure led him to discover transformational wordsmithing: the process of changing your internal dialogue to change your life. He walks through practical tools that anyone, especially coaches and athletes, can use to rewrite limiting stories, calm their nervous system, and reclaim control through language and breath.

This one’s part conversation, part masterclass. Grab a pen.

TOPICS INCLUDED

  • The link between words, breath, and awareness
  • How victim mentality is formed and how to dismantle it
  • The “soft talk” words that cause indecision and stress
  • Real-time application: Denise and Mark’s live exercise on rewriting limiting beliefs

RESOURCES MENTIONED

Community Highlight

After two car accidents and a diagnosis of early-stage Parkinson’s, Becky Johnson refused to give up.

Just days after spine surgery, she walked into CrossFit Loco Ocho — neck brace and all — to do her version of Murph.

“Having a strong baseline of fitness prepares you for whatever life throws your way,” she says.

“This is the sickness-wellness-fitness continuum in action. I got a devastating diagnosis, but I already had the antidote.”

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

Share Your Thoughts: Email us [podcasts@crossfit.com].

Jocelyn Rylee and Dave Durante with text WHERE CROSSFIT AND THE OLYMPICS COLLIDE and the CrossFit MEdical Society logo podcast thumbnail

[CFMS SERIES] Dave Durante on Life After the Olympics (EP. 053)

This marks the seventh episode of a special CrossFit Podcast collaboration with the CrossFit Medical Society

Olympian and Power Monkey Fitness co-founder Dave Durante joins the CrossFit Podcast to talk about the transition from elite competition to lifelong fitness. After representing the U.S. in gymnastics at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Dave discovered CrossFit, and it changed his life.

He shares how CrossFit helped him stay healthy and strong beyond his competitive years, the story behind Power Monkey Camp, and why gymnastics remains one of the best foundations for athleticism at any age.

TOPICS INCLUDED

  • Life after elite sport: finding purpose and health beyond competition
  • How CrossFit reignited Dave’s passion for training
  • The creation and evolution of Power Monkey Camp
  • Building bridges between gymnastics and CrossFit
  • The importance of play, curiosity, and community in adult fitness
  • Why gymnastics is the ultimate foundation for all sports

RESOURCES MENTIONED

Community Highlight

After two decades studying cancer genetics, Dr. Jennifer Beebe-Dimmer wanted to give patients something they could act on today. That’s how the CAPABLE program was born, a free, 12-week, CrossFit-based intervention for cancer survivors.

Coached by Level 1 trainers, participants train three times a week and complete pre- and post-testing for strength, conditioning, and biomarkers. Since 2019, more than 275 people have gone through the program, most of whom had never done anything like it before.

The results speak for themselves: significant improvements in quality of life, body composition, sleep, and A1C, with cognitive function up next.

Beebe-Dimmer calls CrossFit the “secret sauce,” not just for the workouts, but for the coaching and community that keep people coming back.“

When I look back at my career, this will be the most meaningful thing I’ve done.”

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

Share Your Thoughts: Email us [podcasts@crossfit.com] or complete our survey here.

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