The 2017 National Championships just wrapped up in Chicago last weekend, and since I skipped writing an article for the week because of it, I figured I’d better write an article about it as penance. The following are some lessons I think are important for anyone coaching or competing (or planning to) at the national level based on my experiences at these meets, and in particular, the most recent ones.
Don’t Trust Openers
In local meets, the attempts in a given session are typically spread out pretty significantly. This makes it relatively easy to count attempts and warm your lifter up. Increasingly at national meets, with the growing number of competitive lifters, more attempts are closer together, meaning that slight changes can make large differences in the timing of your warm-up. For example, if your lifter is opening at 82, and there are 4 lifters opening at 77, you’re probably counting 2 attempts for each of those 4 lifters, giving you 8 total, and probably even padding it another 1-2 in case of misses and repeats. But what if 3 of them bump their openers to 80 or 81, the remaining 77 jumps to 82 for her second attempt, and suddenly you have half as many lifts left?
It seems increasingly common for coaches to put in openers lower than they intend to do when it’s unnecessary. When you’re in the mix for medals or teams, this is often a sensible strategy. When you’re rounding up the bottom of the C session, it’s not doing anything but making everyone else’s lives more complicated and stressful. I’ve seen coaches jockeying for 23
rd place—not much surprises me anymore.
Also seemingly more common is coaches increasing attempt weights after misses. Apparently no one is capable of making a lift after a 2-minute clock anymore, so coaches are desperately trying to buy more time—in my experience, this is rarely any more effective than just using up your 2-minute clock. The real time to do this is if another coach burns your clock, so that rather than 2 minutes, your lifter is immediately called again—in this case, adding 1kg makes a lot more sense.
The point is, be prepared for sudden changes—either having to accelerate or decelerate the warm-up. Have a plan before you need it regarding what you’re going to do in either case so you’re not scrambling last second. For example, if you have extra time, are you going to repeat the last warm-up weight? Are you just going to sit and wait? Are you going to take a lighter weight or partial lift to stay warm while you wait longer than expected for the next warm-up lift? Or if you lose time, are you going to skip a warm-up and adjust the remaining? Are you going to take a lift every 2 attempts instead of every 3? Have at least a basic idea so you don’t panic. And be sure to briefly discuss this with your lifter if this is new to them—be sure they understand that they need to be flexible and not expect perfect warm-up timing.
Have a Post-Weigh-in Plan
At national meets, the availability of appropriate food and the proximity of the venue to your hotel room can vary considerably. If you’re lucky, the venue is attached to your hotel and is a quick walk, and that hotel has a number of good food options. If you’re unlucky, you’re staying a 15-minute drive away from the venue and your hotel has no food at all. I’ve been to meets in genuine food deserts… it’s a good idea to use the old internet before you travel and know if you need to bring food or where you’ll go to get supplies.
The day before you lift, make sure you have a plan in place for what’s going to happen from your weigh-in until the time you arrive in the warm-up room. Have food prepared and packed ahead of time as needed, make sure your transportation is sorted out if necessary, and triple-check your bag(s) for everything you’re going to need. You don’t want to be running back to your room because you only packed one shoe, or forgot your credential and can’t weigh in.
Get Out of the Way
This past National Championships had a pretty snug warm-up room. The platforms were extremely close to each other, which made navigating the room to get to the marshal’s table and back a challenge. These kinds of situations are exacerbated when everyone moves in—leaving bags, drinks, and everything else they brought right in the limited and small pathways that do exist. If you don’t want people walking across your platform, give them an alternate route.
Worse, never before have I seen so many people camped out in front of the marshal’s table and scoreboard, very few of whom were counting attempts or making changes. On top of that, a number of people insisted on standing 16” away from the scoreboard for extended periods of time—if you’re waiting to make a change with the marshal, stand by that table, or better yet, kneel. Don’t obscure the thing that everyone else needs to see because you’re too lazy or oblivious to take three steps to your right.
Know How to Do Stuff
The competition process can be complex, but it runs smoothly if coaches know what they need to do. A couple important things to know:
- You have 30 seconds to declare a weight once your lifter has been called, even if you’re taking the minimum 1kg increase. If you don’t declare and sign the card in that first 30 seconds, you lose your 2 changes. So let’s say you want to keep the automatic 1kg increase on the board and then after some time, bump up the weight so your lifter goes after someone else, or just to give them a little more rest during the weight change. If you didn’t declare that 1kg increase in the first 30 seconds, you don’t get to make a change, and now you're stuck with that 1kg automatic increase. The simplest way to remember it is that all changes must be made before the final 30 seconds on the clock—on a 1-minute clock, you have to make that declaration and any changes within the first 30 seconds; on a 2-minute clock, you still have to make your declaration in the first 30 seconds, but you have until 1:30 to make any changes.
- Refer to your lifter by lot number—not name—when making changes at the marshal’s table.
- You need to initial the attempt card for every weight, so don’t write in a change and then wander off. Tell the marshal the change as you do it, and make sure they hear/see and the change is inputted into the system.
- Only first attempts are ordered by lot number—I have seen this get a lot of people I trouble. Lowest attempt/weight goes first, e.g. a lifter opening at 120 goes before a lifter taking 120 for a second attempt. For same attempt number and weight, the lifter who’s been waiting longest goes first—so if there are 4 lifters waiting to take 130 on third attempts, the lowest second attempt will go first. If your last attempt was 125, and the other 3 lifters’ last attempts were all 126, you’re up first because you’ve been waiting the longest (lowest previous attempt). If all 4 lifters took 125 as the previous attempt, then you’d be ordered by lot number, lowest to highest.
We Don’t Know Who You Are—Make Sure You Give Us the Right Reason To
Never have I seen so many lifters with camera crews in a warm-up room as I did at this last Nationals. You’d have thought it was a Kardashian-Jenner family reunion. Listen, I get it—you’re pumped to be at the National Championships, and you have an Instagram account to keep healthy. But maybe let’s take a deep breath and remind ourselves why we’re there—to compete in the sport of weightlifting. If what you’re doing is getting in the way of that—or worse, getting in the way of others trying to do that—you need to reevaluate your plan.
Our lifters nearly always have a full complement of coaches and teammates in the back room with them. The difference is that we know how to stay out of the way, and we know what the priority is. If your bros can get footage of you while being unobtrusive, then by all means, make your blockbuster. If your camera guy is continually in everyone’s way and neither of you cares, don’t be surprised when he/she gets stepped on and pushed out of the way remorselessly, and your shot gets ruined.
So many new lifters are coming onto the scene acting like the world knows who they are and owes them something. I’m here to assure you that we absolutely have no idea who you are and don’t care. If you’re new and you make a splash because you make big lifts, we’ll remember you, and you’ll deserve the recognition and credit you receive. If you make a splash because you’re an asshole, throwing tantrums on the platform or in the warm-up room, causing problems because your gang is getting in everyone’s way, talking shit about established lifters because you think you’re going to come out of nowhere and beat them even though you end up 30kg behind, you will in fact be remembered—and you’ll forever be disliked and not respected no matter how good of a lifter you become in the future. Being a great lifter and being respectful and respectable are not mutually exclusive. You can’t guarantee you’ll ever be the former, but the latter is 100% within your control.
Be Prepared
The theme here is pretty simple and obvious—be prepared before you get there. There are a lot of easily-accessible resources, from my website to the
USA Weightlifting website (yes, I know, it’s hard to navigate—give it a shot). You have no excuse to be totally clueless (no one expects you to know everything, but put some effort into it).
Do your homework before the meet and you’ll ensure you and/or your athlete has the best possible experience and performance, and no one hates you at the end of the weekend. And remember that the majority of coaches and lifters are friendly, supportive and more than willing to help you if you ask questions.
Alyssa Sulay