The Russian Kettlebell
The #1 Handheld Gym For
Extreme Fitness
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Accelerates the development
of all-purpose strength—to
easily handle the toughest
and most unexpected demands
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Boosts your physical
resilience—to repel the
hardest hits
-
Builds your staying
power—because the last round
decides all
-
Ensures the correct blend of
strength with
flexibility—because strength
that fails to reach is
impotent
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Hacks your fat off—without
the dishonor of dieting and
aerobics
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Forges a fighter's
physique—so form matches
function
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Gives you
independence—world's #1
portable gym makes you as
strong as you want anywhere,
anytime
What is
a 'kettlebell'?
A 'kettlebell' or
girya (Russ.) is a traditional
Russian cast iron weight that
looks like a cannonball with a
handle. The ultimate tool for
extreme all-round fitness.
The kettlebell goes way back, it
first appeared in a Russian
dictionary in 1704 (Cherkikh,
1994). 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,"
reported Russian magazine
Hercules in 1913.
Why
train with kettlebells?
Because they deliver
extreme all-round fitness. And
no single other tool does it
better. Here is a short list of
hardware the Russian kettlebell
replaces: barbells, dumbbells,
belts for weighted pullups and
dips, thick bars, lever bars,
medicine balls, grip devices,
and cardio equipment. Here is
why the kettlebell dominates
other exercise equipment
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; work capacity and
balance, measured with special
tests.
Voropayev (1983) tested two
groups of subjects in pullups, a
standing broad jump, a 100m
sprint, and a 1k run. He put the
control group on a program that
emphasized the above tests; the
experimental group lifted
kettlebells. In spite of the
lack of practice on the tested
exercises, the kettlebell group
scored better in every one of
them! This is what we call "the
what the hell effect".
Kettlebells melt fat without the
dishonor of dieting or aerobics.
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.
Kettlebells 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-up midsection,
and strong legs without a hint
of squatter's chafing.
Liberating and aggressive as
medieval swordplay, kettlebell
training is highly addictive.
What other piece of exercise
equipment can boast that its
owners name it? Paint it? Get
tattoos of it? Our Russian
kettlebell is the
Harley-Davidson of strength
hardware.
Who
trains with kettlebells?
Hard comrades of all
persuasions.
Soviet weightlifting legends
such as Vlasov, Zhabotinskiy,
and Alexeyev started their
Olympic careers with
old-fashioned kettlebells. Yuri
Vlasov 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.
"…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, explosive 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".
The elite of the US 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 RKC instructors among
Force Recon Marines, Department
of Energy nuclear security
teams, the FBI's Hostage Rescue
Team, the Secret Service Counter
Assault Team, etc.
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, regular hard comrades.
Am I
kettlebell material?
Kettlebell training
is extreme but not elitist. 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. Dr.
Krayevskiy, the father of the
kettlebell sport, took up
training at the age of forty-one
and twenty years later he was
said to look fresher and
healthier than at forty.
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,
especially if you consider that
these are elite athletes who
push their bodies over the edge.
Many hard men with high mileage
have overcome debilitating
injuries with kettlebell
training (get your doctor's
approval). Acrobat Valentin
Dikul fell and broke his back at
seventeen. Today, in his
mid-sixties, he juggles
180-pound balls and breaks
powerlifting records!
How do
I learn to use the kettlebell?
From Pavel's books
and videos: The Russian
Kettlebell Challenge or From
Russia with Tough Love for
comrades ladies. From an RKC
certified instructor; find one
in your area. Kettlebell
technique can be learned in one
or two sessions and one can
start intense training during
the second and even first week (Dvorkin,
2001).
What is
the right kettlebell size for
me?
Kettlebells come in 'poods'.
A pood is an old Russian measure
of weight, which equals 16kg, or
roughly 35 lbs. 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 a 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. Some
women will advance to a
35-pounder. A few hard women
will go beyond. |