Subject: Prepare to train, don’t just warm up

How to start your practice/training sessions is very individual. The warm-up can range from “grip it and rip it,” hopping right into practice, to esoteric 30 to 45-minute soft tissue, breathing, and movement practices, and every permutation in between.


What if you prepared to train instead of warming up?


Priming the system for better performance in a systematic way.


Tristan Walker, StrongFirst Certified Elite Instructor, incorporated just such a strategy into his practice using the 044-snatch protocol from The Quick and the Dead.

As Tristan started a new training cycle, there was a change to how he prepared for his sessions.

However, this time around there was a change in the programming. Instead of a traditional barbell warm-up, my coach, StrongFirst Director of Education Brett Jones, proposed taking a different approach.


He suggested using the 044-snatch protocol from The Quick and the Dead, which the book describes as “an advanced, minimalist, self-contained GPP platform that develops a wide range of qualities, with the emphasis on power while minimizing fatigue and soreness and leaving plenty of time and energy for other pursuits.”


…Initially, this seemed like a strange idea to me. In the past I have used this protocol for conditioning after a training session—not as preparation for barbell work. However, as a mere young Padawan, I decided to heed the advice of Jedi Master Brett and give it a go. After my mobility routine, I completed the 044-snatch protocol, performing three cycles of the 5/4 series with a 24kg kettlebell. Once that was complete, I moved on to my barbell training for the day.


I was an immediate fan of using snatches as a warm-up. My past experience with barbell training usually involved performing one to two warm-up sets, increasing the weight in between, and then starting my working sets. While it worked, I found it tedious, and it caused me to get into my head. Using snatches to warm up for my deadlift session essentially acted as a specialized variety exercise—same, but different.

Click here to read how Tristan incorporated The Quick and the Dead routines into his training preparation and progressed to running the full 033 protocol. Also, read how his students benefited from this strategy.

The Quick and the Dead
Total training for the advanced minimalist