The chalk has barely settled from the Open, and your legs might still be sore from those Quarterfinal doubles and deadlifts. Whether you crushed your goals or found a few gaps in your fitness, one thing is certain: The season has officially begun.
With a calendar full of local throwdowns, Semifinals, and summer festivals over the next 6-8 months, now is the time to transition from winter bulking to podium hunting.
Here are 5 ways how you dial it in for the long haul
1. The Programming Pivot. From Strength to Capacity.
In the off-season, we focus on the big weights and building a raw strength base. But as competition nears, a 150kg back squat doesn’t mean much if you’re redlining three minutes into a 20 minute AMRAP.
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Shift the Focus
Gradually move from pure strength cycles to Metcon Capacity. This doesn't mean you stop lifting; it means your lifting starts to look more like the competition; higher heart rates, shorter rest periods, and touch-and-go repetitions. -
Sport-Specific Density
Start practicing "density" training. Can you do 30 clean and jerks at 70% of your max in under 3 minutes? That’s where the magic happens. -
The Taper
Remember, you can't be at 100% intensity all year. Work in 4-6 week blocks with a de-load week to ensure you aren't walking onto the competition floor with "heavy legs."

2. Work your weaknesses
We all have that one movement we pray doesn't show up on the leaderboard. And you bet, it will show up exactly when you least need it for a solid score.
The Rule: If you hate it, work it. At least once a week. The 3 month window to your next competition is the perfect time to turn a liability into an asset. Spend 15 minutes before your main session working on skill progressions for your “most feared”. By the time your summer competition rolls around, that "scary" movement will just be another part of the work. And who knows, you might actually start to enjoy the movements more than you think.

3. Fueling the Engine. Nutrition for Performance.
You wouldn't put low-grade fuel in a race car, so stop treating your body like a dumpster during competition prep.
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Carbs are King
High-intensity CrossFit thrives on glycogen. Don't fear the potato. Ensure you’re timing your carbohydrate intake around your training window to maximize recovery. -
Hydration & Electrolytes
As the weather warms up and the volume increases, water isn't enough. Magnesium, sodium, and potassium are vital to prevent cramping and maintain power output during those 20-minute AMRAPs. -
Practice Your Comp-Day Meal
Never try a new supplement or a new "power breakfast" on the morning of a competition. Use your Saturday sessions to test what fuels you best without making your stomach do backflips.
4. Gear Up with the right tools for the job
In CrossFit, your gear is your armor. There is nothing worse than a pair of shorts that ride up during burpees or a shirt that feels like a weighted vest once you start sweating.
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The Kit
Look for high-performance fabrics that offer four-way stretch and moisture-wicking properties. You need gear that moves with you, not against you. -
The Essentials
If you haven’t replaced your grips or speed rope in a year, now is the time. Break them in now so they feel like a second skin by game day. -
The Shoes
Ensure your lifters and trainers are in good "structural" shape. If the foam is compressed, your power transfer is leaking.

5. Don’t Lose your "Why". Keep it Fun!
Let’s be real: we do this because we love it. The preparation for a competition is grueling, and the "dark place" in the middle of a workout can get lonely.
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Train with a Crew
There is a reason the CrossFit community is so tight. Pushing yourself alongside a training partner makes the 5 AM sessions bearable and the wins much sweeter. -
The "Friday Night Lights" Energy
Carry the spirit of the Open with you. High-five your judge, cheer for the person finishing last, and remember that at the end of the day, we’re just playing fitness with our friends. -
Perspective
Whether you’re standing on a podium or just finishing your first Rx event, the goal is progress. Celebrate the small wins, the first double-under, the PR snatch, the fact that you showed up.

Final Thoughts
The next few months are where the real work happens. It’s the boring stuff, the zone 2 cardio, the mobility work, and the meal prep, that wins competitions.
Show up, do the work, and look good doing it. We’ll see you on the leaderboard.
Step into this season prepared. Discover the latest performance pieces in store now, and step onto the comp floor with confidence.








