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Ruth Performance Lab

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Stim Matters: The Deadlift Deep Dive
This week @Ryne Sullivan and I dedicated the entire episode to deadlift inside of competitive CrossFit context. We covered everything from assessment --> programming for strength vs capacity --> technical issues --> and A TON more. In the episode I promised I'd provide a copy of my internal notes that I put together before the show, so I wanted to post those here for anyone who wanted them AND as a way to stimulate discussion. I'm really curious about how other coaches in the space approach "the deadlift problem" for competitors -- how frequently do you attack the movement? What are the principles or pillars you use for programming? Do you view the capacity vs absolute strength debate through a different framework? Episode link: CLICK HERE TO WATCH Notes below: ----------------------------------- 1. SEPARATE THE PROBLEM: STRENGTH VS CAPACITY ----------------------------------- Treat deadlift strength and deadlift capacity as two different adaptations. Strength - Neural output - Confidence in heavy positions Capacity - Repeatability of hinging under fatigue - Often shows up inside mixed-modal work Trying to solve both with the same tool is the mistake. Key takeaway: If you want to get someone stronger, you need to address the neural aspects of strength. If you want them to be able to repeat deadlift under fatigue, that's a 2nd order problem of metabolic demand + strength requirement. ----------------------------------- 2. DEADLIFT STRENGTH IS PRIMARILY A NEURAL PROBLEM ----------------------------------- Move away from high-volume deadlift strength work! What not to do: - High-rep tempo deadlifts (useless for building top-end strength in a healthy well trained athlete) - Large weekly deadlift volume “to get stronger” - Treating deadlift like a hypertrophy lift What to do: - Heavy singles, doubles, triples -80%+ of 1RM 5+ sets per week - Hand-release or full reset reps (no touch-and-go)
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@Kyle Ruth yes, I was referring to intentionally decreasing respiratory frequency. Growing up as an athlete, I’ve been conditioned to “catch my breath”, and as I’ve learned more about physiology, I think I’ve mistakenly assumed that catching my breath (resting to intentionally decrease respiratory rate and feel “in control of my breathing”) is also working to offload CO2 and therefore better prepare me for more work or the next set. After listening to your episode specifically on breathing, I think I might be a victim of years of coaching (track, football, CrossFit) where my coaches’ queue was always “slow your breathing down” rather than “breath deeply”. Therefore, I feel like I’ve conditioned central nervous system to equate recovery with the sensation of “controlled breathing” which only comes by resting and intentionally decreasing respirations. Does that make sense?
1 like • 2d
Thanks @Kyle Ruth. I appreciate you!
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Luke Kaiser
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@luke-kaiser-1794
Firefighter/AEMT | Father | Fitness Junkie | Chasing performance, and toddlers.

Active 7h ago
Joined Mar 23, 2026
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