"Does Pavel Tsatsouline Even Lift?" (feat. Kettlejitsu)

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
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    Taken from the Episode #39 from the Kettle Knights Podcast • "Does Pavel Tsatsoulin...
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Комментарии • 149

  • @dalejansen127
    @dalejansen127 Год назад +35

    Pavel opened a couple doorways. Kettlebells of course. Maybe it originated somewhere else, but Pavel is the first person i heard “GTG” (grease the groove) from. This is a pivotal concept, especially for people who think they have to get to a gym. Well, you dont. Pick your movement(s), perform them throughout the day, “practice” as Pavel said it, et voila at the end of every day you will have moved. Consistent movement is the golden ticket. I do wish Pavel had shared his age. I am 66 and currently a full time paid professional firefighter. We “older” athletes have an obligation to BREAK the age paradigm. So yeah let people know. Let them know this fitness thing is for life. Age WELL, not Badly.

    • @hopelessatusernames
      @hopelessatusernames Год назад +1

      Great comment

    • @cgillit
      @cgillit 9 месяцев назад

      Great comment.
      I also think also Pavel filled such a void in the commercial fitness industry at the time, at least for mainstream audience, by focusing on functional strength. People forget what it was like before Crossfit became such a phenomenon. The main things I remember being popular in the Fitness industry among mainstream audiences in the late 90s/early 2000s at the time were Aerobic workout DVDs sold on TV (Tae Bo, Zoomba) and body building (the 90s Dorian Yates/Ronnie Coleman/Jay Cutler magazine covers or Bill Phillips' Body for Life Book and Contests). And Pavel came along and wasn't selling vanity and big muscles, but actual functional strength to use in real world applications, it was very refreshing. And unlike something like Competitive Powerlifting where you would see footage of these monsters lifting mindboggling amounts of weight, kettlebells seemed very approachable and attainable for average people.

    • @koma7778
      @koma7778 6 месяцев назад +1

      Google it. He is 54

  • @CoryFalde175
    @CoryFalde175 Год назад +20

    I went from never deadlifting before to deadlifting 365# in a few months with Pavel's "Power to the People" plan

  • @abcdefghij2099
    @abcdefghij2099 2 года назад +74

    Respect your elders.. We probably would not be using kettlebells right now if it wasn't for Pavel

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +3

      Glad to hear this! - Gregory

    • @johnstephenmurphy546
      @johnstephenmurphy546 Год назад

      Brits were using kettlebells when Pavel came along but he was a much better marketer

    • @bloodycrepe
      @bloodycrepe 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@johnstephenmurphy546 kettlebells did not originate in U.K. so that's irrelevant

    • @johnstephenmurphy546
      @johnstephenmurphy546 7 месяцев назад

      @bloodycrepe where did I say they did so your comment is irrelevant 🤔😉

    • @bloodycrepe
      @bloodycrepe 7 месяцев назад

      @@johnstephenmurphy546 whoa you are petty

  • @RoadieC
    @RoadieC 2 года назад +27

    Whatever Pavel is or is not lifting at this point, his mind and continued dedication to pursuing and teaching the KNOWLEDGE behind training is incredible.

  • @horseman3222
    @horseman3222 2 года назад +17

    You can find online info on weightlifting meet where Pavel did around 500 lbs deadlift with a hook grip :) so that's that...

    • @jonathanfrost944
      @jonathanfrost944 2 года назад +7

      Yes, there was a dragon door deadlift competition team. Pavel competed often and it was very public on the forum. This whole conversation is based on the last few years with no acknowledgement of the previous 20.

    • @horseman3222
      @horseman3222 2 года назад +6

      @@jonathanfrost944 exactly... does doing dips and swings now make him any less of a coach? Take a look at Mark Rippetoe, not exactly a fitness influencer, but you can't deny him his knowledge.

    • @rouka7638
      @rouka7638 2 года назад +1

      @@jonathanfrost944 can you link it?

    • @jonathanfrost944
      @jonathanfrost944 2 года назад +1

      @@rouka7638 I will try. It was all chronicled on the dragon door forum. I don’t go there anymore. But there were pictures in “hardstyle” magazine dd used to put out

  • @patrickh9937
    @patrickh9937 2 года назад +18

    I could be wrong about this, but I think Pavel wrote "Power to the People" before he wrote any kettlebell book. It was published in 2000. Like all of his books, it is based on the idea of using just 2 lifts, so I can believe the dips and swings answer from Rogan's show. Also, he had a serious elbow injury from arm wrestling, which has limited what he can do ever since. As or the refusal to give his age, that absolutely was suspect. Probably because Pavel was too young to actually have trained Spetsnaz fighting in Afghanistan. He more than likely embellished his resume early on. He is undeniably a very knowledgable guy who has had a big impact, despite his shortcomings.

    • @wowkwis7011
      @wowkwis7011 Год назад

      His age should be fairly easy to look up though.
      I had a book from the 80's abour spetznaz, and it said the Soviets were putting 14-15 year olds through selection and training. Not sure if that would even make a difference in Pavel's case. Just putting it out there for those wjo enjoy sleuthing.
      Also, in the 90's, it seemed like everyone coming from behind the iron curtain was spetznaz or a sambo champion. Then there was systema...with a mysterious guy named "Uncle Peter" as a source...(suspicious face displayed).

    • @einsteinorwell
      @einsteinorwell Год назад

      @patrickh9937 I think you're right. Power To the People was published before his kettlebell books.

    • @Roper122
      @Roper122 Год назад +1

      It absolutely was published first.

  • @rhysxj
    @rhysxj 2 года назад +24

    Years later and this is still one of the funniest questions out there. Someone accused Dan John the other day of not lifting and DJ got HEATED

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +5

      It's a legitmate question. I would have love to see Dan's reaction to this question; he doesn't hold back and rightfully so. :) - Gregory

    • @hasanc1526
      @hasanc1526 2 года назад +2

      @@lebe-stark you should bring him on and ask lol

  • @MARKJERNIGAN
    @MARKJERNIGAN Год назад +6

    being a pavel fan. since 2001. i believe what pavel try to get across is simple and minimalist. like myself i work long hours and get exhausted so a nice simple workout plan keeps me in shape. pavel doesn’t say this carry’s over in sports. he says you need to do more for your chosen sport. this is general fitness. i see a lot of ppl go to the gym for hours. and play around. i would rather snatch a bell or clean and jerk. get on to my own life. i could be wrong. that’s what i get from him. i’m 52 in great shape lean at 170 lbs. so living this way works. it’s not the only way. but it’s a way. for busy ppl.

    • @kayodoubleu3310
      @kayodoubleu3310 Год назад +1

      Yes. That is how i see it too. I follow his programs now since 2013. Just a few minutes at home. No stress et all.
      His Programs seems to be made for amateurs who wants to stay in shape wihtout too much time consument. They aren't made so you can win in competition.
      But he wrote Power to the people professional. There are some Programs which are Powerlifting Programs which seems to be made for competition.

  • @lukeandresen9856
    @lukeandresen9856 9 месяцев назад +1

    Right on, a lot of good points but, one thing in particular, is about “what are you training for” I’m not an endurance athlete but I was in the military and I did train military personnel with these methods.
    When you’re on deployment and you’re working with guys who are on call, they have to be minimalist and not break themselves down.
    The other area this style of training is good for is sports! Combat sports, in particular, see almost magical qualities emerge with some of his protocols.
    Love him or hate him, Pavel has brought a lot of good info to the masses and I’m thankful for him.

  • @jamesatkinson5805
    @jamesatkinson5805 2 года назад +22

    I'm not familiar with who the bald know it all is, but success leaves clues. There are countless experts and agencies including Marty Gallagher who have worked with Pavel and praised him and his methods. As far as him just doing dips and swings, he explained it has a lot of carry over and he is doing them most days of the week and people don't get prizes for doing the most exercises. That statement that Pavel can't be passionate about training just because he doesn't do a lot of exercises is nonsense. Who said he or anyone else has to compete? If staying strong and fit till he is an old man is his goal without spending a lot of time so he can have a good quality of life that's his business. I could go on but the info is out there it's not like he's some guy that's new on the block

  • @MARKJERNIGAN
    @MARKJERNIGAN Год назад +6

    pavel has always been a private guy. i drive back with him in mn in his car. he was extremely nice and down to earth. but private. he knows how america can be so mean and judgmental and turn on ppl. so he is a smart coach. that doesn’t want to see ppl become hurt from lifting weights. smart move on his part. i. started training at 7 yrs old. the first rocky movie. lol got me hooked. i did it all. mostly ahead of the game. when i found pavel info it changed everything. i’ve stopped all the fluff. weights are for building strength. i like to stay lean the bells help. it’s what i enjoy. i believe that’s what he enjoys. he is a great coach. forever grateful

  • @NGAOPC
    @NGAOPC Год назад +2

    As to Pavel not being an athlete and what his minimalism “carry over” mentioned in the Rogan interview pertained to, by 2020 he was ranked 1 Mens Senior USWC in Kyokushin, which was after his Rogan interview.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  Год назад

      I‘ve heard about this achievement which is impressive and solid!

  • @jonathanfrost944
    @jonathanfrost944 2 года назад +21

    I’m going to reiterate a couple of things. And yes I’m a fan of Pavel but don’t use his protocols any longer. The first videos including RKC ETK more Russian kettlebell exercises, all the stretching and all the abs videos were demonstrated by pavel. I’ve taught martial arts for almost 30 years and at 50 let my students demonstrate a lot of techniques. My instructor has cancer but doesn’t talk about it. If you took a class from him he wouldn’t demonstrate but you could learn a lot. Point being you never know someone’s story. All of pavels programs are 2 exercises and they work for certain things. Look at Pavel Macek and tell me it doesn’t work. “Kettlejitsu” is just as made up as hard style. And Im sure most gs champs would say the same about it as they do hard style. It’s a made up nom traditional kettlebell method. And so is every other kettlebell cert they are all someone’s creation. I have no problem with criticism but this was more of an insult or taking shots imo. And I challenge anyone to find an interview or video of him saying anything negative about anyone. And I don’t think he has to maintain that persona lots of people change over time. And he’s not nearly as “schticky” anymore. When you talk about it being his way or the highway of course it is, you wouldn’t run a certification company and let someone change your program, the whole idea is quality control so that anyone can deliver the system. It has to be simple and concrete. Try to tell chick fil a they should change their recipe.

    • @scottcale8915
      @scottcale8915 2 года назад +3

      Most definitely, two guys are taking potshots at Pavel because they are jealous and not as famous. You can hear the disdain in their voices. It's clickbait for more viewers, Sad they had to use Pavels' name to try to get more viewers!

    • @rafalka7084
      @rafalka7084 Год назад +1

      ​@@scottcale8915 Alvarado for sure. His criticism is completely irrelevant.

    • @Tokoloschi2
      @Tokoloschi2 11 месяцев назад +1

      That’s exactly how I understood this conversation. Very well put, thank you.

  • @ExpeditionaryRanger
    @ExpeditionaryRanger 2 года назад +8

    Like him or not, I bought a copy of Enter the Kettlebell and it’s the funniest and best reading fitness book out there. It’s worth having just to add to your library, wherever you stand/swing… ha.

    • @ianheding7830
      @ianheding7830 2 года назад +1

      I like him.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +3

      His writing style is very captivating! - Gregory

  • @tykonIInokyt
    @tykonIInokyt 2 года назад +13

    Ich finde die Frage nebensächlich. Ich bin durch ein Buch von Pavel zum Kettlebellsport gekommen und es motiviert mich immernoch, wenn ich darin lese. Das Training, das darin vorgestellt wird, macht mir Spaß und ich werde immer stärker. Darauf kommt es für mich an.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +1

      Danke für dein Feedback! - Gregory

  • @rup3rt75
    @rup3rt75 2 года назад +7

    I learnt my KB technique from Enter the KB by Pavel, several years ago, he was doing all the moves there, if he does less now, well the body changes with age/injury. I am only a casual KB user x2/week with 16 and 24 for swings, but the technique i learnt from Pavel has worked well. I love your channel Lebe, as you say the discipline has evolved, and simple techniques seem to be the best....if you ever come to Vevey to train in CH be good to see you!!

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +1

      Thanks for sharing brother! Sending love to the other side of Switzerland! - Gregory

    • @fishbelly789
      @fishbelly789 Год назад +2

      Pavel isn’t losing sleep over this.

  • @myyt-channeltodaymarioment7002
    @myyt-channeltodaymarioment7002 2 года назад +7

    uuups you people messed up with the wrong dude:
    The 15-th U.S. Weight Category Karate Championships 2019 was held on January 27, 2019 at the Los Angeles, USA.
    MEN SENIOR LW
    1st Pavel Tsatsouline - Manhattan Beach, CA
    2nd Kosei Hatakeyama - Irvine, CA🤣

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +2

      Thanks for sharing! Great to see Pavel crushing it as a martial artist! - Gregory

    • @jonathanfrost944
      @jonathanfrost944 2 года назад +1

      Exactly. I mentioned this on the original video.

  • @hingemethod5938
    @hingemethod5938 10 месяцев назад

    I first heard of Pavel back in 1998 (I think that was when his article was in Mens Health) The model did everything with dumbells before dragondoor started manufacturing kettlebells. I was hooked after that article. I am a sucker for good marketing and the marketing of pavel was one of the best I have ever seen. Incredible copy that talked to his audience. "A man among men" "As strong as you look" "THe secrets of the russian....." "The cardio of an android" and he built an incredible community.

  • @zacdavenport1
    @zacdavenport1 Год назад +2

    what difference does it make the fact that people are saying how much does pavel workout is subjective. the fact is he's a wealth of knowledge. its sour grapes with steve maxwell pavels methods work iv'e tried relax into the stretch beyond bodybuilding etc.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  Год назад

      Pavel shared many interesting concepts; and was also wrong a couple of times.

    • @zacdavenport1
      @zacdavenport1 Год назад

      The one thing I did learn from him was intra abdominal preasure and learning to be a grinder with reps.

  • @mechatronicman9565
    @mechatronicman9565 7 месяцев назад

    I know I'm late to the party, but Pavel is known for his minimalist workouts. He trains swings and dips currently, in the past has advocated swings and getups, barbell deadlifts and side press, bodyweight pistol squat and one arm pushup, etc...
    He stays true to his teachings.

  • @shawndoherty3750
    @shawndoherty3750 Год назад +1

    I have never in my life seen such lack of self-awareness and a conversation to guys who literally do every single thing that they’re criticizing Pavel for doing. Every single human being in the fitness industry models the exact strategy that Pavel used it’s the whole reason this gentleman has a RUclips channel. I’m not saying that a lot of what you’re saying isn’t true but it’s true for everyone in the fitness and strength and conditioning industry every single person. There wouldn’t be an industry without it because the truth of the matter is every single person can get stronger and better shape at home in the basement with some cement blocks and that’s been proven for centuries. But most of all from somebody who’s been in the strength room for 30 something years I can tell you for a fact that not one of you would even know what a kettlebell was if it wasn’t for Pavel he is the sole reason anybody uses kettle bells while you can buy a kettle bell in any store that’s all him and deserves respect for that and I’m not even a huge Pavel fan it’s just as decent respect. And lastly the idea that your modalities for strength shouldn’t change in your lifetime make you a horrible trainer because any decent trainer should know that no modality is a long-term modality number one except for walking and B that as you age in your experience in your wares and tears and lifetime stresses require you to change modalities

  • @simonhinkel4086
    @simonhinkel4086 2 года назад +3

    Talking about Cult vibes: the comments don't disappoint 😄

  • @shumardi1
    @shumardi1 4 месяца назад

    When Convict Conditioning came out I predicted that was the end of Pavel at Dragondoor and that turned out to be the case. Since then Dragondoor has published other body weight stuff and even gotten into isometrics.

  • @LordZiober
    @LordZiober 2 года назад +2

    Very cool mini episode. I didnt know Joey before. I hear stories for another reason Pavel created hardstyle and that was because kb sport was to hard for him ;).
    To be honest JRE with Pavel was a blast for me. I dont look so harsh on that "dips and swings" as his bare minimum in this moment. In books he always picks some 2 exercises to become your routine and help you on daily basis. Swing and dip is the variations from last book. Push & hip hinge movements. Pavel explains how to build an endurance in the good way, even in JRE podcast but I agree in Quick and the Dead he markets it like is cure for all.
    I believe for endurance athletes is not gonna be good but for amateurs mma or "regular" man this is basically good interval training program.
    To the all gentelmans that you mension I will add Andy Bolton, great powerlifter that benefit from kettlebells and their write a book together so that also add weight to that "statue" of Pavel persona. In the end of the day the kettlebell is just another tool to help you reach your goal. That title can be adress to any strength specific coach or some ex olympians who are great coaches but looks unfit right now. It will be great to have Pavel on your podcast and ask him this questions directly. I really like your quote "take every expert's opinion as guide not as a gospel".

  • @edwinmondragon3762
    @edwinmondragon3762 4 месяца назад

    I love these videos. I lovd pavels work, but will always gravitate toward dan john due to his football and track focus. I have spent alot more time on the football field and track than i have on a russian elite force. Carry over to what is the best question for pavels work.

  • @michaelhartman7402
    @michaelhartman7402 5 месяцев назад

    I worked out with Pavel and Andrea in little Canada, MN. Great training

  • @ianheding7830
    @ianheding7830 2 года назад +7

    Pavel.... the czar . ... after all... we use kettlebells because of who?

  • @fraserdawson7415
    @fraserdawson7415 2 года назад +12

    Come on, guys. If you slag a guy for being good at marketing, you have to cancel the whole of America! BTW, what is the point of your video? Marketing, right?

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +2

      We're not slagging; we're just having a discussion. - Gregory

  • @Solomon_Bachelor
    @Solomon_Bachelor 7 месяцев назад +1

    Pavel is a marketing genius

  • @levishardertokillarsl
    @levishardertokillarsl 2 года назад +2

    yes. yes. yes. business man 100%. very good at it too

  • @vojtoos88
    @vojtoos88 11 месяцев назад

    Yeah, it's funny because I was just recently revisiting some old RKC videos and not only that you don't see Pavel quote on quote working out, but also his way of presenting is not very convincing in the era of kettlebells we are right now. Still he braught the kbs into the main stage of fitness.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  11 месяцев назад

      Good point! Can't wait to have our podcast, brother!

  • @raymonddunne7153
    @raymonddunne7153 7 месяцев назад +1

    To each his own. AXE works for me. Im an old fart and im a space cadet. i work 50-60 hrs/wk. Exercising 40 min 3-4x/wk doing something every min on the min keeps me efficient and consistent. I worship Pavel like a God

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  7 месяцев назад

      Worshiping mere mortals as Gods is the fastest way to limiting your learning curve; but to each his own, brother. Glad it works for you.

    • @raymonddunne7153
      @raymonddunne7153 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@lebe-starkjust tryin to be funny. I'm a devout christian.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  7 месяцев назад

      I see! While you‘re being funny, others are dead serious about it. lol

  • @PauloBerni699
    @PauloBerni699 2 года назад +3

    There was a guy named Matt Furey who was very much like Pável. He came in twenty years ago wrote a hit instructional book and did a seminar series called Combat Conditioning, which appealed to the grappling community. He touted “The Royal Court” which was seven body weight exercises that would solve all your problems in life, fundamentally. He made a big wave in the fitness community then, made a lot of suspect claims, then poof! He disappeared.
    Much like Pável, however, Furey indeed had some sound ideas but I hindsight here to sell, make a few bucks and split. *I too 😂recall the Swing and Dip response, which left me scratching my head. Made no sense as a “Full body” pan-beneficial duo of exercises.

    • @jamesatkinson5805
      @jamesatkinson5805 2 года назад +2

      Matt Furry hasn't disappeared he still has a couple of Facebook pages and you tube and his website. Also the comparison isn't the same anyway, Pavel has been busy all of these years first with Dragondoor and then and still with Strongfirst

    • @ianheding7830
      @ianheding7830 2 года назад +6

      Hindu pushups..... Back bends... and hindu squats.... if i remember. ... At 58 i do these.... if not daily... But regularly enough to still be able to do them. ;)

    • @PauloBerni699
      @PauloBerni699 2 года назад

      @@jamesatkinson5805 yeah well I disagree with you. I’m not collecting data so this is mostly anecdotal. Neither is as high profile as they once were after coming in like gangbusters, end of story. Have a better day.

    • @MrWolfsangel9
      @MrWolfsangel9 2 года назад +2

      I've found Pavel's books invaluable though I no longer follow his protocols. As for Matt Furey, I thought his "Combat Conditioning" book and his dynamic stretching video were both great and gave me much needed inspiration back in the mid-2000s when trying to maintain a fitness routine while struggling with back problems. His subsequent books and videos did indeed make some dubious claims, I think the best one was his "Sexual Kung Fu Lovemaking Techniques" DVD he was selling for $300.00. Interestingly enough Pavel and Matt are both on record as having an aversion to eating chicken on the grounds of it being a "weak bird"!

    • @PauloBerni699
      @PauloBerni699 2 года назад

      @@MrWolfsangel9 I liked his ideas on he calisthenics too, his prominence just seemed to disappear as quickly as he arrived.

  • @DanielOliveira-nt7ly
    @DanielOliveira-nt7ly Год назад

    Very good vídeo. But some things are better explained In the book. Pavel explained in Quick and dead that dips are not for everyone's shoulders, And that Quick and dead program is not enough to a cardio event, would Just give you a general condition.

  • @AnUnhappyBusiness
    @AnUnhappyBusiness 2 года назад +1

    Speaking of swings versus presses, there is a strong first vid where Pavel says a single long cycle is the most comprehensive single exercise

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад

      I totally agree! - Gregory

  • @aubreygmcghee
    @aubreygmcghee 2 года назад +4

    I think this critique of Pavel is looking for chinks in the armour of a very solid guy that has absolutely made a solid impact on the fitness and strength community with his career.
    Most all of the critiques offered fail to account for all the information involved. Pavel's focus has always been around offering a model of GPP that offers the most development of strength that has the broadest carry over into the broadest spectrum of daily activities and maintains a foundation for athletic training for sports that can be built upon, alongside taking the least toll on you system to minimize the need for recovery, so that you can add to it to develop specificity for any activity you might want further develooment for. In other words Pavel has never claimed that his basic programs are "all you need".
    Pavel's claim is not to offer a "Complete program" for every activity or sport. His claim is the most well rounded foundation that has the most carry over into any activity. His claim is that the Kettlebell is the tool that is most effective and efficient at that task. He never says it is the ONLY tool for that task. In fact he even offers other tools that are better at certain tasks or circumstances. For instance if your goal is maximal strength development the kettlebell isn't the absolute best tool for the task. That's why he offers a protocol with barbells. He also recognises the convenience of body weight training and offers a body weight protocol etc.
    Pavel also recognises the need to build on the protocols he offers for specificity in sports or other activities. That's why he offers many strength tools and methods that go beyond just a GPP protocol or certain GPP protocols that are activity or sort specific GPP protocols. Pavel's choice of swings and dips is simply a GPP protocol that he feels best supports his own current lifestyle. Since activities in our lives often change from time to time so might our GPP protocol change to give us more specific carry over into our activities. This also doesn't recognise that as a sports trainer Pavel likely does other training on top of his GPP. We have to take into account the constant demonstrations and involvement he is exposed to as an athletic trainer that likely adds to his "weekly rep count". I'm sure as he ages he likely tries to use others to demonstrate as it becomes exhausting constantly demonstrating physical lifts and movements. As a coach it starts to make more sense to have others demonstrate for you.
    Again let's try to understand rather than look to critique Pavel. I think we would find that what he says makes sense when we add all of the factors surrounding what he is saying. It's clear he has worked with many top sports professionals and if he was full of bologna it's not likely that wouldn't have been exposed and yet most have had nothing but positive things to say about him.

    • @aubreygmcghee
      @aubreygmcghee 2 года назад

      I would just add that it makes sense that the Kettlebell is the absolute best tool for over all GPP. It is one tool that develops strength, cardio, mobility etc. All while taking the least amount of time and effort, making recovery quick and leaving you with plenty of time and energy for life's activities and any specific training added on top of the GPP..

  • @shirtlessviking9225
    @shirtlessviking9225 Год назад

    well, i think he works out swings and dips as he says.
    probably for half an hour a day swings and some days periodically in the week?

  • @ninipooh74
    @ninipooh74 Месяц назад

    I keep wondering after all these years how Pavel came up with the idea of the relation KB - Spetznaz. WTF is Spetznaz? Something from Rambo movies? Does he mean the FSS units (Alfa, Vimpel), VDV, the Marines, or the GRU units? They are all very different. A Belarussian like Tsatsouline passing military service there? No one's ever heard of this guy in Russia, either among the military or professional sportsmen. Since when are soldiers from these units supposed to train with kettlebells? Since when have they been supposed to have strength and conditioning coaches? The truth is any military barracks in the East back when we had the Warsaw Pact, had some primitive kettlebells, and soldiers had no idea what to do with them; any enthusiast would lift them any way he likes. Only GS champions knew what to do with KBs, but even the great Sergey Rudnev admits that he acquired some proper techniques pretty late. In the old film you show, you can see some Soviet paratroopers doing something with KBs, but clearly, they are also clueless. Let us admit the simple fact: Pavel is fake through and through. In the US he was able to find gullible people he could sell his fairy tales to.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  Месяц назад +1

      Kettlebells undoubtedly had humble beginnings. Sergey Rudnev's acknowledgment that proper technique was developed on the fly, alongside figures like Valery Fedorenko, is a testament to his character.

  • @Bamboocha-ey7ns
    @Bamboocha-ey7ns 10 месяцев назад

    Do you use over 40kg Kettlebells?

  • @brianpotter3804
    @brianpotter3804 6 месяцев назад

    I think this is a little of an unfair take on Pavel. Yes he is a master brander of himself. But his whole fitness philosophy for the everyman is to do minimal amount of work for adequate levels of fitness. He talks about this minimalism alot. The idea is that if you are working, have a family, and can't take 5-10 hours in the gym each week and all you need is some general fitness to keep yourself healthy then his prescriptions are very relevant. If you want to be in the 1000 lb club or do strongman then they are not. For the average guy who is a cop, firefighter, sits at a desk, etc then it is all you really need to get and stay fit. At Pavel's point in life this is all he really needs too.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  6 месяцев назад

      85% of our clients are 50+ and they don't have a lot of time. So our job is to give them the best results we can in the shortest amount of time. We never do Dips & Get Ups.

  • @WalksAlone
    @WalksAlone 2 года назад +1

    Pavel T. is comparable to Werner Kieser (of Switzerland). He had a really good Idea, started a franchise system, and the rest is history. Unlike W. Kieser, P.T. doesn't seem to use his product much himself. Pavel's character presentation is the very reason I avoided kettlebells for a decade or more.. It was people like Steve Cotter and LS 💪, and D. Vasilov that demonstrated to me, that Kettelbells are going to be worth it for me.

  • @smokinjoe1264
    @smokinjoe1264 2 года назад +3

    Gregory, have you tried to invite Pavel to a conversation like you had with other masters? Did he refuse?

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +2

      I admit that I didn't even try since I've heard he's not into podcasting. I'm nowhere near the size of JRE - and that's the only podcast he's agreed to as far as I know. - Gregory

    • @spikeman1444
      @spikeman1444 2 года назад +3

      @@lebe-stark He did Tim Ferris as well.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +1

      @@spikeman1444 Thanks man; I missed that one! - Gregory

    • @smokinjoe1264
      @smokinjoe1264 2 года назад +2

      @@lebe-stark maybe he will be interested in conversation with you because of the advanced kettlebell topics you can discuss. I think, Joe Rogan or Tim Ferris are not even nearly your level in kettlebells

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +7

      @Smokin' Joe I've just written a formal invite to the StrongFirst email because you're right. Those who do not ask do not receive. Thanks for the motivation! - Gregory

  • @hopelessatusernames
    @hopelessatusernames Год назад

    Perhaps kettle bells appeal to people for whom barbells or calisthenics don't, and have come to them via Pavel. Does it matter that Pavel didn't want to tell Joe how old he was?

  • @billmcpherson706
    @billmcpherson706 5 месяцев назад

    3 minutes in and so many ignorant statements. I got my first Pavel book for free in 2001 (Beyond Crunches). I bought Beyond stretching & after enjoying that Power to the People. The Russian Kettlebell Challenge I bought in late 2002. So no Pavel didn't revert to barbells after crossfit gained steam in the early mid 2000s... He has always been focused on strength not the tool & efficiency.
    Bodyweight, calisthenics & Kbs have always been in his programs. How do I know? Well I went through the RKC in 2005. Strongfirst was created when Pavel allowed the "functional/ corrective fitness" crowd take too much control via John Ducain. That split was a business decision to regain control over the direction of his courses.
    Finally, we know Pavel has pulled heavy heavy deads in studies for Dr. Stew McGill. I haven't talked to Pavel since 2008. I don't get too deep in these groups, but I have plenty of friends who do. The pount is within the first 3 mins of this pod you just talked made trash that is probably false.

  • @tim_t
    @tim_t Год назад +1

    Do you HAVE to do accents when quoting Russians?

  • @warrenellis1023
    @warrenellis1023 2 года назад +1

    LeabaSchtakk seriously has it out for Pavel.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +1

      Whenever there's a chance to have a conversation about the man who brought back the kettlebell to the western world, I'm all for it Warren! :) - Gregory

    • @warrenellis1023
      @warrenellis1023 2 года назад +1

      @@lebe-stark I see what you’re doing, but I’d be lying if I said I didn’t enjoy hearing Fedorenko, DuCane, and John’s take on the legend. Cheers to some legendary, insightful podcasts, even if you’re clearly trying to coax Pavel into a discussion.

  • @AnUnhappyBusiness
    @AnUnhappyBusiness 2 года назад +2

    Cultic… well whatever happened to taking everything with a grain of salt? Guide not gospel you said, yeah. Well the same thing happened in the guitar world in the 80s

  • @guerillakettlebell8307
    @guerillakettlebell8307 Год назад +1

    Nothing to see here. Just two people trying to bash Pavel to score some points on his name.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  Год назад

      Nobody's bashing anybody. We're simply having a discussion about the man who's responsible for the modern kettlebell renaissance. - Gregory

    • @guerillakettlebell8307
      @guerillakettlebell8307 Год назад

      @@lebe-stark well, you probably wouldn't act like that (no respect) being face to face to a person.
      Without any common sense arguments you just laughed about Pavel training only dips and swings. Who cares. What is wrong with that anyway?
      It is ok not to agree with that. I understand that practicing only two drills may seem odd. But it does the job.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  Год назад

      @@guerillakettlebell8307 You're misunderstanding my laugh as a form of disrespect instead of a common human interaction.
      I hold respect for what Pavel brought to the table. That doesn't make his teachings (and in fact anybody else's) flawless or void from critique. - Gregory

  • @JackintheMouth
    @JackintheMouth 2 года назад

    I hate how comments are disabled on the strong first channel (sets a bad precedent, not fans of discussion apparently) I owe a lot to Pavel, if nothing else than at least for his inspiration. However his concepts of grease the groove and doing 1/3 to 2/3 of your max reps have not yielded any fruit for myself.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  Год назад

      I didn't know they disabled comments; not good optics. - Gregory

    • @footba11fan41ife
      @footba11fan41ife Год назад

      Grease the groove has absolutely taken my pull-ups to the next level. Are you sure you’re doing it right?

  • @terrywarchief5647
    @terrywarchief5647 Год назад

    Pavel is just cool.

  • @akn0187rmb
    @akn0187rmb 7 месяцев назад

    This dude hates the player. Pavel is the man. He found a business market and he used it. And he puts out good stuff.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  7 месяцев назад

      No hate; only adding to the discussion.

  • @KortalaulPodcast
    @KortalaulPodcast Год назад +1

    Come on Joey. You are so much better person, than that.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  Год назад

      Thanks for sharing Peter! Care to elaborate on your statement? I think Joey was just uttering his opinions with no harm intended. - Gregory

    • @KortalaulPodcast
      @KortalaulPodcast Год назад

      @@lebe-stark Statement? That was not a statement, just a remark or rather a personal opinion. Gregory, respect is part of the strength and martial arts World. We do not talk about it. We show. Have a nice day and keep up the good work...

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  Год назад

      @@KortalaulPodcast Thanks for elaborating! In my opinion, we can be respectful towards eachother and still have differing viewpoints.
      As for the show don't tell: I do see your point and you're most definitley right! Yet I also see validity in having conversations about any giving topic/ person etc. - Gregory

  • @ralphnevill6171
    @ralphnevill6171 Год назад

    Joey is the bomb!

  • @conduit242
    @conduit242 Год назад +1

    Pavel is 53

  • @zacdavenport1
    @zacdavenport1 Год назад

    kettlejitsu is a minimalist prejudice.

  • @fox4488
    @fox4488 Год назад

    try getting a strongfirst instructor such as brett jones on your podcast

  • @mrcrhartman
    @mrcrhartman 2 года назад

    Half or more of the fitness gurus out there are products of marketing. Look at the belly you see on Greg Glassman, but that one word "Cr....t" creates endless revenue. At least Pavel had some quality content that I and many others benefitted from. Besides...the Russian iron man character kept things less boring. People need to lighten up sometimes.

  • @Taurian_
    @Taurian_ 8 месяцев назад

    Boost

  • @tp-project
    @tp-project 2 года назад

    Pavel looks to be mid to late 50s to me. If i could see photos of him and the years they were taken i'd be able to gauge better.
    I followed some of his books for a bit but when it got to the nitty gritty of an actual training programme they were not detailed enough and once I got over the newbie gains it was hard to improve using his books.
    I saw some of the Joe R podcast and as pointed out, it looked a bit awkward to me.
    If he lifts or not doesn't have to be relevant. Everyone has their own body type and training methods that is right for them. You don't have to be a top athlete to be a great coach or sport scientist. We don't need someone who was a great footballer to coach a soccer team. We need someone who understands how to get the best out of an individual and what's right for them and the team and the science behind the training.
    Sport/training science gets better all the time. We can only advise on practises as understood at the time and correct ourselves when science shows our understanding was lacking.
    Pavel is scrawny but he obviously is in good shape (from the photo at least). Even Gregory and Angie look far better now in an athletic sense than when they had more muscle mass when you see them in older videos vs where they are today. You don't need to be 102kg pure muscle to look good.

    • @giuseppedimeo4750
      @giuseppedimeo4750 2 года назад

      Searcing on Google It says that he Is 53, Born in August 23rd 1969

    • @jonathanfrost944
      @jonathanfrost944 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/cKx8xE8jJZs/видео.html he wasn't scrawny here. IDK his current health situation etc. etc. but he was in fantastic shape and very strong.

  • @gnnguy
    @gnnguy 9 месяцев назад

    I saw a video once of Pavel pressing the beat KB overhead from the side splits. This vid is trash

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  9 месяцев назад

      Don't be too emotional about it, brother.

  • @girea75
    @girea75 2 года назад +2

    Gregory, didn't I tell you the same? He is not considered as a master of anything by all great russian kettlebell lifters!

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад +2

      I truly respect and appreciate your feedback brother! In my humble opinion, I consider Pavel's contribution (especially to us Westerners) as substantial.
      While we can debate about certain techniques he advises, we cannot disregard the fact that he (alongside his associates) helped popularize the kettlebell to a massive extent. - Gregory

    • @jonathanfrost944
      @jonathanfrost944 2 года назад +2

      So what? The system he created is not at all like what all "great russian kettlebell lifters" do. Look at someone like Eddie Bravo who created a very different system of jiu jitsu. Lot's of people gave him crap because it wasn't how it was done "by the Gracie's". But some people go their own way. Not everyone that lifts a barbell does olympic lifting, not everyone that plays golf needs a professional swing, and not everyone that uses kettlebells needs to do it the same way.

  • @mtg1776
    @mtg1776 9 месяцев назад

    You're talking crap about the guy to whom you both owe your entire careers? That's pretty sad.

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  9 месяцев назад +1

      I owe my career to God my friend.

  • @robinnegus6499
    @robinnegus6499 2 года назад +2

    This is my most favourite thing about you Gregory! you talk to so many prominent people in the kettlebell world, but you never sit back and blindly accept anything as law. You ALWAYS think for yourself, but remain open to any and all information you come across. You also share it freely with the world. I hope to someday make it to Switzerland and visit Lebestark just to hangout for an hour and swing some bells around!🫶🏽

    • @lebe-stark
      @lebe-stark  2 года назад

      You're most definitely welcome Robin! - Gregory