Five rounds of snatches, one minute on and one minute off, framed by a two-minute warmup and a two-minute cooldown — 13:00 of total running time. Equal work and rest means every round starts fresh enough to hold a consistent cadence.
It’s pacing rehearsal for the ten-minute snatch test: find a tempo that feels repeatable rather than heroic, swapping hands as your grip demands. Once the cadence is locked in, shorten the rests in the editor to creep toward continuous snatching.
Ten rounds of 0:30 two-handed swings with 0:30 rest. Steady hinge, sharp hips, relaxed grip. The simplest kettlebell session there is.
Five Turkish get-ups per side, alternating, with a long rest between each rep. Move slowly — get-ups reward patience and reveal where mobility is missing.
Five kettlebell movements covering hinge, press, squat, pull, and carry — three rounds at 0:40 work, 0:20 rest. Use a moderate-heavy bell and reset breathing between stations.
Four leg-dominant movements rotated for four rounds at 0:45 work, 0:15 rest. Targets glutes, quads, and posterior chain — your legs will let you know it.
Three movements, eight rounds each, finished one at a time before moving to the next. Group format means full focus on one pattern at a time — fight for technique as fatigue stacks up.
Two movements stacked: snatches then thrusters. Five rounds of each at 0:40 on, 0:20 off. Conditioning with a bite — pace the snatches so you can survive the thrusters.
Pavel Tsatsouline's classic minimalist session: ten sets of ten two-handed swings on the minute, then five Turkish get-ups per side with a generous rest between each. Strength and conditioning from one bell.
Armor Building Complex by Dan John — clean, press, then front squat, repeated as one continuous flow on each side. Two passes per side with a rest between, building total-body strength and structural integrity.
A ladder of swings and goblet squats — work intervals climb from 0:20 to 1:00 then back down. The descent feels easier than the climb, but it isn’t.