
Fitness Racing and CrossFit: A Powerful Complement, Not a Clone
At Synergy Strength, we’re proud to build athletes who are strong, capable, and resilient across all areas of fitness. As part of that mission, we offer both CrossFit and Fitness Racing classes—two distinct but complementary approaches to developing full-body fitness.
While they share some surface similarities—functional movements, high intensity, and a community-driven atmosphere—CrossFit and Fitness Racing are fundamentally different in purpose and structure.
One is a comprehensive sport.
The other is a specific and valuable training stimulus.
And together, they make athletes better.

Scapulohumeral Rhythm: Understanding Shoulder Mechanics Under Load
The shoulder is the most mobile joint complex in the human body. Its ability to move freely in multiple planes is what enables pressing, pulling, reaching, and throwing—but this mobility demands finely tuned coordination between several anatomical structures. One of the most critical—and often underappreciated—of these is the scapulothoracic articulation.
When we talk about overhead pressing, benching, or any loaded upper-body movement, we must understand a key principle: scapulohumeral rhythm. This concept describes how the scapula and humerus work in concert, alongside the thorax, to create full, functional shoulder elevation. Without this rhythm, movement becomes dysfunctional, compensation increases, and injury risk skyrockets.

The Physiology behind fitness races of the future
While CrossFit emphasizes constantly varied functional movements using a broad range of energy systems, Fitness Races is a fixed-format endurance event designed to test aerobic capacity and muscular stamina under consistent, measurable standards.
Fitness Races are less skill-intensive but far more grind-based, favouring those who can maintain output over 60+ minutes, with pacing and fatigue resistance being key to success.