🔥OPEN 26.2🔥: Here’s the Brutal Second Round of the 2026 CrossFit Open
It was ready on Thursday night. As the clock ticked towards 8:00 PM in Cascais, Portugal, the atmosphere was electric at CrossFit Black Edition. After a brutal opening with 26.1 that left legs in ruins, the whole world was ready for the next chapter. And let me tell you: 🔥OPEN 26.2🔥 is not a workout you walk away from lightly. This is a tribute to endurance, technique, and pure, unadulterated willpower.
A Three-Act Showdown: Campbell, von Rohr, and Cringle
CrossFit has a knack for creating drama, and the 26.2 announcement was no exception. The three heavy hitters, Lucy Campbell, Mirjam von Rohr, and Aimee Cringle, were set to battle it out for glory in a live duel. Von Rohr, who won 26.1 and dominated the Open in both 2024 and 2025, exploded out of the gates. She had a solid lead, until a relentless judge slapped her with a "no-rep" on the rings. That moment proved costly. Aimee Cringle fought her way back, but in the end, it was Lucy Campbell who kept her cool and snatched the win. It was a stark reminder that in our sport, everything can change in the blink of an eye.
The Workout: 26.2 in Detail
For those of us watching from our living rooms, it was a jaw-dropper. What a workout! This is a "For Time" workout with a 15-minute cap that will test your entire range. The key is to pace yourself correctly through the three rounds:
- Round One: 80 ft Overhead Walking Lunges, 20 Dumbbell Snatches, 20 Pull-Ups.
- Round Two: 80 ft Overhead Walking Lunges, 20 Dumbbell Snatches, 20 Chest-to-Bar Pull-Ups.
- Round Three: 80 ft Overhead Walking Lunges, 20 Dumbbell Snatches, 20 Ring Muscle-Ups.
See the progression? From regular pull-ups, to chest-to-bar, and finally the dreaded ring muscle-ups. It's a classic trap. If you burn too much fuel in the early rounds, you'll be running on empty when you need to haul yourself up on those rings against the clock.
More Than Just Iron: Mental Strength and "1% Better"
When I see a workout like 26.2, I immediately think of more than just technique. I think about digging deep. About the ability to sit in the pain when your shoulders are screaming and your lungs are burning. It reminds me of the story of Chris Nikic. He's the man who became the first person with Down syndrome to complete an Ironman. How? Through the philosophy of "1% Better". His dad, Nik, taught him to improve by one percent every single day. One more rep, one more round, one more kilometre.
That's exactly the mindset you need when you're facing that final round of 80 ft walking lunges in OPEN 26.2. You don't think about all 20 muscle-ups left to do. You just think about the next one. Then the next one. And slowly, but surely, you grind your way through the pain. For those who really want to dive into the principles of effective and injury-preventing training, the book Be Iron Fit: Time-Efficient Training Secrets for Ultimate Fitness by Don Fink and Melanie Fink is almost the bible. It teaches you that it's not about training the most, but training the smartest.
The Mind is the Most Important Muscle
We talk a lot about the physical side in CrossFit, but mental health is just as important. Especially in a season where the pressure is on. I've always said that competing is like opening the door to your own head. To understand the complexity of that, I can recommend Darryl Cunningham's graphic novel, Psychiatric Tales: Eleven Graphic Stories About Mental Illness. Cunningham, who worked on a psychiatric ward, draws stories about anxiety, depression, and bipolar disorder in a way that hits you right in the gut. It's a brutal reminder that we need to look after both body and soul, especially in a sport that pushes us to the absolute limit.
So, to all of you out there about to take on 26.2: Respect the workout. Have a game plan. Hold back in the first two rounds, and trust that the mental training you've done, whether it's "1% Better" or just good old-fashioned grit, will carry you through to the finish line. The deadline for video submissions is March 9th at 8:00 PM ET. Let's do this!