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Outside Magazine November 2002
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Bodywork Personal Coach
Bell Boy
An ex-soviet launches a low-tech revolution
By Erik Hedegaard


Pavel Tsatsouline: Russia's fitness antidote to Richard Simmons (Sian Kennedy)

Leave it to a former Russian military trainer to develop a complete workout using a most rudimentary piece of equipment. The device in question is called a kettlebell, and it's nothing more than a melon-size cast-iron ball with a handle. The trainer making the most of it is Pavel Tsatsouline, who once spent his days beefing up the Soviet special operations forces. Since arriving in the United States 11 years ago, Pavel's renounced his commie ways, settled in leafy Santa Monica, California, and turned into quite the capitalist running dog. He markets his own abdominal machine (the Pavelizer), pens exercise books (Power to the People!), and even sells Red Army fitness tips to his onetime sworn enemies, the U.S. Marines. Tsatsouline's genius, however, rests with the minimalist kettlebell. Using a single girya (they come in six sizes, ranging from nine to 88 pounds), he devises workouts that include lifts, presses, and squats; abdominal exercises; and cardio drills. Done right, he says, his regimen will efficiently work all of your major muscles and, well, "leave you coughing up hair balls." Russkie overstatement? Maybe, but to find out for yourself, grab a 10- to 30-pound dumbbell—or visit www.russiankettlebell.com to order the real thing—and try the following three times a week.


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