February 27, 2026

CrossFit Open 26.1: Strategy, mobility and performance tips

The CrossFit Open 26.1 has officially been announced. As always, the Open kicks off with a workout that looks simple on paper but quickly exposes pacing errors, movement inefficiencies, and mobility limitations under fatigue. When intensity rises and volume accumulates, your usable range of motion shrinks, and any restrictions in your hips, ankles or thoracic spine become much harder to hide.

You can find full movement standards and official details on the CrossFit website. Always refer to the official rulebook before submitting a score.

CrossFit Open 26.1 workout recap

For time
20 wall-ball shots
18 box jump-overs
30 wall-ball shots
18 box jump-overs
40 wall-ball shots
18 medicine-ball box step-overs
66 wall-ball shots
18 medicine-ball box step-overs
40 wall-ball shots
18 box jump-overs
30 wall-ball shots
18 box jump-overs
20 wall-ball shots

Time cap: 12 minutes

This is a high-volume wall-ball workout with repeated lower-body loading and significant breathing demand. It tests:

  • Squat endurance.
  • Hip and ankle mobility.
     
  • Midline stability.
  • Aerobic control.
  • Movement efficiency late in the workout.

If you lose position in your squat, let your chest collapse, or fatigue your quads early, this workout becomes very expensive very quickly.

FREE MOBILITY PROTOCOLS

designed for the OPEN

Strategy tips for 26.1

1. Activate specifically for 26.1

Before you think about pacing, think about position.

Workout 26.1 is built around high-volume wall balls and repeated box work. That means deep squat mechanics, strong hip extension, ankle mechanics, and upright thoracic positioning under fatigue. If those ranges are restricted before you start, intensity will only magnify the problem.

Targeted mobility activation before your attempt helps you:

  • Access full squat depth without compensation.

  • Maintain heel contact and knee tracking.

  • Keep your chest upright in the wall ball.

  • Reduce unnecessary stress on the lower back.

Wall balls demand:

  • Adequate ankle dorsiflexion for depth and balance.

  • Stable hip flexion and extension for efficient drive.

  • Thoracic extension to keep the ball tracking vertically.

If your heels lift, your knees collapse, or your chest drops forward, each rep becomes more expensive. Over 200 wall-ball shots, that inefficiency adds up fast.

Activating those positions before you begin allows you to express your fitness rather than fight your limitations.

26.1 activation protocol overview

Inside the GOWOD app, the 26.1 activation protocol prepares your squat pattern, hips, ankles and thoracic position before your attempt. You can choose a 3, 10 or 15-minute version depending on how much time you have.

Without foam roller

Duration Movements
3 min MobiFlash 90 to 90, Active deep squat, Active hinge, Standing quad stretch, Air front rack, Alternating eccentric calf activation
10 min Active deep squat, 90 to 90, Full T hip opener, Active hinge, Standing quad stretch, Air front rack, Alternating eccentric calf activation, The bird
15 min Roll over to V sit, Active deep squat, 90 to 90, Full T hip opener, Calf stretch in downward facing dog, Active hinge, Standing quad stretch, Air front rack, Bottom squat rotation, Alternating eccentric calf activation, The bird


With foam roller

Duration Movements
3 min MobiFlash Quad roll, 90 to 90, Active deep squat, Active hinge, Air front rack, Alternating eccentric calf activation
10 min Quad roll, Active deep squat, 90 to 90, Full T hip opener, Active hinge, Air front rack, Alternating eccentric calf activation, The bird
15 min Quad roll, Calf roll, Roll over to V sit, Active deep squat, 90 to 90, Full T hip opener, Active hinge, Air front rack, Bottom squat rotation, Alternating eccentric calf activation, The bird


Go in prepared. Move well from rep one. Let your fitness decide the outcome, not your restrictions.

These protocols are available for free in your GOWOD app. And if you’ve completed your Mobility Test, they automatically adapt to your weakest area!

2. Pace the wall balls early

This workout is largely defined by wall-ball volume. It is tempting to attack the first 20 and 30 unbroken at max speed, but that decision often shows up later during the set of 66.

If you are aiming for a strong overall finish:

  • Establish a sustainable rhythm from the beginning.

  • Plan short, intentional breaks instead of reacting when you hit failure.

  • Keep your breathing controlled rather than chasing speed.

Think long-term. The set of 66 is where pacing mistakes are exposed.

3. Stay consistent on box jump-overs

Box jump-overs are not “rest.” They accumulate leg fatigue and spike heart rate, especially after heavy wall-ball sets.

Your goal here is consistency:

  • Choose a pace you can repeat every round.

  • Avoid failed reps at all costs.

  • If appropriate, a lateral jump-over may help maintain rhythm and reduce unnecessary turning.

Mobility still matters here. Tight calves and limited ankle range can slow your rebound. Restricted hips reduce efficiency in your landing and take-off. Efficient athletes conserve energy in transitions and land softly rather than heavily.

4. Use step-overs as controlled active recovery

The medicine-ball box step-overs may feel less explosive than jumps, but they still tax the legs.

This is your opportunity to:

  • Bring breathing back under control.

  • Re-establish posture.

  • Set up your next wall-ball set deliberately.

5. Protect your squat position under fatigue

As fatigue builds, mobility restrictions become more obvious.

Common breakdowns in this workout:

  • Heels lifting in the squat.

  • Excessive forward lean.

  • Loss of depth consistency.

  • Overuse of the lower back due to limited hip rotation.

When mobility is limited, the body compensates. Over 200 wall-ball shots, those compensations become costly.

Why mobility matters more during the Open

In normal training, small inefficiencies often go unnoticed.

In the Open, they get exposed.

High repetition, fixed time caps and competition pressure magnify:

  • Poor squat mechanics.

  • Limited ankle range.

  • Restricted thoracic extension.

  • Early leg fatigue due to inefficient movement.

When fatigue rises, usable range of motion decreases. If you start restricted, you finish compensated.

Preparing your movement quality before the workout helps you:

  • Maintain cleaner mechanics under fatigue.

  • Conserve energy across high-rep sets.

  • Reduce unnecessary strain on knees and lower back.

  • Express your true fitness level.

FREE MOBILITY PROTOCOLS

designed for the OPEN

CrossFit Open 26.1 FAQs

Can I retake CrossFit Open 26.1?

Yes. You can repeat the workout within the official submission window. Only the score you submit before the deadline will count.

Do I need a judge to submit my score?

Yes. To submit a valid score, the workout must be judged according to official standards or recorded under the approved video submission guidelines.

Does my first attempt count if I redo the workout?

No. You may attempt the workout more than once, but only your final submitted score before the deadline will be registered.

Should I redo 26.1?

That depends on pacing and execution. If your first attempt was limited by strategy errors or poor preparation rather than fitness, a second attempt may be worthwhile. Just ensure you recover properly between efforts. The GOWOD recovery protocol is specifically designed for that.

Always refer to the official CrossFit Games website for full rules and movement standards.

Unlock the 26.1 activation protocol inside GOWOD

The CrossFit Open rewards preparation. The 26.1 activation protocol inside GOWOD is built specifically to prepare your squat mechanics, hips, ankles and thoracic position for this exact workout.

Choose your format:

  • 3-minute MobiFlash for fast activation.

  • 10-minute focused prep.

  • 15-minute full movement reset.

Go in warm.
Go in ready to perform.

Let your fitness be the limiting factor, not your mobility.

Good luck from the GOWOD team, and see you on the leaderboard.

UNLOCK YOUR BODY

Start your journey to better mobility

You’re only 3 steps away from unlocking your full potential.

  • Download the GOWOD App
  • Take your assessment
  • Improve your mobility one stretch at a time with GOWOD Premium
Three smart phones depicting GOWOD app interfaces. From Left to right: a guided workout of the Samson Stretch with a built-in timer, a personalized dashboard with mobility scores and statistics, and the opening screen of the GOWOD app.

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