OUTSIDERS BLOG

Murph is one of CrossFit’s most recognized traditions—but it was never meant only for the fittest people in the room. Here’s the story behind Hero Workouts, why we do them, and how anyone can participate regardless of fitness level.

Every year around Memorial Day, something happens inside CrossFit gyms all over the country.


People start asking:

“Are you doing Murph?”

“Are you wearing a vest?”

“What partition are you using?”


If you’re newer to CrossFit—or have never heard of Murph before—it can sound intimidating.

Maybe even exclusive.


You see photos online of athletes wearing weighted vests, covered in sweat, finishing hundreds of reps.


And it’s easy to think:

That’s not for me.



At Outsiders CrossFit, we want you to know something important:

Murph was never meant to only be for the fittest people in the room.

Understanding why we do Hero Workouts matters much more than understanding the workout itself.


First… What Is Murph?

Murph is one of CrossFit’s most recognized Hero Workouts.

Traditionally it looks like this:

For Time:

1 mile run
100 pull-ups
200 push-ups
300 air squats
1 mile run

Optional: Wear a 20/14lb weighted vest


The workout honors Navy Lieutenant Michael P. Murphy, who was killed in Afghanistan in 2005 and later awarded the Medal of Honor for extraordinary courage and sacrifice. Murph was one of his favorite workouts, originally called “Body Armor.” CrossFit adopted it as an official Hero workout in his honor.


Today, thousands of people across the world complete Murph each Memorial Day—not simply as fitness, but as remembrance.


Hero Workouts Exist for a Reason

CrossFit has many Hero Workouts.

They honor military members, first responders, and individuals who gave their lives serving others.

The purpose isn’t punishment.

The purpose isn’t proving how fit you are.

The purpose is remembering.

For one hour, we choose discomfort.

Not because a workout compares to sacrifice—it doesn’t.

But because carrying something difficult briefly can create gratitude and perspective.

Murph becomes bigger than reps.

Bigger than scores.

Bigger than whether someone completed it RX.

That perspective matters.


The Most Important Thing: Murph Is Scalable

This is where many people misunderstand CrossFit.

They think participating means doing exactly what they see online.

At Outsiders CrossFit, our mission is Fitness for Life.

That means fitness should meet people where they are.

Murph should do the same.


Your Murph may look like:


Full Murph
1 mile run
100 pull-ups
200 push-ups
300 squats
1 mile run

OR…


Half Murph

OR…


Partner Murph

OR…


Walking instead of running

Ring rows instead of pull-ups

Push-ups to a box

Reduced reps

No vest

Movement substitutions

Modified volume

Every version counts.

Because effort counts.

Showing up counts.

Participation counts.

Honoring counts.

One person’s Murph may take 35 minutes.

Another person’s Murph may take over an hour.

Someone else may simply come support and cheer.

There is room for all of it.


RX Has Never Been the Point

This may surprise newer athletes:

CrossFit’s original description for Murph literally states:

“Partition the pull-ups, push-ups, and squats as needed.”

The weighted vest is optional.

Breaking reps up is allowed.

Scaling is allowed.

Participation is encouraged.


Yet every year people still worry:

“Does it count?”

The answer:

Yes.


Because Murph was never supposed to become an ego contest.


The goal is honoring a fallen hero—not proving toughness online. Similar guidance appears repeatedly across experienced coaches discussing Murph strategy and scaling.


Murph Usually Teaches Something Unexpected

Every year we watch people surprise themselves.

Someone finishes their first mile.

Someone does their first pull-up variation.

Someone returns to fitness after years away.

Someone realizes they’re stronger than they thought.

Those moments matter.

Sometimes Murph becomes proof that people are capable of more than they believed.

Not because they did it alone.

Because community carried them.

That’s one reason community matters so much.


The Best Part of Murph Isn’t the Workout

It’s what happens around it.

People staying after to talk.

Cheering the final athlete in.

Parents bringing kids.

Members supporting one another.

Shared struggle creating connection.

That’s what many people remember years later—not their score.

Community.

Encouragement.

Perspective.


If This Is Your First Murph…

Maybe you’re nervous.

Maybe you think you’re not ready.

Maybe you’ve convinced yourself you need to get fitter first.

Know this:

You do not need to prove anything.

You do not need to wear a vest.

You do not need to RX.

You do not need to finish first.

You simply need to show up.

Because Murph has never been about perfection.

It’s about participation.

Reflection.

Community.

And honoring something bigger than ourselves.


At Outsiders CrossFit, whether this is your first Murph or your tenth, we’ll meet you where you are.


That’s what Fitness for Life means.


Not fitness for the already fit.


Fitness for everyone.

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