Kettlebells, Why?
- Dave Hedges
- May 13
- 5 min read
This was a Facebook comment (I think) which I just copied in a hurry without taking note of the persons name, so I apologise. I often grab these questions in a hurry while using my phone.
If you recognise the question as your, please shout out.
"Hey Dave!
Quick question....
Kettlebell training, why?
Excuse my ignorance in asking this question.
Why do people do kettlebells instead of free weights etc."
And if you aren't the person, be the person who asks the next question…..
So, why kettlebells?

Back in the early 2000's after I had got back from wandering the earth and had returned to Dublin with the intention of settling there as a base of operations.
A place to have an actual address, job, training but could bounce out and back with ease.
I was training in the Martial Arts Academy in its old location on Leeson St, and was there while they (poorly) planned the move to the Magennis Place location which became Wild Geese a few years later.
In the Magennis place martial arts academy I trained with the exercise weights set.
1 inch plates, some metal, some concrete. A bar and dumbells with spin lock collars and one bar that had spring collars.
It was basic, but functional.
Got me fighting fit, both for working the doors and training up for my Kenpo 2nd degree black belt and anything else I fancied doing.
In this time I, in reading various articles and forums about fitness and martial arts, started to read about this thing called a kettlebell.
It seemed to be this mysterious tool from Russia that was making waves in the US.
I read a good deal, always cynical as most of the info was from one source, Dragon Door and this guy called Pavel.
Then I got injured. Seriously damaging my back.
So I spent the time I would usually have spent training reading.
And reading.
I bought one of Pavels books and sourced a kettlebell. Which was not easy back then, it was a 16kg and I believe it is still being used in Wild Geese.
With the book “Enter the Kettlebell” and a 16kg bell I started learning and practicing at home before going to the martial arts academy.
I learned the Turkish Get Up and the Swing from that book
Slowly.
Carefully
I genuinely believe that my recovery from injury started to speed up with the practice.
The swing seemed to be a tonic for the pain and gradually improved my ability to hip hinge and tolerate spine flexion.
I genuinely fell in love with the kettlebell.
So I bought a 24, bought more of Pavels work and kept training at home, slowly getting myself back to strength.
By the time the Martial Arts Academy folded and Paulie and I took it over at Wild Geese Martial Arts, I had taken a personal trainer course and built a significant library of books and downloads.
I was transitioning into Coach.
And the kettlebell became my weapon of choice.
I found that growing up in martial arts studios and rural areas, I got great results with bodyweight exercises and improvisation.
Kettlebells slotted right into that mindset.
Looking at Steve Maxwells work, combining Kettlebells with Bodyweight drills as a way to train for BJJ made sense to me and mirrored my own thinking.
I began realising a training philosophy that I'd always followed but never consciously thought about.
In 2005 or 6, Vasily Ginko came to Ireland to teach Kettlebells in a workshop hosted by a fledgling All Ireland Kettlebell Lifting Federation which at that time was basically one guy, the late Jason Kelly.
Vasily and Jason taught the actual Russian way of training and the sport of Kettlebell Lifting.
Vasily told me to start teaching in a way that was difficult to say no to.
The following year when Vasiky was back certifying instructors we had a more or less the same conversation, except this time about competing in Kettlebell Sport.
And that is where Wild Geese Fitness Training (WG-FIT) really started. You can thank Vasily for telling to teach people to use kettlebells!
Later in 2007 I brought Steve Cotter over and we became friends, I had Steve back several times over the years. Hosting his CKT level 1 & 2 instructor courses and other courses he taught.
So, to get back to the question, “Why Kettlebells?”
And my own question based on observation, why were so many early adopters of the kettlebell martial arts or boxing enthusiasts?
Simply put, efficiency.
One tool, that doesn't take up much room, can do many things.
A tool that has many uses.
And in a group setting, I can train twice as many people in a given space using kettlebells then I could using bars.
The swinging movements work great for work capacity while targeting the common weak areas of the body (hamstrings, hips, upper back, grip, heart, lungs, mental discipline)
And strength came from pressing, squatting (mostly single leg variations due to the limitations in loading) and a few other drills.
Combining these with bodywork exercises, push ups, pull ups, jumps, crawls, sprints and all of a sudden you have a tool that helps you unlock athletic potential.
Add more kettlebells to the collection and that potential increases more.
Back in the day, I started training folks with a single 16kg, one 24 and one 32kg bells, a Trx and plenty of floor space.
I had people who had trained in fully equipped gyms now feeling they moved better and had more endurance.
I had people with aches and pains feeling fresher and moving easier.
I had kickboxers turn their competitive careers around, going from losing streaks to consistently winning (see the WMD ebook for the program that I ran for them, go tothe shop page on either wg-fit.com or davehedges.net)
Older "retired" athletes started returning to sport
As we expanded our equipment and attracted more clients, the results really started speaking for themselves.
There is something about a swinging implement, which includes Mace, Indian Clubs and Bulgarian Bags as well as kettlebells that just works.
Yes for maximal strength, barbells all the way.
Squats, Deadlifts, Olympic lift variants can be overloaded the most and with more careful increments with a barbell.
If we think in terms of energy systems, much of the Anaerobic work, the strength and power based training is maybe best done with a bar.
The other energy systems are where our kettlebell and the whole category of swinging / ballistic lifting tools live.
Getting that athletic, bouncy, “joined up” feeling, getting a back that is resilient and strong, an upper back you can see from space with the work capacity to match, swing stuff.
Right now, as the weather is so good, I am training with a Bulgarian Bag as it's soft and won't damage the sports field I use.
It does much of what the kettlebell does.
And my body is feeling amazing, much better than it has the past couple of years where I've mostly lifted bars.
It takes your strength and glues it all together, it adds a turbo and puts in a bigger fuel tank.
And, and this is important, it's fun!
When I did bodybuilding type training, it was dull. Granted I got bigger and stronger, but it wasn't that great for my movement and martial skills.
So kettlebells are about efficiency, about moving well and about covering as many bases as possible with the least amount of space or equipment,
And after training for a while with kettlebells and swinging implements, they leave you wondering if you actually could take that gorilla……
(You can't……but you can always wonder….)
Regards
Dave Hedges
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