Athletics Books


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Athletics Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Athletics
Thinking Body, Dancing Mind: Taosports for Extraordinary Performance in Athletics, Business, and Life
Published in Paperback by Bantam (1994-05-01)
Author: Chungliang Al Huang
List price: $18.00
New price: $5.90
Used price: $0.35
Collectible price: $18.00

Average review score:

The best advice for everything you do in your life
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-09
This is perhaps my all-time favorite book. The concepts and exercises will help you with every area in your life where you want to accomplish a goal. As a musician I found it to be wonderful and refreshing. It goes right along with "The Inner Game of Music'" and "A Soprano on her Head." Replacing the sports performance scenes with musical performing situations is a no-brainer. It's incredibly helpful to us performers who tend to be very down on ourselves and notoriously dim about mindset, self-talk, etc..

Not for the advanced...
Helpful Votes: 30 out of 58 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-03
This IS a book for novices. True Taoists would just have a copy of the Tao Te Ching and the I Ching and draw their own answers through introspection of these two primary documents. While I had hoped that this book would provide something of substance, the whole of the book can literally be summed up with, "Visualize how you want things to be and it will be so. Center. Take five easy breathes. Act as if and it will be so." The authors say this in EVERY chapter and with every chapter being template formatted to this mantra it gets VERY repetitive and exhausting. I cannot believe they got 300 pages out of the same text...

I also have trouble believing that the worldclass athletes alluded to within this book are so undisciplined that they need the simple affirmations provided to open their eyes to their true potential, especially martial artists. The affirmations provided get so much to the point of comedy that it is best to ignore them as you push through the book. (They reminded me of the Saturday Night Live skit, "I'm okay and I like me.")

This is a New Age book, not an enlightening text. (Though I acknowledge that once you decide to become enlightened, you are.) If you are an advanced athlete who understands even the basics of Taoism and how it can be applied to ALL ASPECTS of your life, this IS NOT a book for you.

About the Book- from the Publisher
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-10
Thinking Body, Dancing Mind: Taosports for Extraordinary Performance in Athletics, Business, and Life

ANNOTATION
Written by a sports psychologist and a renowned T'ai Chi master, here is a guide to enriching all of life's pursuits through the practice of its simple mental tools and wisdom. Using stories of success from athletes and businesspeople, the authors present techniques and exercises to promote relaxation and enhance performance.

FROM THE PUBLISHER
Why fight your way to the top when you can rise to it? Let go of the obsession to win - and you will be victorious. Acknowledge your vulnerabilities - and turn them into strengths. Find the courage to risk failure - and begin your journey to success.
That is the secret of the TaoAthlete, and in this remarkable book t'ai chi expert Chugliange Al Huang and renowned professional and Olympic sports psychologist Jerry Lynch teach you the time honored principles of successful performance - whether on the playing field, in the office, or in your relationships. By mastering the unique strategies and mental exercises of the TaoAthlete, you'll unlock the extraordinary powers of body, mind, and spirit that will lead you to victory in any field of endeavor.

Fabulous!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-18
I am in graduate school for Sports Psychology and this book hits at the heart of what works for athletes. This is an Eastern-thinking text, so if you do not agree with that philosophy, you will not like this book.
Not only can this book be a reference for the athlete, it is also a reference book for living. I love this book.

Important Tool for Committed Athletes
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-02
This book addresses most of the stumbling blocks many athletes encounter in their quest for excellence. It then suggests specific guidelines for achieving not only performance excellence but also an internal sense of calm and satisfaction with the effort and accomplishment.
The format is succinct and easily used as a reference when specific concepts need to be reviewed. It is not a deeply theoretical book. Rather, it is a very practical and, in my experience, highly effective friend. It has totally changed my approach to my sport (and to my life) with wonderful results.

Athletics
Time-Saving Training for Multisport Athletes
Published in Paperback by Human Kinetics Publishers (1997-02)
Author: Rick Niles
List price: $16.95
New price: $14.69
Used price: $1.42

Average review score:

Great book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-03
This book essentially eliminates wasted training in favor of higher intensity, shorter and less frequent workouts. A shorter high intensity work out is the best way to improve actual performance and doing the "junk miles" or LSD just wastes time and energy. This allows more time for recovery and focuses your training time on the developing the speed and intensity you will use in racing. Makes a lot of sense and I'm integrating it in my training plans with good success. I liked his statement that a "recovery run" is an oxymoron - go for a bike ride or swim instead. A very worthwhile book for anyone serious about improving with increased efficiency.

This book is too technical.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-21
After reading reviews that stated this book was simple to use and had specific examples, I couldn't wait to receive it. I really need time saving training methods and hoped this book would offer solutions. What I found was the usual confusing information on VO2 max, heart rate and other measurements that needed to be taken before you could move on to what you could do to train efficiently in less time. I tried to skip all that and move ahead to the meat of the book and found that pretty confusing too. If I had enough time to read and comprehend this book, I wouldn't need it...I would spend the time training. I am going to give Mark Allen's new book about the same topic a try.

This book is too technical.
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-21
After reading reviews that stated this book was simple to use and had specific examples, I couldn't wait to receive it. I really need time saving training methods and hoped this book would offer solutions. What I found was the usual confusing information on VO2 max, heart rate and other measurements that needed to be taken before you could move on to what you could do to train efficiently in less time. I tried to skip all that and move ahead to the meat of the book and found that pretty confusing too. If I had enough time to read and comprehend this book, I wouldn't need it...I would spend the time training. I am going to give Mark Allen's new book about the same topic a try.

Good Base for INtermediate/Advanced Training
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-06
While this material might not be ideal for most beginners, once you've been training for a while, it will be an invaluable addition to your training regimine.

The principles can be utilized and easily expanded to cover 1/2 and Full Ironman programs -- weekdays stay the same, just extend the long weekend workouts and you're all set!

A good second-stage triathlon book
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-14
There are better books for beginners (I used Triathlon 101 by John Mora, which I found perfect for my first race), but when you're ready to focus on improving performance instead of simply finishing, this book can help you get to that next level. He explains the technical details, but then generally summarizes in layman's terms. He encourages technical training aids like heart rate monitoring, but also proposes lower-tech ways of estimating. At the end of the day, however, if you want to improve and have a limited time budget, you've got to be organized and be willing to structure your training for greater intensity. It's not easy and it's not going to hold your hand; it is focused on performance

Athletics
Track & Field Coach's Survival Guide: Practical Techniques and Materials for Building an Effective Program and Success in Every Event
Published in Spiral-bound by Parker Publishing Company (1997-11)
Author: Edward L. Wallace
List price: $32.95
New price: $21.73
Used price: $14.49

Average review score:

Very helpful book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
Very helpful book... gives a great overview of the basics, as well as some more specific stuff. Could use some updating, but on the whole a great resource.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-04
This is an excellent book for new and experienced coaches alike. The technical knowledge is great and very understandable.

Disappointing
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-13
Although this book has some helpful information, overall I do not feel that it is ideal for a typical high school track program (in Iowa). There is only information on 300m hurdles, not run in Iowa; we run the 400m hurdles in high school. Also the majority of high schools here do not begin track until February or March, and the training schedule in the book is for a much longer season and seems to be geared more for the college level.

Ok, But!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-04
I found this book to be a valuable resource. I don't like that coach Wallace offers for you to email him for additional info - and when you do, he doesn't reply. Take the offer out of the book then.

Indispensible Reference for New Coaches
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-31
There are wonderful gems of wisdom in this coaching manual. I adapted the information in it to start up a grammar school track and field program and we were highly successful in our first season! Coach Wallace gives you the benefits of his 30+ years coaching and it greatly reduced the learning curve for me. This is especially useful for coaches starting up programs on a "shoestring" budget with less-than-optimal facilities. I would highly recommend it to any track and field coach.

Athletics
The Ultimate Guide to Marathons
Published in Paperback by Capital Road Race Publications (1997-03)
Authors: Dennis Craythorn and Rich Hanna
List price: $19.95
New price: $15.92
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Average review score:

Good Reference - Needs Updating
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-11
I found the book to be a good reference, but I wish I had a later revision.

Great for 1998
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-02
This was a very useful book when I bought it in 1999 to pick a marathon for 2000. Now, given how many marathons have changed their routes, increased their support, cancelled, etc., it's become outdated. I don't think there's a new edition out yet--I wish there was.

This *was* a great book...
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-15
...now it is seriously out-of-date. It reviews the 1998 and 1999 calendar years. Without an update by the authors it is, for all intents and purposes, useless.

I really do hope the authors get someone to publish an update, because it was (as the authors rightfully state) the ultimate guide back in 1997 - 1999. A shame.

A good book for planning your first marathon.
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-02
This book provides useful information to those new to the marathon game. While it is not a training guide, it does provide a comparative listing of the most popular marathons in the U.S. and Canada, including course descriptions, logistics, local hotels, and area attractions. Particularly useful is the 1 - 10+ rating system which includes Course Beauty, Difficulty, Race Organization, Crowd Support, and Appropriateness for First Timers. While this system is purely an objective one based on the opinions of the authors, I have found them to be "dead on". My only complaint is that while this book claims the be the "Ultimate Guide", it omits most of the smaller marathons, concentrating on the bigger and more popular races. Overall, this guide is well worth the price.

excellent guide, just a little out of date
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-08
"The Ultimate Guide to Marathons" is an excellent marathon resource for runners. This second edition was published in 1998 with information current up through 2000. A runner using this book as a guide needs to know that in five years a lot can change for a given marathon. A good example of this is the poorly managed Lakeshore Marathon in Chicago which recently had an issue of the course being measured incorrectly and being a mile too long. Information like this would be critical in any new edition of "The Ultimate Guide to Marathons". However, if you are able to accept this potential shortcoming of slightly out of date information and use this book as exactly what the title says, a "guide", then any runner can find a lot of value in this book.

This book ranks 110 marathons from across the United States and bases the rankings on such categories as fan support, race organization, course beauty, course difficulty, and how appropriate the race is for a first time marathon runner. The description of each of the 110 marathons includes sections on the history of the race, the race course itself, what sort of awards and accommodations there are, and other details about the race. This is excellent information. While every major marathon in the country is included in these rankings (as of 1998), there are also quite a few small marathons that make the list. As a Minnesotan I was pleased to see that all four Minnesota Marathons were included (Twin Cities, Grandma's, Med City, Walker North Country) and was surprised by Med City and Walker North Country because these are small marathons. W.N.C. in particular is a trail marathon and trail races are included and ranked right along with the big ones like Boston and New York City.

There is also a listing of approximately another 50 marathons that are typically smaller than the ones included in the ranking, and are "destination marathons", but as one that I recognized (Marathon to Marathon in Iowa) is not really a destination most people would want to go to, my guess is that these are just marathons that the authors were not able to fit into their ranking and that they ran out of time to get them included. I may be wrong about that, though. Either way, it is nice to see such a listing of marathons. I am aware of other regional marathons that were not included, but I do not know when these marathons were founded.

While the information provided in this book is several years out of date, the rankings and descriptions can be used as a guide to see if this is a marathon you are interested in running. If so, I would then recommend looking online at the race's website or perhaps finding another online marathon guide to see if there are any changes or significant drops in runner participation. But this book can be used as an excellent guide to get marathon ideas and if most major marathons are not changing their course or management you can expect that the rankings would stay fairly consistent overall. That makes me happy because Minnesota had the number 2 (Twin Cities, behind only Big Sur) and the number 13 (Grandma's) marathons according to these rankings.

-Joe Sherry

Athletics
Brain Training For Runners: A Revolutionary New Training System to Improve Endurance, Speed, Health, andResults
Published in Paperback by NAL Trade (2007-09-04)
Author: Matt Fitzgerald
List price: $15.00
New price: $6.99
Used price: $4.96

Average review score:

Joe Friel meets Jack Daniels
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-13
Excellent book! He takes Triathlete coach Joe Friel's training principles, plus those of running coach legend Jack Daniels, combines them beautifully, and takes them even a little deeper. Very helpful/informative on many levels.

Excellent - Best Running Book I've Read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-03
I read a lot of running books but for me, this is the best. It's an easy read with a lot of useful training tips. His exercises have really helped me. I've been suffering for 2 years with groin/hip pain and have spent a small fortune on doctors to no avail. The exercises and training plans in this book have got me back running, pain-free. I run by myself so having a good training plan and "virtual coach" has been great. I think you'll find something helpful for your running in this book.

Just one question for Fitzgerald
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
I have one question for Fitzgerald and those who rave about this book and the author's mixture of triathlete training and the proven philosophies of coach Jack Daniels: Do the great African runners (Kenya, Ethiopia, Morocco) do a lot of cross training or triathlons? I think you all know the answer to that is a resounding no. They run. They run multiple times daily. They run in groups that push each other in each run. They have fun. They live and eat together. They run on dirt all the time and avoid injury. They wear light minimalistic training shoes that allow the foot to actually move and spread out properly. They run constantly on hilly or mountainous terrain. But they don't cycle, and they don't spend any time in swimming pools or the weight room at Gold's Gym. They improve their running by focusing on their running and enjoying the spirit of community competition. It is part of their culture. Americans and Europeans can't compete in the distance events because they will not train in this manner. Americans run on asphalt, generally avoid mountainous terrain, wear thick clunky shoes advertisers have convinced them are necessary to protect their heels, strike with their heels with each footstrike, and then wonder why they get hurt and aren't as fast as their international competitors.

To combine the principles of a great triathlete's training with the running philosophy of Jack Daniels may be "revolutionary" in the sense that no one has put such a combination forward promising improvement for runners, but that may be because it is a combination that overlooks the fact that the worlds best runners don't use any such training ideas. Cross-training may give a brief mental break from the demands of running, but many people run because it is the simplest and least expensive way to exercise: No gym membership needed, no bicycle equipment (big $), no need for a pool or the danger of open water swim areas, you just put on a good pair of shoes and head out the door. If cross training were the answer for major running improvement, everyone in the world would have been cross-training for decades. However, the world's best runners do very little, if any, cross training.

Days later now, and I will modify this review to say that the sections in this book about the psychology of running and how to train the brain to push through fatigue are well done, and the portions that focus on specific exercises to develop core strength are also quite useful and easily incorporated into even the least experienced runner's training. There are good sections on racing and how to prepare for competition, whether your goal is first place or a PR. These are the book's strength. I stand by my evaluation that cross training is emphasized a bit too heavily in some sections, but don't throw out the baby with the bath water, as they say, and miss the useful parts of the book because of the cross-training "revolutionary" revelations.

One step beyond
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
I do love this book. It articulates a lot of advice that I thought about in training with facts to back it up. It makes sense! I have been running for 20 years & felt somewhat stagnant in my progress to improve & this technique has moved me into a different realm of running. I feel great & attribute that to training differently by incorporating Matt Fitzgerald's "Brain Training for Runners" into my daily routine. I would definitely recommend this book for all runners from beginners to elites!

Reet

A little disappointing
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-19
This book is thick and looks meaty, but half of it is comprised of training programs.

The author cites numerous "studies" but rarely, if ever, tells the reader what the names of the studies are, where they were conducted, or where the results were originally published. Simply saying "Studies show that..." or "A study done is (insert place name) revealed..." wears thin after a while. The book lacks a proper bibliography or list of references.

This author clearly has a lot of experience and wants to share evidence to support his claims. Most of the evidence is based on his personal experience or anecdotes, rather than science.

I found the book easy to read and follow, but I would have liked more evidence to support his claims.

Athletics
College Athletes for Hire: The Evolution and Legacy of the NCAA's Amateur Myth
Published in Kindle Edition by Praeger Publishers (1998-07-30)
Authors: Allen L. Sack and Ellen J. Staurowsky
List price: $69.95
New price: $55.96

Average review score:

A Deep Look at NCAA's Amateur Myth
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-21

An in depth look at the evolution of both amateurism andthe NCAA, Sack & Staurowsky take a historical view to show how theNCAA falsely classifies college athletes as amateurs. The authors look at current labor and contract laws, as well as historical court cases, to draw comparisons to what the NCAA refers to as athletic scholarships. Are athletic scholarships a gift given for ability? Or, are they a payment for services rendered. The authors argue that scholarships are an employment contract for services. The fact that the scholarships must be renewed every year by the coach, and can be taken away from a player for what the coach deems poor performance, or for that matter even an injury, make the arguement a very strong one. If scholarships were merely a gift, then shouldn't an athlete be allowed to walk away from the sport with no prospect of financial harm?

By current NCAA standards, the authors say this is not the case. "College Athletes for Hire" shows how and why the NCAA passed legislation allowing for one year renewable scholarships giving total control of the coach over the athlete both on the field, and in some cases off. Furthermore, athletes are awarded these athletic scholarships on athletic ability alone, with no consideration of academics or, in many cases, personal character. The thesis argued by Sack and Staurowsky that athletes are already 'unpaid professionals' is even stronger when the authors use a legal perspective to show how courts have interpreted employment contracts. When discussing amateurism and scholarships, a working definition and background is needed.

The book does a good job in providing a history of what amateurism is defined as. The use of the word scholarship, and how the NCAA defines an athletic scholarship, is also thoroughly discussed to avoid any confusion of the use of these terms. While reading the book, it was alarming to consider the point that Universities, athletic directors, and coaches can financially benefit from ticket sales, sponsorships, and endorsements, while the athletes are not allowed anything more than a full scholarship.

Although the topic is well studied, this is not a book to take with you to read leisurely. It is highly academic and close examination of the issues expressed is needed to fully understand the thesis presented. The authors do not seem to have a separate agenda or act as lobbyists for any organization; rather, they have strong beliefs in what they consider to be wrong in inconsistant by the NCAA's treatment and defining of college athletes.

ýProfessionalý College Athletes
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-29
Stark and Staurowsky have created a book about college athletes that explores the issue of professionalism in college sports like no other. The purpose of this book is to prove that college athletes who receive scholarships based on athletic ability are in fact paid professionals who are compensated in the form of room, board, tuition, and fees. In spite of this fact, the NCAA still labels these athletes amateurs. As a result, the NCAA is protected under rules that allow them to get away with behavior that they otherwise could not if these athletes were considered professionals in the true sense of the word. The authors contend that by labeling athletes amateurs the NCAA is able to avoid taxes, workers compensation claims of injured athletes, and antitrust scrutiny. The author's focus is on athletes involved in revenue producing sports, mainly men's Division IA football and basketball. The authors do a good job of proving that the role these sports are playing in universities more closely resembles an unrelated business of the university rather than an academic supplement.

Other books talk about the evils of college sports in terms of commercialism and illegal payments. These books focus mainly on the outrageous amounts of money that some college sports generate and how it is corrupting the athletes who participate. This is one of the few books that address the issues of professionalism in college sports. The primary focus of this book is on professionalism and the problems it has caused in college athletics.

According to the authors amateurism began in Great Britain in the early 19th century and centered around the British aristocracy. The traditional definition of amateurism included the belief that it involved an activity that was done in one's spare time, separate from activities that involved making money or a living. The amateur ideal spread to academic universities. It was not long until universities found that they could make money off of these athletic events. In the early 1900's, as universities were defying amateur ideals by finding ways to subsidize athletes as incentives to play for their university, the NCAA came along to play the role of regulator. The authors not only contend, but prove through rulings and behavior of the NCAA that the NCAA never once tried to prevent professionalism from forming in college sports. As a matter of fact, according to the authors the NCAA has not only been unsuccessful in stopping professionalism, but has actually accommodated it.

The authors have quite a few chapters of their book devoted the history of women's sports. These chapters are very important to their argument. They illustrate that women's sports in college began quite differently than men's sports. The women's sports model, as the authors refer to it, strove to separate itself from the money and exploitations associated with men's college sports. This model balanced education and athletics and strove to provide all female students with the opportunity to be involved in athletics. This is what the authors believe that the role of sports should be in universities. Up until very recently, focus in women's sports has remained on the athletes, not the spectators or the revenue being produced by their sport.

The authors spend a whole chapter proving that athletic scholarships have changed from gifts given to students into contracts of employment. This transformation of the athletic scholarship is the very root of the problem that has turned college athletes into professionals. It is in this chapter that the authors do a great job of combining their views and the history of the previous chapters with actual court cases. Although most of these cases deal with the issue of workers compensation for college athletes, they illustrate the transformation of the college athlete from amateur to professional with the introduction of athletic scholarship in the 50's. Awarding financial compensation in the form of scholarships to talented athletes constitutes payment and violates amateur rules. But it was not until 1967 that the NCAA turned these scholarships into employment contracts by allowing athletic scholarships to be canceled by the university, in affect giving the university the power to "fire" an athlete.

What makes this book interesting is that the authors not only talk about the issues and problems with college athletics, but they also offer solutions to the problems they discussed. There are two solutions presented. The first solution presented is for colleges to do away with athletic scholarships and concentrate on educating students. This solution involves bringing college athletics back to the amateur level. This model is successful in Ivy League schools. The second solution offered is to acknowledge that athletes receiving scholarships for their ability are in fact paid professionals and to support these athletes to their fullest potential. In some cases this would involve running the revenue producing sports of a university as an unrelated business, one that has employees and pays taxes.

This book was thorough and very well researched. The authors discussed cases and archival material from the NCAA that I have never seen discussed before. By doing this the authors were able to illustrate their opinions with facts. Although I liked that their opinions were backed up by facts I found this book to be difficult to read at some points. Parts of the book read like a history book, and although the history was very interesting and in some regards necessary to their mission, I would have enjoyed more opinion and less history. Since the authors were involved in college athletics themselves I would have enjoyed reading about some of their experiences. On the other hand, because there was so much history and facts throughout this book I was really able to understand the issues. Overall I enjoyed this book because it explored a side of college athletics that has never been looked at in this kind of detail. I recommend this book to anyone who is interested in college athletics.

Amateur Myth of NCAA
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-25
"... a nationwide money-laundering scheme." How Walter Byers, executive director of the NCAA from 1951-1987, described the awarding of athletic scholarships in 1957, which essentially lead to the professionalism of college athletes according to Allen Sack and Ellen Staurowski.

"College Athletes for Hire" is a book that should be read by anyone interested in the NCAA and its place in American sport. The authors of this book, Allen Sack and Ellen Staurowski, have compiled an historical look of college sport from its beginnings as an amateur sport to the highly commercialized spectacle it has become today. Built upon British ideologies of amateurism, college sport quickly grew as universities discovered college sport, moreover college football, to become a revenue producing avenue as well as an avenue for bringing prestige to the universities. As college sport grew, the price of winning brought illegal inducements to athletes and essentially the end of amateurism established in the early days of competition. With the advent of athletic scholarships, the athletes essentially became employees of a university as the scholarship acted as an employment contract where the athletes received free room, board, tuition, and fees for his/her service.

With the rise of professionalism in college sport, especially at the Division I level, the NCAA continued to argue that college sport was still a leisure activity and that college sport still adhered to its original amateur principles. An argument the NCAA continues to use today. This amateur myth has been used not to benefit the athletes in anyway, but to keep the NCAA and its member institutions free from antitrust violations, workers compensation claims, and from paying federal taxes. Sack and Staurowski have put together a well written and well research analysis that can finally help to dispel the notion of the amateur myth and put to light the issues affecting the NCAA, its member institutions, and most importantly, the athletes who help to generate millions in revenue, but fail to reap the benefits of a true higher education.

The book takes the reader on a journey of the NCAA from its inception in 1906, when it was established to restore amateurism, through the rise of women's athletics, the rise in commercialism of college sport as a revenue producing entity, and finally to the issues affecting the athletes themselves. Sack and Staurowski show how athletes have been receiving some sort of payment for their athletic ability and performance on the playing field since the beginning of the NCAA. The so called amateurism of the NCAA created and underground network of illegal payments, which were provided by, boosters, alumni, local residents, and college officials. It was not uncommon for athletes to be given a job and receive payment for which they performed no work at all.

Sack and Staurowski show that the NCAA itself has violated its own long established principles of amateurism with the passage of several amendments. The first of these was the "Sanity Code," which entitled universities to award financial aid based on athletic ability. The second was the granting of full athletic scholarships in 1956, which gave the athletes he aforementioned free room, board, tuition, and fees. Sack and Staurowski argue that these two amendments alone come to violate amateurism and that they constitute payment to athletes for athletic ability and not for education which the NCAA has argued is the basis of the amateur model. Sack and Staurowski further argue that the athletic scholarship is in essence an employment contract. In 1967 the NCAA passed an amendment that reduced the scholarship to a one-year renewable scholarship establishing an employer-employee relationship between the coach and athlete. This one year renewable scholarship now gave the coaches the right to terminate the scholarship if the athlete chose to leave the team to concentrate on academics, if an athlete was injured, if an athlete's athletic ability was not at college level, or for athlete insubordination. Sack and Staurowski argue that this is similar to any employer-employee relationship. This gives the coach total control of the athlete both on and off the field and that an athlete can lose his/her right to an education if the coach deems them unnecessary for athletic competitions. If an athlete loses their right to an education because of sports, how can the NCAA continue to claim college sports are amateur and leisure activities?

Important legal cases are used to show how college sports are similar to professional sports and that the athletes are paid employees. The most important legal case is the Coleman v. Western Michigan University which outlines the difficulties courts have had in deciding these issues arising in college sports. Although the NCAA has won a majority of these cases, Sack and Staurowski provide credible arguments to support the athletes. It is up to the reader to decide whether or not college athletes are in fact paid professional athletes.

Sack and Staurowski argue that the only true amateurism in college sports is at the Division III and the Ivy League where no athletic scholarships are given. Financial aid is given at these institutions based on need rather than the ability to score touchdowns or make baskets. At this level the athletes themselves decide whether or not athletics is more important than his/her education, whereas in Division I and II the athletes are paid entertainers where athletics is their primary goal as dictated by the one-year renewable athletic scholarship.

Although I strongly recommend this book, I must say that it is a somewhat difficult book to read that delves deeply into the issues affecting the NCAA and its athletes. The authors have compiled a scholarly analysis of this subject using diverse sources of information that make this book one of the best in the field of college athletics.

In The Light
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-04
In "College Athletes for Hire" Authors Sack andStaurowsky need to be commended for having the courage to create sucha document that takes a very depth and candid look at what collegiate sports have become today in terms of professionalism and commercialism. As a former Division II athlete having participated on both "revenue generating" (football) and "non-revenue generating" (wrestling) athletic teams. I can definitely relate to many of the things the authors have discussed in their book. In addition, being a student of the sports industry, I found the contents to be very helpful as the book took the reader on an educational journey of twist and turns while exposing how people's greed for money has corrupted the essence of amateur sports. This text is one that should be read by all who have any involvement in the grooming of student athletes. This book brings to the surface some very important questions about how, when, where, and for what reasons the authors feel that many of our student athletes have become unpaid professionals. While providing us with an abundance of both primary and archival research material to support their viewpoints and conclusions. By doing this I feel they have eliminated the criticism that this is just a book of hot air stemming from two individual's bad experiences and personal feeling, causing anyone in disagreement to have to produce and organize just as much supporting material as well as to present it in just as an effective manner. The authors hit the reader with an eye-opening jolt of reality by presenting the actual fate of one former collegiate athlete and his quiest for justice. This former football player received a game related injury that left him a quadriplegic. He stresses that if his university's athletic director, coach, or any of the groundskeepers had gotten hurt that day, they would have received workers' compensation for their injury but he as an "amateur scholarship athlete" (by NCAA believes) is not entitled to such coverage even though because of his talents they have jobs. The book showcases the authors' experiences in the sports from the big time Division I revenue generating world of football to the minute world of women's Division III sports. Providing the reader with a revealing look at the amount of time the authors dedicated to investigating and substantiating the material they found. The Introduction sets the foundation for the educational journey on which the reader is about to embark by showing some of the disparities between the various football divisions in the NCAA. It declares what sport is, a taste of the legislative effect on sport, a naming of what they feel is the problem in NCAA sports, a statement as to what the purpose of the book is, and chapter by chapter break down of what the authors are trying to convey in each chapter. Unlike other critiques of collegiate sport they address the historical path that "the evolution of "NCAA-sponsored" professionalism in the form of athletically related financial aid" has taken. In the body of the book the authors express that in Great Britain "the amateur ideal of sport was in many ways supportive of the best academic traditions of the liberal arts when viewed in the context of the British University". But here in America because of spectators' alarming interest in competition (1906) which reached beyond their regional lines, revenue driven individuals leaped at the opportunity to exploit what they saw as an emerging national market giving, the NCAA the boosts it so desperately needed to become what it is today. Helping to propel the NCAA into its present state (a cartel as describe by the authors) was a number of legislative changes which the authors cite as major contributors. These legislative moves were in direct contradiction to the original code of ethics/by laws of the (Articles VI & VII) NCAA that were in place in 1906 forbidding the violations of the amateur principle. Transforming individuals who accepted athletic scholarships into paid professionals based on their very own (NCAA's) historical standards and definitions. The NCAA has always tried to present itself as the "do gooders", but this book reveals the flip side of the coin by containing information on actual court rulings concerning the relationship between athletes, scholarships, employment contracts, compensation, and the strategy used by the NCAA to mask their incorporations of professionalism. The discussion of the emergence of women's sports was a great idea because it shows how women have fought for so many years to preserve the true essence of amateurism by being opposed to the act of having collegiate sports serve the public as an entertainment venue. Which took away from the educational purposes of sports along with exposing the wide spread sexist discriminations that was prevalent against women in the world of sports for so many years. Discrimination lasted until the point where it could be seen that revenue could be generated from the fruits of women's labor right along with that of their male counter parts and through their quest for equality (e.g.Title IX) which sent women leaping into the world of professional sports by now being able to receive athletic scholarships. END

College Athletes: Amateurs or Professionals
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-06
The purpose of this book is to show how college athletes started playing sports as amateurs, but quickly through athletic scholorships have turned towards professionalism. An amateur is one who engages in sports in their free time. This is leisure time, and athletes joining in this time will compete solely on thier will to play and not participate in return for room. board, tuition and fees. An athlete becomes a professional when one accepts an athletic scholorship which may include any of these incentives. This book is primarily about professionlism. The start of the Sanity Code showed signs that the NCAA was turning professional. The Sanity Code stated that financial aid could be awarded to students on the basis of their athletic ability. They called these gifts for play, not pay for play. Recieving any payment at all according to Sack and Staurowsky, makes that athlete a professional. This book touches on the relationships between coaches and players. Under scholorship, athletes must perform under the rules of the coach. I just recently finished my senior year of Division II football. I was under scholorship and my coach did have total control over my actions. My coach acted as the employer, and I was the employee. Schools that don't offer scholorships such as the Ivy League, and Division III schools, players aren't under such strict control. Athletes don't have to practice or play if they don't want to. These players are under no obligation to their coaches. The authors give a good argument that under scholorships, athletes are held under contract, similar to an employee contract. Chapter 5 was a very interesting chapter. The authors explained how sholorships turned into employee contracts through the issue of worker's compensation. In the Van Horn Case the courts awarded Van Horn's family death benefits because Van Horn was under scholorship for his athletic ability, thus making it an employee contract. I thought that adding in the Askew factors made this chapter powerful. The Askew factors were used by the State of Michigan in determining the existence of an employment relationship. One factors is the employer has the right to control the employee. The second factor is the employer can discipline or fire the employee. The third factor is the employee accepts wages to pay for everyday living expenses. The fouth factor is the task provided is a part of the employers business. As a scholorship player I think that athletes under scholorship do meet these criteria. Athletes are under control of the coach and are disciplined. Athletes accept room and board that are used as their everyday living expenses. I also think that since sport revenues go into a universities general fund, then that sport is part of the universities business. This book supports my arguements. Sack and Staurowsky end their book with possible reforms of collegiate sport. I agree with these thoughts. College sport should go to either one extreme or the other. One way is to eliminate scholorships all together. Students will then come first at all universities, and higher learning can be achieved. The other extreme would be to admit that college athletes are paid professionals. This would cause college sports to become stepping stones to professional sports. The revenues generated from that sport would go right back into that program. University funds should not be put into sports, as sports would become an unrelated business to the university. Turning professional will force only the fittest big time colleges to survive in this game. The only unversities that will survive in a professional atmosphere are the schools producing the most revenues. This limits the competition to only a handful, and the rest can only be forced to return to amateur athletics.

Athletics
The Essential Triathlete (Essential)
Published in Paperback by The Lyons Press (1996-05-01)
Author: Steven Jonas M. D.
List price: $16.95
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Average review score:

Great information source for First Timers!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-25
I would say that this book can truly motivate those to get started on their first Triatholon with realistic goals in mind. The author gives realistic goals for those who are about to embark on a unfamilur journey into Triatholoning! Everywhere from Training to Technique to stoping for a Hamburger in the middle of a Triatholon. The author is so easy to relate to, and very entertaining! Can't wait to start my first Triatholon!

A great source of inspiration for determined dreamers!
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-25
A month ago I watched the cyclists competing in the biking segment of the Chicago Mrs. T's Triathlon zoom by a block away from my home. I found myself cheering enthusiastically --I knew it was time I thought about competing in the triathlon next year.

Steve Jonas' book is a wonderful source for people who know little about the triathlon but are drawn to the possibility of ever competing in one. It is written in a witty and light way, constantly reinforcing the message that "yes you can" complete a triathlon -- and that it can even be FUN! Steve provides training schedules for all levels of athletes, from casual walkers to aerobically-fit exercisers. Most importanly, he provides answers to the questions most beginners would be embarassed to ask (can you do the "Coney Crawl" during the swimming segment?).

On the other hand, "The Complete Triathlete" is short and sweet - and it leaves the reader curious to know more. When exactly do I bike? What about technique? How do I supplement my schedule with weight training? For these answers, you'll have to look elsewhere.

All in all, though, I highly recommend this book if you're even dreaming about doing a triathlon one day. By the time you finish Steve's book, you'll be on your way to realistically making your dream come true.

Good beginner info
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-10
I read this book before competing in my first triathlon and found it extremely helpful and supportive. I recommend it to anyone who is considering training for a triathlon. Jonas is great at making you feel like you can accomplish anything. His advice is simple and solid. My only criticism is that he focuses too little on female triathletes. Most of his clothing and equipment advice is male-oriented.

For the non ambitious beginner
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-15
I found this book to be too basic. The book would be perfect for those who are wondering if they can finish a triathlon, not for those who are trying to improve thier performance. Lot's of basic information. No specific advanced info!!

Very inspirational, but too basic
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-02
Steven Jonas does a very good job motivating 1st timers for a triathlon, but if you've ever participated in ANY sport competitively, this book is just too basic. It's more of a primer for healthy living with basic stretching, basic swim,bike & run skills included. Fantastic for anyone starting an excerise program for the 1st time, but definitely not for anyone remotely athletic.

Athletics
The Last Pick: The Boston Marathon Race Director's Road to Success
Published in Paperback by Rodale Books (2006-04-04)
Authors: David J. McGillivray and Linda Glass Fechter
List price: $15.95
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Average review score:

Light Reading good for all runners
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-25
McGillivray has led an amazing life, of that there is no doubt. His book chronicles some of his most incredibly adventures. I like it because there is a great mix of his motivation for success and his dealings with the occasional failure. Some of his ideas for inspiration seem specifically-tailored, I question whether pure stubborness will work for everyone, but it certainly did wonders for David.

The flow of the book is a little odd. The undisputed highlight is the coverage of his 3,200 mile run across the country in 80 days. While reading that section, his tone felt very natural, much like he had come to hang out with me and was telling me a great story. His recollections more or less followed his route, but sometimes he would jump around topics.

The rest of the book felt like anticlimax, despite the awe-inspiring accomplishments, because they were a little disjointed, there didn't seem to be a central story. I know with biography, you can't just invent a driving plot, but Last Pick felt more like a collection of short stories out of his life.

Still, it's a good, entertaining read, and if you're a runner it'll reignite your enthusiasm for the sport.

An inspirational life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-31
I was very surprised at how much McGillivray accomplished in his life. I picked up his book expecting to read about a marathoner and his experience as the race director of the Boston Marathon and got so much more. McGillivray's cross country run, 24hr run, bike and swim and so on are just amazing in and of themselves.

Sometimes his motivation and drive does seem very obsessive compulsive, but it works for him. I was very inspired by everything he's done and the attitude he takes in life.

I must say that at times it did seem like McGillivray was tooting his own horn. I was also annoyed by the small excerpts and quotes that were literally on every other page. Some were legitimate quotes from a newspaper or contemporary runner/athlete, but many were just his family and friends and didn't really add any credence to his biography. The only thing that was useful was to see the words from the horse's mouth, so to speak, just before McGillivray went into a time in his life where that person was.

All in all a very inspiring book. I would definitely recommend.

4 stars.

250 Pages of Bragging
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-16
This is the most annoying, self-aggrandizing narrative ever written. He brags about everything he's ever done, inserts useless "quotes" from his friends and siblings - mostly quotes that brag about what a special guy he is, and acts as if he's the greatest and most selfless ultrarunner who has graced this green earth. He even has his "resume" of accomplishments at the end, to ensure that the reader has a full complement of information on what a swell guy Dave is.

Could be titled "Fight the Good Fight" or "Never Say Die"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-23
Starts a bit slowly - just like a good long run - but certainly worth the time and effort as it hits its stride. This man "Dave" is motivational and exceptional in his physical achievements; and he's made most of them up while following his own template. AKA "Don't give Time anything... rather force Time to take from you" and this book follows that philosophy.

Inspirational
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-09
Great read Dave!
Inspiration from someone who has done some inspiring things. Dave's the real deal. Unlike many of our contemporary self-help prophets Dave's got the resume to back it up. He's unpretentious in his accounts and proves the value of setting goals, pursuing them like mad and then setting new goals until life becomes a happy whirl of accomplishment.
The most outstanding thing I learned, and Dave epitomizes, is the power of giving. If you sow so shall you reap - and look at what is possible! Helping people makes his world and ours a better place and that's his success.
I'll be running your (our) big race again this year - thank you and keep it coming...
Read this book and then buy a copy for someone you love.
Chris Russell

Athletics
Raising Your Child to Be a Champion in Athletics, Arts, and Academics
Published in Paperback by Citadel (2004-07-01)
Author: Wayne Bryan
List price: $12.95
New price: $0.08
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Average review score:

Change the way you raise your children
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-15
Reading this book was probably one of the best things that I did. In fact, I did eventually by another one as a gift to my friend. I could see lot of things which I have been doing wrong with my son. I learned to put less pressure on him to perform on the tennis court and get him to enjoy the sport more. In fact, it has improved his love for the sport and improve his mental strength as well. It is a must read for all parents.

nothing new
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
Although the author clearly thinks they have discovered something new and insightful, they offer minimal advice that any father doesn't already know. The fact that the author is a tennis pro and has the ability and personal skill to make it easy for his kids to take up the game makes this book irrelevant to most parents with normal jobs living in the suburbs. The author is clearly impressed with himself, which is annoying, especially because the good points he makes, could have been spelled out more succinctly and effectively in a couple pages. I would not waste your time with this one.

Oh, please!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-26
I didn't read the whole book as I started to gag on the second paragraph (where the author states how he is against pushing children to fulfill their parent's dreams). I've known Mr. Bryan most of my life. He's a tennis teacher and plays in a band. His boys had tennis rachets and guitars in their hands before they could walk. He has about as much expertise about raising children as my pet goldfish. He has succeeded in life because he was blessed with talented, intelligent boys and a wonderful grounded wife.

A very good guide for concerned parents
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-07
This is a very good book, and I have been recommending it to other parents, especially with children in competitive tennis. We tennis parents are rather all alone, and we need help. This books is comforting and is a great source of help. However, a reader should take care not take the book too seriously. For example, it is impossible to be positive and praise your child all the time w/o criticizing... there is a limit. Also, I wish Wayne gave more examples of "side door" to inspire. No book is perfect, but this is a great book for parents who want their children to be successful in life and become a champion!

A must read for all tennis parents and Coaches!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-21
I just have to comment on the review written by R.D.H. It is obvious that this person is envious and jealous of Wayne Bryan's success with raising his sons to be great champions. I also personally know Wayne Bryan and he practices what he preaches. He and his wife Kathy, have raised two incredible sons to be great people and gracious champions! As a tennis parent and tennis enthusiest this book has helped me to be a positive force in my kids lives. I would recommend this book to ALL parents and coaches so they could be a positive force in their kids lives.

Athletics
Running for Dummies
Published in Paperback by For Dummies (1999-02-05)
Authors: Florence Griffith Joyner and John Hanc
List price: $19.99
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Average review score:

An informative find
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-29
Back when I was in high school, Florence Griffith-Joyner was a huge inspiration for me. Since I was also a sprinter on the track team, that makes sense. After high school, I fell out of the habits I had followed and eventually abandoned them. Now I am older, and wiser, and I would like to get back into the walking/jogging routine. This is an EXCELLENT book to use as a refresher or as a starter. Flo-Jo has really wonderful tips and leads you every step of the way. No matter what fitness level you are at, this is a must if you are considering walking/jogging and/or running.

The Basic Running Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-15
At first I bought this book for my research project for my English class. I chose running as my topic and eventually this book helped me much.
I am personally a noob at running but just think to start it. After reading this book, I know many things i didn't.
I also read many other running book. They are somewhat not easy to be understood, unlike this book. Though running for dummies gives just general explanation, it's simple and easy to understand, especially for the amateur runners.

A good book if you never ran
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-03
I found this book extremely helpful when I first started exercising. If you have never run before, I believe you will find it helpful. It is a novice book, but we all have to start somewhere!

Good overall, especially for Flo-Jo fans
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-17
This is a great buy if you are a Flo Jo fan.

For everybody else, this is a typical dummies book, it covers all the major areas of a subject, but it by no means comprehensive or in-depth. As with most dummies book, I recommend them for those looking for a quick introduction/reference to a topic.

An excellent book for novice and intermediate
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-25
I feel that this book is full of useful information. Once I picked up the book i didn't set it down. It easy easy to understand and it reminds us intermediate runners about form, nutrition, and staying excited running. This book also has spots for new vocabulary, tips, warnings, and Flo-Jo's encouragement for new runners. This is an excellent book especially for the novice runner.


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