Athletics Books
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Used price: $6.47

Best of the Running DiariesReview Date: 2007-12-21
Finally!Review Date: 1999-12-15
A disappointing logbook, especially in its log designReview Date: 1999-07-08
Great Log With Great Charts and InfoReview Date: 2004-12-09
Best training diary on the marketReview Date: 2002-12-02
Every runner should keep a log like this. It helps keep you motivated and see your progress.

Used price: $5.08
Collectible price: $47.50

Busting Myths & Presenting A Complete HistoryReview Date: 2006-12-07
For example, Sperber found Knute Rockne's personal and athletic department correspondence in the basement of a campus library. And though the rules for recruiting were much different in Rockne's time, Sperber concludes that institutional control became nearly impossible as the coach became a living legend. Some things never change, I guess.
Though Rockne takes center-stage in the history, Sperber devotes ample space to the founding of the school by French priests and the growth of the university during the times of rampant anti-Catholicisim. Go no further than what the "Orange" nickname actually meant at Syracuse University to understand that issue.
Sperber follows the path of the program through the hiring of Frank Leahy in 1941, though his conclusions - as timely now as they were more than a decade ago - takes aim at the money-go-round of major college athletics and the rumblings it can cause in the foundation of the university framework.
In 2006, Sperber presented several lectures on the Rockne legend and ND football, proving the book is still reaching fans and those interested in the college's rich tradition on the gridiron that has made it "America's Team," to love or hate.
The definitive history of Knute Rockne's impact on college football Review Date: 2007-01-05
While the author does not explicitly connect the sport of the 1920s with the sport of today, the cliche about history repeating itself comes to mind again and again when reading this book. College football in the days of Knute Rockne, similar to college football in the present days of the BCS, was filled with highly-paid coaches threatening to leave their team for more lucrative pastures, questionable recruiting tactics, players who spent more time in pool halls than in the classroom, allegations over weak "cupcake" scheduling, huge payouts by boosters for matchups in Soldier Field or Yankee Stadium and other headlines that still appear in modern sports pages.
Notre Dame fans would enjoy an objective, unique story about the most famous program in collegiate athletics, while sports fans in general should also enjoy this revealing picture of how college football was transformed into the multi million dollar behemoth it is today.
Shake Down the ThunderReview Date: 2003-04-26
The most comprehensive history of the early days of ND football.
Family historyReview Date: 2003-05-15
This book relies upon primary documents to breathe life into old attendance figures, names enshrined in Monogram Hall, and won-loss records. Newspaper accounts of the time and Rockne's correspondence reveal the corruption of the officiating, eligibility rules, and recruiting of his contemporaries but does not absolve him from his role. Preview: "Pop Warner football" should bear a different name.
Shortcomings include the meandering accounts of coaches, trends, and University presidents that can quickly become confusing. I strongly recommend "The Notre Dame Football Encyclopedia" (Marder, Spellen and Donovan, Citadel Press, 2001) as a companion to put the results of critical wins, losses, and seasons into perspective. The author's treatment of individual topics (the Rockne biopick, Geoge Gipp, etc.) separately tends to make the context of the seasons and their results hard to follow.
Dr. Sperber also shows his opions about big-time college athletics too boldly. He describes the "reform" movement of Rockne's era deftly but cannot help editorializing from his own campaigns at Indiana University, going so far as to name Coach Bob Knight in a footnote as an example of sport gone awry. Although his distinguished American Studies background serves him and the reader very well, his views come through clearly.
This book is excellent and provides wonderful insight into how Notre Dame football came to life.
Lee Marvin Playing The Role Of George GippReview Date: 2002-08-24
The author makes much use of the private correspondence of Knute Rockne and paints a very unromantic picture of the great coach and some of his star players. Based on this book Lee Marvin or Robert Mitchum instead of Ronald Reagan are the best choices to play the part of George Gipp in a movie.
SHAKE DOWN THE THUNDER is more of a cultural history than a football story. It contains very little football action. The book is well-researched and shows how both the urge to overemphasize college football and the resulting forces trying to contain it have been in existence for a long time.

Used price: $9.43

Excellent textReview Date: 2008-06-13
Great bookReview Date: 2008-04-25
USA Track & Field Coaching ManualReview Date: 2007-01-10
USA Track & Field Coaching ManualReview Date: 2006-02-04
A Great Coaching ResourceReview Date: 2005-08-09

Used price: $60.47

The Unusual Guru of Distance Running and Excellent Distance Running HistoryReview Date: 2007-02-20
Ok, but pretty generousReview Date: 2005-07-07
A Passion for Life as a Stotan - Percy Cerutty of PortseaReview Date: 2003-09-27
Graem Sims has researched Percy Cerutty's life very thoroughly and written a long overdue book; a task I had once contemplated myself. In keeping with current storytelling fashions, he starts at the end (of Percy's life), but then traces his entire history. Cerutty really lived two lives; one up to the age of 44 when his health had been devastated by smoking, physical inactivity and early pneumonia and poor diet, and he was given less than two years to live, and the second beginning with his recognition of his need to survive, and embracement of new rules for living, eating and working. To this he added his prolific background of reading in all subjects from theology to science, and his extra-ordinary capacity to experiment and research movement and fitness from first principles. Graem's book provided fascinating insights into aspects of Percy's life that I had not known. While he includes numerous stories of Cerutty's famed biting comments and cantankerous nature, he does not dwell on them in a sensationalist way; rather he explores the whole rich canvas of Cerutty's life and its directions. Many of Cerutty's antics, for example, were deliberate attempts at publicity to attract people and an income to his athletics centre; the sheer diversity of his ambitions and his complex character however often become self-destructive. There are character and biographical sketches of many people who were connected or disconnected with Cerutty, at a time when Australian middle distance runners held world stage, and reproductions of numerous photos including the earliest shacks at Portsea, many from a cache of suitcases unopened for a quarter-century. Cerutty was a model of independent and unbiased research - Graem's biography includes the development of Cerutty's ideas on movement from studying the motion of horses for hours; methodologies which had more in common with the great scientists of the renaissance than the deductive processes in modern laboratories.
This book is not just for Cerutty aficionados and athletes; as a personality, philosopher and scientist, he makes a fascinating subject for anyone interested in the subject of what makes us tick, physically, mentally and emotionally. Much of what he said and did half a century ago is highly relevant to the current era of cloning, bio-ethics and the passion for computerised simulations which take the place of real life. Graem has provided a well-balanced biography of a man who had us eating raw foods and oatmeal decades before the term muesli was heard in Australia, moving heavy weights twenty years before gyms and fitness regimes were embraced by more than dedicated athletes, and a holistic approach to life and ethics that preceded the rise of eastern philosophies into western thinking. A book that I couldn't put down, and highly recommended
InspiringReview Date: 2004-12-18
While Cerutty's coaching relationships with milers John Landy and Herb Elliot have been examined in a number of other works, this book sheds new light on the turbulent childhood, adolescent and early adult years that forged his volatile temperament and laid the groundwork for his theories. What emerges is a picture of complex man with an unquenchable thirst for knowledge and curiosity for his environment, which led to a number of groundbreaking theories that won admiration from many. To its credit, the book's even-handed dissection of Cerutty's character gives equal shrift to his manic-depressive tendencies, self-destructive behavior, and the inflammatory outbursts that soured many friendships and spawned a large contingent of detractors. Graem Sims also captures the tension between Cerutty's strong drive to profit from his theories and his refusal to affiliate himself with individuals or projects that offended his Stotan principles.
The book probably won't silence those who view Cerutty as a charlatan who just happened to become associated with talented young men bound for athletic glory with or without his assistance. But it reinforces my conviction that this enigmatic fellow, who ran sand dunes, moved heavy weights and ran six-minute miles well into his sixties, was one of the most important thinkers in the history of athletics. His emphasis on doing things the natural way and disdain for modern trappings and conveniences are particularly meaningful in light of the doping scandals currently rocking the sports world.
-Kevin Joseph, author of "The Champion Maker"
The man who sets the soul on fireReview Date: 2004-06-13
He would have achieved many successes if only he had played things better. But in the face of success, success almost always ran away. He was indeed the doomed type. It could be said it was inevitable. A person should not be controlled by another. Cerutty expressed this ideal both intentionally and unintentionally.
Irrespective of the class or the position of the people he was with, he continued to be himself. He lived his life on his own initiative and responsibility without belonging to any group.
He followed his inner voice right through to the end, no matter what others said. He was just Cerutty to the very end.
Cerutty - a man who pursued the truth, who chose solitude and finely honed his sensibility. He kept on expressing through his body what the joy of living and freedom are. His powerful message still appeals to us even now, 30 years after his death.

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A magnificent bookReview Date: 2006-11-13
This is a must have book for any sportsman(woman)
Good Starting BookReview Date: 2004-02-05
Solid Effort But Nothing NewReview Date: 2001-08-28
Millman's work transforms "training"Review Date: 1999-06-25
A balanced approachReview Date: 2006-09-11
Body Mind Mastery is a great book for athletes and Millmans approach is balanced and invigorating. He challenges the athletes training routines and mindset with a perfect blend of information and practical guidlines.
Many coaches in Iceland have used this book with good outcomes as a result of my recommending it to them.
It has even come in handy for people I know that are not professional athletes. The philosophy expounded on can be used in varied situations in life.


Given their dueReview Date: 2005-01-24
I also love the little trivia just thrown in a line or two in places like the fact Thomas Edison was a huge A's fan!
Connie Mack-Bill Kashatus' TriumphReview Date: 2000-01-20
A good but not great book on the White Elephants.Review Date: 2001-09-16
OUTSTANDINGReview Date: 2000-12-30
Connie Mack-Bill Kashatus' TriumphReview Date: 2000-01-20

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Not what I expectedReview Date: 2007-10-24
OK , But not exactly what I was looking for.Review Date: 2007-08-26
the diabetic athleteReview Date: 2007-06-22
He is doing really well and told me yesterday that having diabetes isn't such a big deal. We are well into the baseball season and looking ahead to hockey. I was very nervous about handling low blood sugars, but he seems to take it all into stride.
I highly recommend this book -- it is easy and interesting to read.
great format and adviceReview Date: 2000-11-16
Very informative, a must have bookReview Date: 2002-12-19

Used price: $2.00

Not what I was looking forReview Date: 2003-07-05
Professional endorsementReview Date: 2005-08-02
What a fantastic book!Review Date: 2004-07-07
This book is responsible for getting me very interested in the art of Pilates.
Completely objective opinionReview Date: 2004-10-01
I love it, and I'm a heavy middle-aged man.
It's true that this book concentrates on the philosophy of Pilates more than home practice, but then Pilates, good Pilates, is much more a thing of the mind than simply physical exercise. It's very nearly impossible to really learn to focus on, say, the illiopsoas muscles from a book.
This book, combined with a good instructor, is the best.
The BEST Pilates Book Out There!Review Date: 2002-08-02
If you have been hearing about the benefits of Pilates and wondering if this exercise program is for you, this book will convince you that YOU can do it! Thanks to Amy and Rachel for taking their time to document their approach to a lifetime of fitness.

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Required ReadingReview Date: 2006-10-03
Nice To See a Canadian PerspectiveReview Date: 2003-04-13
Fundamentals of Track and FieldReview Date: 2000-04-07
A great book for beginnersReview Date: 1999-02-21
Fundamentals of Track and Field by Gerry CarrReview Date: 2001-06-11
Melvin Baker International Track&Field Coach

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Good Job!Review Date: 2001-09-26
A High School Coach's ReviewReview Date: 2000-07-07
The other books I've used for recruiting information are mostly designed for Blue Chip athletes. They don't need much help in getting athletic scholarships. This book is written to help the athletes who aren't necessarily Division I prospects. The different ways it helps from Profile creation to the visit, to important questions, to negotiation strategies and scripts to understanding how unfair the recruiting process actually is and how to use that unfairness as a counterforce t level the playing field for parents and athletes is amazing.
The Chapter revealing the real story about Division III recruiting and financial aid for athletic ability is incredibly insightful and powerful.
Where's the Beef?Review Date: 2004-01-17
Athletic ScholarshipsReview Date: 2000-07-14
The book opens so many doors with information about financial help to both collages and universities that the average person is not aware of. It offers places to seek financial help and rewards for the great amount of time and efforts these athletes put into their accomplishments.
This book which has, listed by states, the names of collages and universities where schoarships are offered, along with the guidelines on how to seek financial help which is so very much needed these days. I only wish a book like this had been available when my children were entering that stage of their lives.
I highly recommend this to anyone who has children or knows of anyone who are athletes and are looking to continue their education.
A Parent's and Student-Athlete's Guide to Athletic ScholarshReview Date: 2000-05-15
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It doesn't have set dates, so you can start using it in the middle of the year. Lots of great charts in the back. The log entries let you put in quite a lot of info as well as weekly summaries.
Well worth the money and a great motivator as you see your miles accumulate. I'm aiming for my first marathon in Apr 08!
Highly recommended