Athletics Books
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The perfect blend of business, basketball, and character for all agesReview Date: 2008-06-03
Leading with the HeartReview Date: 2008-01-21
A must for coaches at all levelsReview Date: 2008-01-14
THE BIBLE OF MOTIVATIONAL BOOKS & INTEGRITY: COACH "K" PROVES IT BY LIVING IT. SUPERBLY INSPIRING!Review Date: 2007-10-03
Phenomenal leadership bookReview Date: 2007-09-24

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The Wharton's Stretch BookReview Date: 2007-11-25
a must have for any level of fitnessReview Date: 2007-10-15
Sound theory, dismal bookReview Date: 2008-01-08
That's nothing compared to the book's real problem: the illustrations. They are atrocious. I can only assume that one just said to the other, "hey, can you draw people?" The truthful answer would have been "no." Not only do the little caricatures stare into your soul, but it's difficult to tell what on earth is supposed to be going on. Please, for your own sake, do a "search inside this book" and hit "surprise me!" until you see some examples of what I'm talking about. The illustrations nearly render this book useless.
What's good about this book: these two clearly have experience with relieving pain. Their stretching model, nearly identical (and credited to) Mattes, gets good results. It feels better than traditional stretching methods, and it is reasonably well-explained. Some of their specific stretches are a bit worrisome (there are far better psoas and external hip rotator stretches), but overall they're pretty good.
This book is a lifesaverReview Date: 2007-07-29
Older folks need to stretch - Wharton shows us how.Review Date: 2007-07-16
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Wonderful and bittersweet bookReview Date: 2008-02-13
More than a basketball bookReview Date: 2007-01-02
Probably Doomed to not meet my expectationsReview Date: 2005-03-31
From a book standpoint, it was an enjoyable read, with a good amount of real life ups and downs mixed into it. I hate reading fairy tale non-fiction books, and fortunately this doesn't turn into one. Having read this over a decade after its first printing, I wish there was a new version with author commentary as there was with FNL. My interest in the players, especially Chris Herren, took me to the internet where I found quite a large amount of depressing post Fall River information. In some ways, it made the book more vivid. Reynolds might do well by refocusing on a few players with a re-release.
Overall a 3/5, mainly the 3 coming from a lot of repetitive commentary throughout. This book could have used a better editor.
fall river dreamsReview Date: 2004-07-27
Great characters, great bookReview Date: 2004-07-12
Another great character that seems to almost get lost in the mix is Jeff Caron. Jeff is the second best player on the team, but would be a stand out at any other high school in the area. He seems a little jealous at times, but always remains a team player. He is a sort of an outsider among his teammates and the book does a fine job of telling his story.

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excellentReview Date: 2007-11-12
ProBodX deliversReview Date: 2007-10-27
Best Program for Total Body Fitness !Review Date: 2006-11-25
At first I was flopping all over and a bit nauseous when doing the "on your back" routines. I also was doubtful that I, at age 46, would ever be able to do the more advanced moves.
After doing the program twice to three times a week for the past month I am now free of chronic neck pain which has bothered me since I broke my collarbone at age 22. I can do the "on your back" exercises with no problems - it seems to be a neurological thing.
Best of all, I can balance on the disks and do all of the basic + routine, including the inverted V (bottoms up) with my toes on the top of the ball!
My coordination is better, I can feel my back muscles - those along the spine - at work, and I've gone from a 24% body fat to a 22% body fat.
The program DOES take work, and it takes a long time in the beginning while you are learning the workout, but it's well worth the effort.
It would be great if the authors would do a DVD, but in the meantime the book explains the exercises as thoroughly as possible. You don't feel the same "burn" as you do with weight training or aerobics, but you feel it the next day !
The equipment consists of a Swiss Ball, two balance disks (which we made for $10 a set), and a set of hand weights with handles. Not expensive or hard to come by at all, even here in the middle of the South Pacific.
Experience ProBodX, Then DecideReview Date: 2005-02-20
About those "one star" reviews. Normally I would let it slide but these two are so full of it I need to respond.
"Never read the book. Never did the exercises? Easy?" Need I say more. No, but I will. First, the authors have numerous examples of professional athletes who use ProBodX exclusively and get great, tangle results (without lifting more that 35 lbs.!) The authors beef with traditional weight training is simple: why only exercise 10-20 major muscles (out of 640 skeletal muscles) when we need all of them to operate optimally. And the reviewer claims that ProBodX is another "easy" program?! This is by far the most challenging program I've ever done or seen. You do all of the exercise on a unstable or uneven surface; you use your muscles on multiple planes (not just up and down or side to side); you reverse the exercise; and you use muscles that you didn't even know you had! Easy? Not unless you're just perusing.
1) Yes, the Forward is by Barry Sears, who uses the "Z" word four times - not 75% of the time. He mentions his "Z" diet because it`s part of the ProBodX program - taking up over 80 pages in the book!
2) "The bashing? The attacking?" The authors compare over 30 types of exercises/sports to ProBodX, including a very extensive comparative chart, like the ones used in Consumer Reports. The authors remind readers to continue their own exercise program if they want to - just understand that there may be some limitations not previously known.
3) "Merchandising?" There is ONE reference to purchasing ProBodX equipment in the book. Let's see, they've designed a new exercise program that requires an unusual set of equipment. How dare they tell us where we can buy it! I went online and found only one other company that sells all of the equipment needed to do ProBodX (Sissel-online.com). Personally, I shopped at both.
4) "The writing style? The attitude?" Just about everything they claim is backed by examples from real life professional and college athletes. Performance improves across the board. That's attitude?
Suggestion to reviewers like these two - please spare the rest of us your distorted opinions and half-truths - save that for talk radio.
A Functional Way to Fitness, Athleticsim & HealthReview Date: 2004-08-04

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Advanced Training Routines Review Date: 2007-12-02
This book is focused on bodybuilding and powerlifting.
The author has different books about periodization for many other sports. He is one of the leading authors in the field of periodization. Check him out. Great info for athletes, coaches, trainer, teachers, etc. !!!
Excellent resourceReview Date: 2006-11-03
A book you actually have to READReview Date: 2006-06-15
This book is lousy if you expect to be spoon fed an exercise routine, diet and supplement regime similar to many other books. But the book *isn't* lousy. It is an excellent resource to draw upon when creating an exercise program to utilize periodization and the sorts of diets you need to follow depending upon your goals.
This book is information packed, as well as having a typical large section on exercises and how to do them.
If you are going to reap the benefits of this book, you *will* have to read it, possibly several times, before trying to employ their methods. In that it is probably one of the more substantial books out there and useful if you think that understanding the theory behind your routine is important in your trianing regime.
Also the author mentions what he calls "recreational bodybuilders" which is 90% of those that train in the book - not in detail, but it has a mention and a few suggestions.
Not to broad of information.Review Date: 2006-02-06
a scientific version of Flex magazineReview Date: 2006-04-21

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NOT A LOT TO IT REALLYReview Date: 2007-12-29
A book any beginner boxer can get excited aboutReview Date: 2004-12-11
Better than I expectedReview Date: 2005-12-31
Ross Enamait's Books are far betterReview Date: 2004-06-07
Todd Reinhard
ISSA--CFT
Put down the book and pick up the glovesReview Date: 2005-04-02
This book seemed superficial and had that cash-in-rush-it-on-the-market feel. Not only that, but you can find ALL of the information contained in this book, on the net. Put down the book and pick up the gloves folks and step into a gym, it's the only way to learn.
No one should write more than 50 pages about boxing technique unless they've boxed more than 50 rounds. Case closed.

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Great Book for Beginers and Avid RunnersReview Date: 2008-05-19
Good info for beginners, but design a bit whimsical & content could use improvementReview Date: 2008-04-17
Also included are the obligatory diet recommendations, including a curious plug for vegetarianism. This is where I think the book starts to lose its focus. I realize that many people reading about running are likely looking to lose weight and incorporate vigorous exercise into a healthier lifestyle, but how many times--and in how many publications--must we read about carbs and fats? We get a brief intro to healthy eating, and then the book jumps into diet choices of runners. The organization of the book suggests that you'll go from novice runner to carbo-loading marathoner in a matter of pages.
I think that the injury section, perhaps incorporated into a larger chapter about running and its effects on various body systems and health generally, could be expanded. How to best deal with shin splints, which affect nearly all beginning runners at some point and to some degree, is barely touched on. Compartment syndrome (which is uncommon, grated) isn't mentioned at all. I think that more could be said about strength training as a complement to running, as well as detailed information about effective stretching and cool-down techniques.
Major content gripe: An entire section in the Women's Running chapter (which constitutes about a quarter of the book, so male readers may want to keep this in mind!) is devoted to avoiding the various ways that you can become a crime victim if you're not careful. It's a tired rehashing of all the "safety and security" stuff that women are exposed to on a regular basis, usually in women's magazines or on freak-out local news reports. A cop's contribution to this section details how to avoid getting pulled into a car and ultimately murdered (his solution: don't get near the car). I'm not advocating a head-in-the-sand approach; any solo runner should be alert, particularly when running in an isolated area. But jeez, do we really need a whole section to remind us to run in well-lit, populated areas? The number of pages given to this subject suggests that you're more likely than not to be the victim of a bad-intentioned male at some point during your runs.
My main problem with the book is its format. It is heavy (literally), with a glossy format consisting of giant margins, big text, and dozens of pointless photos. I understand that the book is attempting to be true to its roots: it is published by Runner's World, after all, and its page design is similar to a magazine. But it's a book and should look like a book. Even though it's paperback, it's printed on heavy stock paper and isn't the type of book you'd toss into a beach or vacation bag. And the vast majority of pictures are completely unnecessary. Page after page of very fit people in 1990s running garb (it appears that the images weren't updated for the 2004 edition) are meant to be inspiring but get really old after the first chapter: three young chicks running on a track, a fit middle-aged guy energetically moving along in front of a sunset backdrop, a forty-something gal lacing up in a park. Most of us know what fit runners look like. Do we need to see full-color photos of them on every other page? In the nutrition section, literally half a page is taken up with the image of a banana and something that looks like oats. In the footwear section, we see generic pictures of white leather running shoes with the laces undone. Zzzz....
I realize that this review is a big negative, so you may be wondering why I've given the book three stars. There is a lot of good information for people new to running, and indeed fitness and nutrition. But I'm glad that I got this book out of the library--I'd be annoyed if I paid good money for this. The Complete Book of Running for Women by Claire Kowalchik, and the old standy, Jim Fixx's The Complete Book of Running, are better choices in my estimation.
Paperback, Complete book of runningReview Date: 2008-04-12
excellent bookReview Date: 2007-08-15
Very comprehensive and usefulReview Date: 2007-01-05

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Not the best book out there!Review Date: 2007-08-11
Sorry to be negative on this review, but there just wasn't much to the book that you probably weren't already doing if you included body weight exercises into your normal workout regime.
Should have bought a dvdReview Date: 2005-09-19
Very Good BookReview Date: 2004-07-10
The book has the Seal workouts phase 1& 2 and also phase 3 which is very tough. There is also a section about weight training if you want to add that in as well although most of these workouts centre around Pull-ups, push-ups and sit- ups and running. Nutrition is covered ,but not as well as i would like so thats why i give the book only 4 stars..but apart from that i would rate this book highly.
No nonsenseReview Date: 2005-01-25
The tough get going...Review Date: 2004-07-13
This book is not an official workout programme or an official Navy SEAL document. However the man who put it together, Commander Master Chief Dennis C. Chalker, is a SEAL. Now retired, he reminds people that one don't stop being a Seal -- one is a member of the Team until he dies. One of the things that makes BUD/S training so hard is that in addition to being tough every minute he can quit simply by ringing the bell and saying 'I QUIT!' A lot like fitness in real life - you can quit, or you can succeed; it is up to you.
In this book there is a little bit here and there about the history of the Navy SEALs. Lots of their training is secret, and much of their routine is kept from public eyes because of the nature of their missions. BUD/S training is heavy on running and heavy on swimming. Most of the book is pretty standard exercise manual content, concentrating on particular exercises that are used in training. They have motivational quotes from SEALs throughout the text.
Warm-ups and Cool-downs
Warm-ups and cool-downs concentrate on big movements that involve large muscle groups, just to get the body tuned up and blood and oxygen flowing through the muscles. It also gets the heart pumping more to be ready for the coming exercise. These exercises also include stretches that limber up the muscles.
Stretches are often the most overlooked part of an exercise routine, but just from simply counting the pages in this book you can see the importance it should have. There are 40 pages of stretching exercises, and 60 pages of basic calisthenics, which is what people think of when they think of exercise.
One good thing about the descriptions of the stretches and exercises in this book is that they list advantages and disadvantages of the exercise, and warnings. What will this exercise help you do? What are the problems in doing it? What should you be warned about? For example, with the Achilles stretch, the warning is to not overdo it by overstretch, because that is easy to do.
Calisthenics
Calisthenics are the core of fitness programmes for most of the military, and that includes BUD/S. One thing that is needed is a place to do pull-ups.
Free Weight Training
This book shows very basic weight training exercises. This is not a body-builder book that will concentrate on each individual muscle to maximize each one, but it does concentrate on overall strength building. SEALs need to be strong, not necessarily good looking.
Running and Swimming
This book does not give much detail about these. There are just three pages on running and five pages on swimming. Swimming in BUD/S usually involves equipment and scuba kinds of events so it is difficult for the person at home to do these. For swimming, BUD/S training prefers the basic side-stroke. For running, it gives some distances and advice, but that's about it for running. One thing that anyone who really wants a taste of BUD/S training is to do sand running in boots. Don't try this without being in good shape.
Workout Schedules
This small section shows just how tough the training is. It starts out easy enough - low reps and low number of sets for basic exercises like push-ups, sit-ups and pull-ups, not too much running or swimming, but within a matter of weeks the dedicated are pulling 20 sets of 25 sit-ups (and yes, the math makes that 500 sit-ups) and running 13 miles a week at a fast pace and more pull-ups than anyone would ever think possible!
Airborne, Nutrition, Team, Motivation
These small pieces at the end talk about the addition stuff that SEALs do. One advantage of working out so hard is that one can eat almost anything and still lose weight! SEALs during some weeks of training are shoveling in up to 6000 calories a day and still dropping weight. So SEAL nutrition isn't really what is called for in civilian life certainly. BUD/S graduates attend Basic Army Airborne School at Ft. Benning Georgia for basic parachuting, and this is talked about.
This is a tough book, and it is demanding. Because of that, it might actually be discouraging to an extent for people who can never reach the level of doing all that SEALs do. But don't let that discourage you - do your best, and this book will help.

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TrainingReview Date: 2008-03-16
Good for beginnersReview Date: 2006-02-08
Too simplistic..Review Date: 2006-05-12
Fabulous book for marathoners!Review Date: 2005-04-07
Platitudinous & InsipidReview Date: 2004-02-08

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Good book if your serious about getting in shapeReview Date: 2003-04-29
The book itself is very motivational and inspirational. Also, the book is filled with quality pictures showing you exactally how to do something. One of the things I noticed most is that Antonio doesn't use free weights alot, but instead prefers machines. What I got most out of Antonio's book is his training methodology and dedication.
No Excuses doesnt show you anything you most likely havne't seen before. However, the motivation factor and his mind-sets alone make it worth it. I would recommend it to anyone serious about training and want to fine tune there physique.
Good, motivating workout bookReview Date: 2001-10-29
Antonio goes into the benefits of supersetting, without resting between sets. This gives a really lean look. If you want to look like those models on Men's Health magazine (definition, symmetry, toned muscle), this workout is for you. It is also very beneficial for people who do not like cardio workouts (I get bored on the treadmill). By supersetting the exercises, you take care of the cardio while building muscle.
I have one suggestion, and I am surprised the book doesn't go into this. When starting the workout, you should focus on just going through the routine of supersets, and not so much intensity. After your body builds up the endurance and gets used to the workout, you can then go for higher intensity on each set. Trying to go through this workout head on will be too exhausting and discourage you from continuing, like it did with me.
A Wonderful WorkoutReview Date: 2002-07-11
the only fitness book needed.Review Date: 2002-01-20
Supersets? No Excuses for not explaining this concept clearly. Review Date: 2006-02-06
I loved the design and the content of the book as well as the philosophy behind the book. The salient points from the book can be summed up as follows:
* Stresses on the benefits of SUPERSETS. This is the cornerstone of the book.
* Working out should be a lifestyle and not just a passing fad. We should workout throughout the year (and our lives) not for vanity's sake (and he's a model cum actor) but for health reasons.
* The workout plan presented is not rigid and can be tailored accordingly.
* He dispels the myth that cardio and weight/strength/resistance training should be performed separately. His suggested workout plan encompasses both aspects in a compact one hour session.
* Stresses that symmetry is important and should not be ignored. Most muscles have an equal and opposite muscle which should be worked too.
* Gives due credit to his trainer.
* Preaches the message of steroid/supplement free lifestyle.
This brings me to the point that super-setting is the cornerstone of this book yet it is not adequately explained.
For example, is Sabato's definition of super-setting:
1) I do lat-pulldown immediately followed by bench press done thrice in a row is 3 supersets?
2) I do lat-pulldown (3 sets) followed immediately by bench press (3 sets) is 3 supersets?
I have a gut feeling that it is option 1 but I am unsure. Even though the book is excellent but there are "No Excuses" for not defining the concept of supersets properly.
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This book is easy to connect with for anyone and everyone. For me in particular, coming from a military background, I found it very interesting to learn about Coach K's time at West Point Academy and the experiences he took from there. Also, as I prepare for my freshman year of college, where I will be playing basketball, Coach K values character traits such as trust, loyalty, honesty, determination, and respect, all of which I will take with me into next year. The real situations that Coach K portrays are an incredible look inside the life of one inspiring and motivational man. The stories about basketball, players, friends, coaches, West Point, Korea, Chicago, Duke, and of course family, are really unforgettable.
I had a great time reading this book because you have the opportunity to see what really goes on at Duke University and their highly acclaimed basketball program. Coach K discusses game day routines, pre-game speeches, coaching drills, player development, film work, and coaching, all with open arms. He doesn't feel the need to hide any of his business and welcomes basketball fans around the world to be a part of his story. Through the uses of metaphor and flashbacks Coach K is able to show the importance of character and trust, and not allowing his program to turn into a business like many others. He and his teams have fought through adversity, and despite much criticism, Coach K is definitely one of the best coaches ever. I recommend this book 100% to any businessman, basketball fan, military person, or anyone simply looking to better understand the important things in life, and what should really matter, like friends, family, and religion.