Athletics Books
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A great read just in time for summerReview Date: 2007-06-07
Funny AND SmartReview Date: 2007-06-30
Funny, Interesting, Great Story-TellerReview Date: 2007-06-08
-"Ian"

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Great GiftReview Date: 2001-03-10
It is unique and offers the reader a variety of sports and athletes to marvel at while he/she flips through the pages.
Be forewarned--the picture on the cover is by far the best in the book. That is the only reason that I was slightly disappointed when I received the box containing my purchase. I was very much in awe of the picture of Ali, and I was looking forward to a book full of images that were also interesting, full of emotion and reflective of the athlete. The pictures inside are fantastic, just not as moving as that on the cover.
It Gets BetterReview Date: 2000-08-10
magnificentReview Date: 2000-02-06

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A Memoir of Purple Power (Before Power Corrupted)Review Date: 2008-01-03
Northwestern featured a team composed of genuine student athletes in an environment where academics were stressed on an equal basis with athletics. The 1995 and 1996 teams featured some great individual players who possessed enough character and strength to overcome their athletic deficiencies against more highly rated opponents. One of these players, Pat Fitzgerald is the current head coach of Northwestern.
As a darling of the media, Barnett was constantly offered employment by other football programs at other universities. This seriously hurt recruiting at Northwestern as rival school recruiters suggested to high school seniors that it was foolish to commit to the Wildcats when it seemed likely that Coach Barnett was about to make a hasty exit.
Regrettably, Barnett succumbed to the siren's call and opted out of his contract (taking several top recruits with him) and he accepted a lucrative position at the University of Colorado in 1999. While he came within a game of capturing the National Championship, Barnett's reputation suffered when his athletic program was mired in constant scandals and controversies. Barnett seemed to be thoroughly discredited by the time of his dismissal from Colorado.
Northwestern was fortunate to hire the late Randy Walker to succeed Barnett. Before his death, Walker managed to keep the football team competitive and he won one additional conference title.
This is a memoir of the happier times before success spoiled Barnett. There is a residual bitterness on the part of some Northwestern fans towards Barnett. I can understand that. I can also appreciate Barnett's desire to achieve financial success for his family and to return to Colorado where they had lived for many years and where he formerly worked as an assistant coach under Bill McCartney (when the Buffaloes won the National Championship). For myself, I appreciate what Barnett achieved in Evanston and I am thankful for his efforts that resulted in the renovation of Dyche Stadium (now called Ryan Field) and improved training facilities. There are still some valuable life lessons to be learned from what occurred on Central Street more than a dozen years ago.
Someday, I hope Barnett has an opportunity to redeem himself by accepting another coaching position. It would be wonderful and reaffirming if Barnett could succeed with a new team and prove that the principles that he formerly espoused were not empty platitudes.
Wonderful BookReview Date: 2001-08-22
Barnett writes about success not only in football but in life. I was so touched by this book that I wrote Barnett a letter telling him how good the book was.
You will enjoy!
Finally! College coaching the way it was meant to be!Review Date: 1997-01-14

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Much Needed Book - Right in Time for March Madness!Review Date: 2006-03-09
EnthrallingReview Date: 2006-08-01
Entertaining ReadingReview Date: 2006-03-06
There are many great stories here, and the book is divided up into different stories on the different personalities, so it makes for an accessible read. You can pick up the book, read one article, then put it down. I found the stories by the coaches to be among the most entertaining: Coach K, Roy Williams, Rick Pitino, Dean Smith, Guy Lewis and others all provide insightful stories.
Also, the book puts college basketball in its historical context, with a focus on the first televised basketball game, UCLA vs. Houston, played in the Astrodome. Overall a very informative and entertaining book, I would strongly recommend it to any college basketball fan.

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Solid info.Review Date: 2006-08-14
No-nonsense, old fashion WeightliftingReview Date: 2006-09-01
In total contravention to the inclusive format of Drechsler's Weightlifting Encyclopedia and El-Hewie's Essentials of Weightlifting and Strength Training, Cissik sticks to the hardcore of old fashion Weightlifting. The classical two lifts; Clean and Jerk and Snatch, are described, together with their immediate supporting exercises. The back, front, and overhead squat; deadlift with various handgrips and height of pull; goodmorning in standing, seating, and ground positions; pullover, and stretching is all that trainees need to advance in weightlifting. That is a bold and daring confrontation of appealing consumerism that thrives on promoting expensive machines, fancy exercise accessories, and endless exercises that do little, if any, good to fitness.
The simplicity, clarity, and accuracy of Cissik's Introduction outweighs it poor production quality and attests to the author's courage to stand tall on substance. Although, the book is intended as an introduction, the above mentioned attributes make the book practical and convenient for modern day busy people. In addition, each chapter begins with neat tabulated highlights and basic contents and ends with a list of references. Inside the chapters, the author places the reference citation where needed in every page.
Its drawbacks are:
(1) Complete omission of individualized peripheral training exercises. Modern weightlifters rival bodybuilders; on bulk and definition, and powerlifters; on peak isometric strength. Many young weightlifters could not attain the astronomically high level of modern international records because of lack of muscular bulk. Cissik's old fashion training emphasizes the technique of lifting and periodization for robust, explosive power, yet falls short on massing slow twitching muscle fibers. Those require dedicated bodybuilding training during off season or prior to committing to protracted competitive weightlifting career.
The fear that bodybuilding and powerlifting exercises would do away with the mental skill, specific to the explosive full range of motion and highly coordinated dynamics of weightlifting, is well understood and recognized by experienced lifters and coaches. However, modern lifters have sufficient resources to ease the highly toned and acutely inflamed structures caused by such repetitive and depleting modes of exercising. Yoga, Pilates, Stretch, UV booths, saunas, and massage are few such modern remedies for the side effects of strengthening through controlled motion exercising. That however raises the stakes of heart and cellular reserves. Could the heart tolerate multiple overloads? Could the cellular metabolism adapt its enzymatic machinery to oppositely demanding activities? or, could the trainee have access to adequate health knowledge in dealing with such double sword training modes? Cissik's answer is: simplicity; a wise, safe, and practical choice.
(2) Jumping straight in the air during the pull isn't scientific. Although few great lifters do jump, the laws of mechanics forbid jumping. It wastes energy. Explosive extension isn't synonymous with jumping. Cissik is rightfully insisting on not spreading the feet sideways, yet wrongfully advises jumping. Jumping might be stimulating, yet wasteful.
(3) The deep squat during the amortization phase portrays to some that "deep" is a requirement for lifting. It is better to emphasize that squatting should be as high as it is needed to catch the barbell at its (the barbell) final destination. Unnecessarily deep squat should be reserved for training, stretching, and strengthening.
Mohamed F. El-Hewie
Author of
Essentials of Weightlifting and Strength Training
Excellent Book!Review Date: 1998-10-28


On the noseReview Date: 2004-02-02
sometimes funny, but overall not terribly interestingReview Date: 2005-07-29
Russell Taylor is, apparently a humor writer, and so this book is filled with humorous observations on running, training, races, and why exactly he is doing this. Some of it is actually quite funny and I honestly found myself chuckling out loud a couple of times. Unfortunately, when I wasn't chuckling I was reading and hoping that something interesting would be on the next page. Often enough there wasn't. As a runner I am drawn to books about running and about marathons so I figured this book would be a natural fit, but it was a struggle to get through this one. Taylor includes a section of his training diary and that section was the single least interesting part of the book. It just dragged on and on and on. Sort of like this review.
Then Taylor gets to the races. As a part of his training Taylor ran several races and his racecourse descriptions and his feelings during the race (he made some interesting decisions as to which ones to run) were fascinating and funny. Once again I started enjoying parts of the book. The marathon itself seemed a little skimpy in the description.
I just can't recommend "The Looniness of the Long Distance Runner" to anyone. There are far better books about one man's journey to race (try "To the Edge" by Kirk Johnson for a more interesting book about an ultramarathon), and unfortunately when the humor stops there isn't much here to hold my interest. Pass on this one.
-Joe Sherry
Very British humor but observations apply to US runners tooReview Date: 2004-07-02

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Pindar's Odes: The Mytho-Poetic and Heroic Spirit of Ancient GreeceReview Date: 2008-10-06
Excerpt from (Isthmian, 6.1): "...if any man delights in expense and effort/ And sets in action high gifts shaped by the Gods/ And with destiny/ Plants the glory which he desires/ Already he casts his anchor on the furtest edge of bliss,/ And the Gods honor him."
Ian Myles Slater on Lattimore's PindarReview Date: 2003-09-14
He appeared as all three in the University of Chicago Press "Greek Tragedies," and as translator-poet of the "The Iliad," "The Odyssey", Hesiod (Theogony, Works and Days, and Shield of Heracles), and, in the case at hand, the large-scale lyrics of Pindar (c. 518-438 BC). Originally published by the University of Chicago Press in 1947, and reprinted in paperback in that form, it was reissued in a revised translation in 1976, a few years after C.M. Bowra's British translation had appeared as a Penguin Classic. The Odes are songs for public performance in honor of athletes and other victors (owners of horses and chariot teams) at the major Games of classical Greece in the years around the Persian Wars.
Although Lattimore's Homeric translations are quite well known, and seem to remain continuously in print, his version of Pindar seems to have suffered from the relative obscurity of this magnificent, but difficult, poet, who has almost always found more favor with classical scholars than the public. Given the difficulties in translating his rich, densely allusive, and often terribly obscure poems celebrating long-forgotten athletic contests, this is not surprising.
Lattimore manages to give exceptionally clear translations, without masking the difficulties in following Pindar's lines of thought. His commentary is pretty sparse (as usual), which at least spares most of it from becoming outdated as approaches to Pindar shift. As in most translations (but not Bowra's) the Epinician (Victory) poems are presented in their traditional order, in sets according to the Games (Olympic, Pythian, Nemean, and Isthmian) with which ancient scholars associated them (not always correctly).
Another translation of the Odes, by G.S. Conway, has been reprinted in Everyman Paperback Classics as "The Odes: and Selected Fragments," with an excellent introduction, expanded notes, and translations of additional texts, some fairly substantial, by Richard Stoneman. Stoneman provides a good account of trends in Pindar studies; I have discussed some of the issues he raises in my review of that volume.
A fourth alternative, with a translation facing the Greek texts, is the Loeb Classical Library edition, re-edited in two volumes by William H. Race (1997), which is probably a bit too intimidating for the merely curious reader.
It should be noted that this and several other translations of Pindaros (the full Greek form) have been appearing on the listings as the work of "Peter Pindar". (Or formerly were, when this review was first written, and for quite a while after I reported it to Amazon.) This was a pseudonym for John Wolcot, an eighteenth century physician and author from Cornwall, and seems to have been used by others as well. Its only connection with the Greek poet is the borrowing of his name.
Ian Myles Slater on: Bowra's Pindar, Not Lattimore'sReview Date: 2003-10-08
Pindar was one of the most famous poets of ancient Greece, and besides fragments (which are all that survive of most of his rivals) we have four reasonably intact books out of a much larger collection. As it happens, the four books contain celebrations of victors at major Games (Olympic and three others, Pythian, Isthmian, and Nemean), and are otherwise unlike what moderns think of as typical poetry. They are also densely allusive, and in a Greek which is generally acknowledged to be as difficult to follow as it is beautiful. My own command of Greek is too small to judge, but Bowra is one of several modern translators who have managed to persuade me to read him for pleasure, rather just than for his allusions to myths and heroic legend.
Bowra, who also wrote a major work on Pindar, provides useful annotations to a very attractive translation. He also decided to arrange the poems according to their likely dates, or at least the dates assigned to them by ancient scholars who had list of victors in the various games. There are inherent problems with this, since some of the Odes actually relate to victories in other Games, and some were certainly performed at delayed celebrations. On the whole, however, it does give some sense of Pindar as a developing poet, and of the Victory Ode as a form continuing to grow during his career.
The real drawback is the need to consult a table of references to find any given poem. This can be a real annoyance for a student if Bowra is the only translation you have on hand, and you really want to check a statement supported by a reference to, say, Olympian 3, lines 7 to 10. In most translations, you can just follow the page headings.
Bowra's critical writings on Pindar are now considered obsolete -- at least for the moment His translation remains worth reading, and compares well with Lattimore's, and with Richard Stoneman's recent expanded edition, with excellent critical material, of G.S. Conway's translation of the Odes, which first appeared a few years after Bowra's.
This last was Issued as "Odes: and Selected Fragments," in the Everyman Paperback Classics series, and I have reviewed it, with a more extended discussion of Pindar and related critical disputes. I am glad to have all three; it would be nice if all of them were all in print simultaneously. A fourth alternative, with a translation facing the Greek texts, is the Loeb Classical Library edition, re-edited in two volumes by William H. Race (1997), which is probably a bit too intimidating for the merely curious reader.

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Best conditioning book for the weekend warrior ever writtenReview Date: 1997-04-16
Excellent bookReview Date: 2000-02-07
Good ideas, but oh, the prose...Review Date: 2002-05-09
This is a concept book. Although it contains fairly specific ideas for workouts, the author is clearly trying to get the reader to rethink his/her workout, along with the whole idea of an outdoor recreationist as athlete. The book's main value is not in presenting the reader with a list of individual exercises, but in teaching the reader to apply certain concepts and develop a functional workout whose goal is to improve performance in one or more outdoor sports. In fact, some of the specific suggestions for exercise and nutrition are a bit dated, but that doesn't really detract from the book's value: the concepts still hold true, with specifics informed by more recent information.
The biggest downside to this book -- and it is a big one -- is the quality of the prose. All would-be authors repeat after me: before subverting a form, I will first understand it. Sure, standard expository writing is stodgy at times, but if you're going to chuck things like overall organization, sentence structure, and diction out the window, you damn well ought to replace them with something better. Calling Ilg's prose purple is a profound understatement: his enthusiasm for his subject, combined with a clear lack of experience as a writer, causes him to practically pitch the whole paintpot at each and every page. If that were not enough, the frequent interjection of pithy maxims by really cool people is a major irritation. I like cool quotes, too, but I question whether a book about athletic training is really enhanced by bon mots from sources such as Thoreau, T. S. Eliot, Immanuel Kant, Robert Louis Stevenson, LaRochefoucauld, etc. Quotes about the ecstatic union of mind, body, and nature are much more meaningful when they come from people who actually had such experiences, versus sitting at home and writing about them.
The book's brevity is its saving grace. Ilg's subjects are short enough that even his worst meandering -- and it is bad, very bad -- can't lead you too far astray.
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Athlete, Scholar, Philosopher, LeaderReview Date: 2006-07-13
Joe Paterno puts competition in perspectiveReview Date: 1998-03-24
Paterno: on Sports...and LifeReview Date: 2004-07-26

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Inspiring bookReview Date: 2008-09-16
Inspiring - and honestReview Date: 2007-03-25
I learned a lot about Radcliffe herself in the book, along with a lot of interesting things about running, injuries, dealing with injuries, the triumph of her victories, the agony of her defeats, her drive to always give it her all, and that she is quite funny at times throughout the book.
Also, for those of you that don't know, she is asthmatic and if you know someone that has asthma and struggles with it, get them a copy of this book. It will inspire them.
The Real Experience of RunningReview Date: 2006-06-24
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I am not much of a sports fan, but his writing is very engaging and entertaing in the same way Anthony Bourdaine(Kitchen Confidential) and David Searis(Me Talk Pretty One Day) are. He is also the same type of as humor as they are more akin to Bourdaine than Sedaris. I must admit to laughing out loud through every section of the book.
As for not being a sports fan he does a great job at bring you to the experience with his observatioons and gives the reader enough backgroud to get a good sense of the "experience". He keeps himself relatable to both sports fans and non sports fans alike with a great balance of passion and knowledge.
From his time with the people he meets in Daytona to the craziness of the Superbowl it seems he finds somthing that goes beyond just sports. He manages to find and look for a sort of good quality and in fans that is more human and less alienating than I would expect. He is introspective enough really breath in the experience. It's the perfect summer read and just in time for Fathers Day
(My dad is a sports fan)....I could recomend this to just about anyone!