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Every athlete who spends time in the weight room eventually deals with pain/injury that leaves them frustrated and unable to reach their highest potential. Every athlete ought to have the ability to take the first steps at addressing these minor injuries. They shouldn’t have to wait weeks for a doctor’s appointment, only to be prescribed pain medications and told to “take two weeks off lifting” or, even worse, to “stop lifting so heavy.” Dr. Aaron Horschig knows your pain and frustration. He’s been there. For over a decade, Dr. Horschig has been a competitive weightlifter, and he understands how discouraging it is to tweak your back three weeks out from a huge weightlifting com...
**BLACK & WHITE VERSION**...As a physical therapist, coach, and certified strength and conditioning specialist, Dr. Aaron Horschig began to notice the same patterns in athletes over and over. Many of them seemed to pushed themselves as athletes in the same ways they push themselves out in the real world.Living in a performance-based society, Dr. Horschig saw many athletes who seemed to not only want to be bigger and stronger but to get there faster. This mentality ultimately led to injuries and setbacks, preventing athletes from reaching their full potential.Now, after developing unique and easy-to-use techniques on how to train and move well, Dr. Horschig shares his invaluable insights with...
Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book. Sample Book Insights: #1 It is important to understand that an injury to the spine is different from an injury to the knee or hip. A spine injury sets off a cascade of events, and the disc bulge is just one of them. #2 It is important to remember that an MRI scan is a picture of your anatomy in only one particular position. It would be naive to believe that a mechanic could look at a picture of a race car and know exactly why it's making a weird noise when shifting from third to fourth gear above 60 mph. #3 The spine is not just a stack of bones, but a slightly curved tower of small bones called vertebrae, separated by discs. Each vertebra is connected to the others through small joints in the back called facets, which give the spine tremendous movement options. #4 The spine is a complex structure, and injuries can occur for many different reasons. Understanding how they occur is important to prevent them in the future.
Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book. Sample Book Insights: #1 The current American winatallcost culture has penetrated every aspect of our lives, including sports. The mantra Bigger, Faster, Stronger has been echoed in every aspect of sport performance for decades. However, this has not been effective because the athletes have become so in a way that is not supported by their fundamental movement foundation. #2 A torn ACL can be extremely debilitating for a young athlete, both physically and mentally. The NFL is full of the nation’s best athletes, but only a select few are lucky and talented enough to don an NFL jersey and stand on the sidelines on Sunday afternoon. #3 The Grind, which is the act of training hard, is important. But we must remember that we are training to maintain our movement competency, not to increase it. If we are unable to move efficiently with good technique in the squat, we essentially set ourselves up for failure.
Every athlete who spends time in the weight room eventually deals with pain/injury that leaves them frustrated and unable to reach their highest potential. Every athlete ought to have the ability to take the first steps at addressing these minor injuries. They shouldn’t have to wait weeks for a doctor’s appointment, only to be prescribed pain medications and told to “take two weeks off lifting” or, even worse, to “stop lifting so heavy.” Dr. Aaron Horschig knows your pain and frustration. He’s been there. For over a decade, Dr. Horschig has been a competitive weightlifter, and he understands how discouraging it is to tweak your back three weeks out from a huge weightlifting com...
WALL STREET JOURNAL BESTSELLER IMPROVE YOUR PHYSIQUE, BUILD LEAN MUSCLE, AND INCREASE STRENGTH For more than twenty years, Bret “the Glute Guy” Contreras has been on a quest to improve human performance, focusing his research on the gluteus maximus, the largest muscle in the human body. What started as an effort to improve his own weak, flat backside quickly evolved when he discovered the wide range of functional movements to which the glutes contribute. Properly trained glutes not only help you lift heavier, jump higher, sprint faster, and swing harder but also help prevent knee, hip, and lower back pain and injuries. Bret went on to earn a doctorate in sports science and is now known a...
Built from Broken is a complete, research-backed corrective exercise guide to healing painful joints and building a resilient body. Most middle-aged fitness enthusiasts and athletes have been dragged down by joint pain, injuries, and all the other ailments that are commonly accepted as "part of getting older." This book systematically dissects the common causes of joint pain, explaining the latest science of tendinopathy and pain management, and provides a complete road map for conquering joint pain, improving movement and posture, and building a strong, functional body that stands the test of time.
This book is for anyone serious about learning or coaching the basic lifts.
From the author of what has been called the best book on Olympic weightlifting, Olympic Weightlifting: A Complete Guide for Athletes & Coaches, comes Olympic Weightlifting for Sports. This book focuses on athletes and coaches outside of the competitive weightlifting world to present a method of teaching the Olympic lifts and their variants simply, safely and effectively to all types of athletes. Also includes information on program design and flexibility training to prepare athletes to perform the lifts. "Coach Everett's Olympic Weightlifting for Sports is a extraordinary product for any sport coach s library. As a proponent of the power clean and its variations for performance training, I f...