It
is true that most individuals can participate in sports, but not every
individual fully comprehends what is required to optimize their athletic potential. . . . .
This
book is intended for the individual who is seeking to understand and master the
ten athletic principles required to optimize athletic potential.
. . . .
For
most people, swimming is an exhausting task, but for a few it appears almost
effortless.
With
experience, most athletes come to realize that an increase in strength or an
increase in endurance is an effective way to improve performance. This is not,
however, always the case with swimmers. Because a swimmer passes through water
rather than air, a unique set of issues arises requiring the athlete to rethink
and outsmart this different environment.
Only
after learning to slip past water with the body while grabbing water with the
hands will a swimmer know how to use strength to achieve speed and endurance to
cross great distances. . . . . .
A
runner’s form is the result of many complicated interactions and an ability of
your body to make this unique set of motions comfortable for you.
Most
literature on running form describes positions and motions for each limb. Here
we focus on enhancing positive forces, reducing or eliminating negative forces,
and allowing the body to select its own set of familiar motions to manage the
resulting forces. . .
. .
In
tennis, you are responsible for a relatively large area. In fact, this area
extends well beyond the boundary lines. Fortunately, your opponent cannot
randomly return the ball to any point within this area of responsibility with
equal probability of success. Rather, each return is characterized by its own
unique area of high probability, the size and position of which is determined
by many variables.
Court
management skills assist you in achieving position relative to the center of
likely response rather than position based solely on your area of total
responsibility. The player with better court management skills travels a
shorter distance to the ball and has more time to hit it, increasing the
chances of a successful return. . . . .
Cycling
is one of a handful of sports most individuals participate in at some point in
life. Most people learn to ride a bike in childhood, absorbing basic techniques
that survive a lifetime. A few take the sport to a level requiring advanced
techniques. Regardless of your level of participation, you can enhance your
enjoyment of cycling, and reap more benefits from it, by understanding many of
the techniques used by accomplished riders. . . . .
Balance
is unquestionably required if you want to be a successful skier. On any
incline, gravity provides the minimum force required for the ski to slide
across the snow’s surface. Unlike running, skiing does not involved a fixed
point of contact between the body and the ground. The trick, then, is to find
other means for achieving balance while the ski is slipping over the snow.
Understanding how a “feeling” of balance is achieved and how “balanced body
positions” are achieved permits you to take specific steps to actively achieve balance. . . . .
This
(final) chapter presents a method for assessing your performance in accordance
with the unified theory’s underlying principles. It is our hope that you will
use this method to organize and focus your efforts. . . . .