June 19, 2013

Born star athletes philosophies for athletic training

clip_image001 atheletic trainers and sports stretching exercises Born to be a star with athletic training since a young age this athlete became a star football player in professional sports. His father taught him sports training for diets and exercises to naturally obtain athletic skills.  Similar to yoga philosophies for stretching exercises and diet routines the skills taught to him were very obscure according to most athletic trainers. However, even though his father helped gain a professional athletic career many social problems arose.  Many of the professional athletes thought he was weird because he never ate burgers and practiced a different pregame workout than was being taught by other athletic trainers.  After entering the professional sports league we went onto play in Canadian as well as playing arena football sports teams. During the 1990’s his athletic trainers gave him the social skills to get an all time record of ten football touchdown passes in one arena league game.  Likewise; with Jacksonville being such a big football state with a national championship for the Jacksonville area football team there is also a lot of commodity with sports fans in Jacksonville. As with so many problems within our society there are also many social complications.  Thinking that yoga or other stretching routines to gain flexibility or speed in sports is actually a joke to most sports athletes or athletic trainers when it comes to the philosophy that is behind this type of thinking.  Today, when someone mentions vegetarian views society laughs with jokes that states what kind of man does not eat meat. When we post articles on yoga the Internet links photos of the Dahlia Lama and community Buddhist monks. And when we mention athletic trainers most coaches disagree by enforcing other sports routines when training for pre games.  The truth is that whatever makes someone more comfortable with sports routine is what makes the person play or perform better.  There are no outside complications that have a negative impact on the game.  How many times has someone tried to distract the concentration when someone is born to be a star?


references: bleacher report, la times, and other arena league football archives