As I understand it, one of the central premises, if not the central premise, of Jon's philosopy is that that you should train the muscles you use, in the manner you use them. For example, baseball involves a lot of rotational movement, both in swinging a bat and pitching. Therefore you must train rotational movements. Do the exercises listed below do that? No. But there are others, like those detailed in Unbreakable Abs, that do.
I have Jon's Unbreakable Abs book and video. They are well worth the money. (If only I could get my son to use them more.) I also have the new Tom House book, Fastball Fitness. House and his group have also adopted the philosopy that you must train rotational movements. House has his own suggested exercises for developing rotational strength/flexibility. He also includes chapters detailing programs developed by other trainers/therapists/etc. To me, they all appear to be variations on a theme.
I commend both Unbreakable Abs and Fastball Fitness to all of you. My apologies to Jon if I have misstated his philosopy.
quote:
Originally posted by Glove Man:
Why because it's free?
Where not talking weights here (max reps max weight), we're talking core midsection BASIC exercises,
1. crunches...done'em, started when I was in football in 7th grade,
2.bicycle crunches....been there done that since fresh HS
3. Hip curls, them too started in HS
OK, all those who looked at the webpage from SI.... you owe me two installments of $34.95, if you act now we'll knock off one entire payment.