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Testimonials
Below
are some testimonials from people
in the fitness industry who have been
involved in our
Jennifer
Stone, Head
Athletic Trainer/Manager, Clinical
Programs, U.S. Olympic Committee
Sports Medicine in
Colorado Springs, Colorado for
23
years and 4
Olympic Games.
“In
1986 I began working with Dr.
Scherger to implement spinal fitness
training and treatment procedures
with Olympic athletes. For
the next 16 years, I was personally
part of a collaborative effort
that resulted in this material
finally being made available to
the public. Now you
can find these techniques in these
courses.
I
could tell you that the simple
training and treatment procedures
work, but I will save that for
the next fitness fad salesman.
What I will say is, in
my professional opinion,
if
you are sincerely interested
in performance
enhancement, injury prevention,
rehabilitation and/or the science
of human movement, you
should take these courses.
The
theoretical and practical
information you
gain from these courses is an
absolute must to
help your athletes stay healthy
and perform better.”
Jennifer
Stone, MS, ATC, CSCS
Bob
Beeten, 23 years as the Director
of the U.S. Olympic Sports Medicine
and Research Center in Colorado
Springs Colorado.
“I
have always been interested in
the science of human athletic
training. I started first
as a college track coach and then
moved on to work in Olympic medicine
and research. Now that I am retired
and back to coaching track and
field at the high school level,
I am still interested.
I
watched this material develop
just as I watched the development
of many other training and treatment
courses and procedures here in
the US and around the world.
I watched the constant and steady
research and development quietly
go on for 17 years. As I
watched, I saw this material begin
to separate itself from all the
others. I saw, as
you will see, that in the claims
that are made, mathematical proofs
are developed to prove the claims
validity. I have personally,
in all the research I have witnessed,
never seen this done before.
There
is no other sports training or
treatment program in the world
that I am aware of that has ever
subjected itself to this much
development, this much validation,
and then finally after 16 years
when ready to present itself to
the public, first subject its
findings to a professional peer
review. I watched as peer
review professionals worked for
over 1 year to find fault with
the material until finally, when
no fault could be found, it was
released to the public.
I
first authorized use of the robotic
exercise equipment at the 1986.
I am currently implementing the
simple training procedures you
find in these courses to improve
my athletes’ ability and
to prevent injuries.
If
someone asked me, in my 23 years
of observing all the athletic
training and treatment world had
to offer, if there was one course
or training procedure I felt everyone
should learn about, it would definitely
be this material.
On
what this material has gone through
to develop its worth, to prove
its worth and, last and most important,
the profound significance of its
worth, I have to recommend it.”
Bob
Beeten MS, ATC
US
Olympic Training Center Sports
Medicine Director 23 years retired
Track Coach
Doug
Wilson D.C., Vancouver Washington
“I
have taken these courses and found
them an easy and informative way
to learn material that I could
not get from going to a typical
class. I work with athletes
and was especially interested
in the fitness concepts of the
courses. I am using the
exercises and they work well to
get people out of pain, as well
as improve their strength and
posture. I also gained new
and simple ways to clearly explain
to patients what I am doing and
what is wrong with them.
This is helping to achieve better
patient education, retention and
results.”
Doug
Wilson, D.C.
Vancouver
Washington
Richard
Smith, York Barbell
“I
first heard Dr. Scherger speaking
about Spinal Fitness at the National
Strength and Conditioning Convention
in New Orleans in 1986.
What he was saying made sense
so I tried his simple training
procedures for the spine and they
felt like they made sense.
I have continued to use them in
my personal training and at the
fitness center for United Defense
where I currently assist as a
fitness coach. I invited
Dr. Scherger to speak to weightlifting
coaches in Colorado Springs at
the Olympic Training Center and
at the 2000 Olympic Weightlifting
Open in Seattle Washington
because I feel he has vital information
of a solid scientific nature that
strength and conditioning professional
should be aware of.
Here’s
a little bit of the perspective
on my history and why I would
recommend these courses. I
bought my first weight set from
York Barbell in 1938. In
the 1950's I became part of the
York Barbell team when we were
know as "Muscle Town U.S.A."
and got to work with the greats
like John Grimek, Tommy Kono and
the Father of Modern Weightlifting,
Bob Hoffman. In fact, I
accompanied Mr. Hoffman to the
Senate hearing in 1962 when they
were trying to prosecute him for
putting the word “Health”
on his protein powders.
In 1982 it was my swing vote on
the Board of Directors for the
U.S. Weightlifting Federation
that allowed women into the sport
of Olympic lifting.
I have been a coach for 5 Olympics,
20 world championship teams and
countless other international
competitions in 39 different countries.
I could not begin to tell
you the countless times that I
have sat down with international
coaches and strength and conditioning
experts and discussed physical
training.
My
point is, those of us who were
there in the early days were like
missionaries spreading the word
on the benefits of physical training
and weight lifting. We were
eager to find scientific evidence
that would reveal the under the
skin the interaction of the neuromuscular
skeletal parts that resulted in
the superior Olympic weightlifter,
or, in better fitness and health
for all. Beginning in the
early 1930’s and for years,
York Barbell’s publication,
Strength and Conditioning
was the only the only forum for
the dissemination of scientific
thought on training for health
and fitness.
Today
words like biomechanics and the
multitude of papers on biomechanics
of muscle training are common.
In the old days words like biomechanics
were unheard of and papers on
scientific training rare.
But nothing I have ever seen is
as rare or uncommon as these courses
on biomechanics. The
theories for training not only
include hypertrophy or use of
muscle, they are also designed
for training the spinal skeletal
system that the muscles attach
to for improved performance and
health. This type of training,
in all of my 64 years in the industry,
has been unheard of. To
top it off, these courses back
up their concepts with physical
or mathematical demonstration.
In
the early days we knew the value
of a strong healthy spine.
The closest we came to identifying
it was to say the guy with the
good spine has a “high chest”.
We then looked for the guy with
the “high chest” because
we knew that meant he would probably
have a big curve in his lower
back. The guy with the high
chest and the big curve in his
lower back was the guy you could
teach Olympic weight lifting techniques
to and expect him to excel.
The guy with the dropping chest
and flat back was never going
to be strong or have the explosive
power and agility necessary to
be good.
I
just wish we would have had these
courses back in the early days
of weight lifting so Hoffman and
all of us at York Barbell could
have used them to train for the
big curve in the lower back and
the natural “high chest”."
Yours
truly,
Richard
Smith
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