I've heard this man and his book referenced numerous times. What is so valuable about this text and his opinion?
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He speaks a lot of Olympic Lifters (which indicates his limited knowledge of sports in general since he rarely uses other sports as examples in his book)... there he mentions how O lifters will clean and jerk or snatch a weight and then move about laterally, etc., to impose an unstable environment. This helps to train them for such an occurrence in competition. However, he warns not to wear typical running shoes or anything with too much of a heel since they lack ankle stability. This is an example of a contradiction. Huge contradictions in the book, particularly when it comes to SAID... he speaks of being sport specific, then recommends doing something that is not specific to the sport (while trying to emulate joint position and force production that is 'similar' to the sport).
His recommendation for "speed-strength" could be 50-60% of 1RM at one point in the book, but then changes it to 50-70% at another point. He defines his terms (such as speed-strength) in 2-3 different ways throughout the book... no consistency. I don't see how people did not pick this up (including Siff), but I think they merely read, took the general information from it, and did not compare it to itself (or principles of motor learning, etc.).
Duncans Donuts said:In my dealings with the people at http://exercisecertification.com, I have heard nothing but bad things about the book. There is currently a 60 page critical analysis of Siff's work being prepared for the fall release of Synergy 2005...
I will withold judgment until reading the book, but the idea of improving jumping ability with a pogo stick is ludicrous..
