Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group, LLC Blog

A Slow News Day by Seth Godin

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Fri, Apr 22, 2011 @ 07:04 AM

athletic training

 

A slow news day

I think you can learn a lot about an organization (and a person's career) when you watch what they do on a slow news day, a day when there's no crisis, not a lot of incoming tasks, very little drama.

Sure, when we're reacting (or responding) and it's all hands on deck, things seem as if they're really moving.

But what about in the lulls? At the moments when we can initiate, launch new ventures, try new things and expose ourselves to failure? Do we take the opportunity or do we just sit and wait for the next crisis?

If you have ten minutes unscheduled and the phone isn't ringing, what do you do? What do you start?

 

Topics: Basketball Related, basketball performance, basketball conference, basketball training programs, athletic training conference, boston hockey summit, boston hockey conference, Seth Godin

Intensive Learning Track Almost Full!

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Tue, Apr 19, 2011 @ 07:04 AM

Yikes!  Only 3 spots remain for the Intensive Learning Track at this year's BSMPG summer conference, "Standing On the Shoulders Of Giants" featuring Shirley Sahrmann, Clare Frank, and Tom Myers.

Register today before we have to close this opportunity!!  Don't worry, there are plenty more spaces available for the regular tracks including hockey, basketball, and sports medicine...

Are you ready for great education, excellent networking, and a clam-chowder-slurping good time!!??  We are!!!  See you soon! : )

 

basketball resources

 

clare frank

 

Learn from industry leaders in a small group setting!

 

tom myers

Topics: Brian McCormick, basketball conference, athletic training conference, boston hockey summit, Brijesh Patel, Charlie Weingroff, Brendon Ziegler, George Mumford, Shirley Sahrmann, Tom Myers, Jonas Sahratian, movement impairments, Clare Frank

Good Luck Runners!

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Mon, Apr 18, 2011 @ 07:04 AM

athletic training

 

The BSMPG family would like to with the over 20,000 runners in this year's Boston Marathon the very best of luck!

Topics: basketball training programs, athletic training conference, boston hockey summit, boston hockey conference, boston marathon

Register Before May 1st And Win!!

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Thu, Apr 14, 2011 @ 07:04 AM

Who likes Early Bird Prizes??!!!

Register for the BSMPG summer conference, "Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants" before May 1st and be entered in a drawing to win prizes including: A one-year membership to StrengthandConditioningWebinars.com and two, one-year memberships to HockeyStrengthandConditioning.com. 

Register soon - limited seats available.

Early Bird Registration and the chance to win prizes end May 1st!

hockey resources

 

hockey resources

Topics: athletic training conference, boston hockey summit, boston hockey conference

Joe Maher Added To Hockey Track at BSMPG Summer Conference

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Tue, Apr 12, 2011 @ 07:04 AM

Joe Maher replaces Pete Friesen at the 2011 "Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants".  Joe's been a fixture for a program that has quickly risen to national prominence.  Learn how Joe has Yale  skating circles around the competition along with Jim Snider, Strength Coach for 2011 Women's Ice Hockey National Champions, Wisconsin Badgers and Russ DeRosa, Strength Coach for the 2010 Men's Ice Hockey National Champions, Boston College Eagles.

 

hockey resources

 

Joe Maher

Joe Maher, a former hockey head coach and player and a sports physiologist, was named Yale's assistant strength & conditioning coach in August of 2007 after serving in a similar role at the University of Richmond for two years. His work with the Yale hockey team has been a significant factor in its ascencion to national prominence.  Maher was the assistant S&C coach at Richmond from 2005 to 2007 while also serving as head coach of the U-16AA Richmond Royals hockey club. His Richmond football squad won an Atlantic-10 Championship under his watch.

Prior to that, he was a graduate assistant in the Kinesiology Department at Louisiana State University and a coach at the USA Weightlifting Development Center in Shreveport, La., from 2004 to 2005.  Maher, who is the S&C coach for the 2011 U.S. Junior National Team, also served as assistant sports physiologist at the U.S. Olympic Center's Athlete Performance Laboratory. He played hockey at the University of Rhode Island and coached and competed in 2005 Collegiate National Weightlifting Championships.

In addition, Maher, a New Jersey native who has authored numerous articles on S&C and owns a masters in education, coached and co-directed the 2004 American Open Championships, co-directed the 2005 Pan-American Championships and coached the 2005 Junior National Championships. He also worked on Keith Allain's U.S. Team staff during the 2010-11 IIHF World Junior Championships (bronze medal).  Maher's certifications include: Strength and Conditioning Specialist (National Strength and Conditioning Association); Weightlifting Senior Coach-In Process (USA Weightlifting); First Aid, CPR, AED (American Red Cross); USA Hockey Level 3 (In-Process of Level 4).

Topics: athletic training conference, boston hockey summit, Brijesh Patel, Charlie Weingroff, boston hockey conference, athletic trainer, Jim Snider

Accepting False Limits by Seth Godin

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Mon, Apr 11, 2011 @ 07:04 AM

athletic training resources

 

Accepting false limits

I will never be able to dunk a basketball.

This is beyond discussion.

Imagine, though, a co-worker who says, "I'll never be able to use a knife and fork. No, I have to use my hands."

Or a colleague who says, "I can't possibly learn Chinese. I'm not smart enough."

This is a mystery to me. A billion people have learned Chinese, and the failure rate for new kids is close to zero. If a well functioning adult puts in sufficient time and the effort, she''ll succeed.

The key to this disconnect is the unspoken part about time and effort and fear. I agree that you will never ship that product or close that sale or invent that device unless you put in the time and put in the effort and overcome the fear. But I don't accept for a minute that there's some sort of natural limit on your ability to do just about anything that involves creating and selling ideas.

This attitude gets me in trouble sometimes. Perhaps I shouldn't be pushing people who want something but have been taught not to push themselves. Somewhere along the way, it seems, I forgot that it's none of my business if people choose to accept what they've got, to forget their dreams and to not seek to help those around them achieve what matters to them.

Not sure if you'll forgive me, but no, I'm not going to believe that only a few people are permitted to be gatekeepers or creators or generous leaders. I have no intention of apologizing for believing in people, for insisting that we all use this moment and these assets to create some art and improve the world around us.

To do anything less than that is a crime.

 

Topics: basketball conference, athletic training conference, boston hockey summit, boston hockey conference, Seth Godin

"How Much Can I Get Away With?" by Seth Godin

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Mon, Apr 4, 2011 @ 07:04 AM

basketball resources

 

"How much can I get away with?"

There are two ways to parse that question.

The usual way is, "How little can I do and not get caught?" Variations include, "Can we do less service? Cut our costs? Put less cereal in the box? Charge more?" In short: "How little can I get away with?"

The other way, the more effective way: "How much can we afford to give away? How much service can we pile on top of what we're selling without seeming like we're out of our minds? How big a portion can we give and still stay in business? How fast can we get this order filled?"

In an era in which the middle is rapdily emptying out, both edges are competitive. Hint: The overdelivery edge is an easier place to make a name for yourself.

 

Topics: basketball conference, basketball training programs, athletic training conference, boston hockey summit, boston hockey conference, Seth Godin

Are You Making Something by Seth Godin

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Mon, Mar 28, 2011 @ 07:03 AM

athletic training resources

 

Are you making something?

Making something is work. Let's define work, for a moment, as something you create that has a lasting value in the market.

Twenty years ago, my friend Jill discovered Tetris. Unfortunately, she was working on her Ph.D. thesis at the time. On any given day the attention she spent on the game felt right to her. It was a choice, and she made it. It was more fun to move blocks than it was to write her thesis. Day by day this adds up... she wasted so much time that she had to stay in school and pay for another six months to finish her doctorate.

Two weeks ago, I took a five-hour plane ride. That's enough time for me to get a huge amount of productive writing done. Instead, I turned on the wifi connection and accomplished precisely no new measurable work between New York and Los Angeles.

More and more, we're finding it easy to get engaged with activities that feel like work, but aren't. I can appear just as engaged (and probably enjoy some of the same endorphins) when I beat someone in Words With Friends as I do when I'm writing the chapter for a new book. The challenge is that the pleasure from winning a game fades fast, but writing a book contributes to readers (and to me) for years to come.

One reason for this confusion is that we're often using precisely the same device to do our work as we are to distract ourselves from our work. The distractions come along with the productivity. The boss (and even our honest selves) would probably freak out if we took hours of ping pong breaks while at the office, but spending the same amount of time engaged with others online is easier to rationalize. Hence this proposal:

The two-device solution

Simple but bold: Only use your computer for work. Real work. The work of making something.

Have a second device, perhaps an iPad, and use it for games, web commenting, online shopping, networking... anything that doesn't directly create valued output (no need to have an argument here about which is which, which is work and which is not... draw a line, any line, and separate the two of them. If you don't like the results from that line, draw a new line).

Now, when you pick up the iPad, you can say to yourself, "break time." And if you find yourself taking a lot of that break time, you've just learned something important.

Go, make something. We need it!

Topics: basketball conference, athletic training conference, boston hockey summit, boston hockey conference, Seth Godin

Set Your Mental Channel

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Wed, Mar 23, 2011 @ 06:03 AM

 

 

Take a look around where you’re sitting and find five things that have blue in them.

Go ahead and do it.

With a “blue” mindset, you’ll find that blue jumps out at you: a blue book on the table, a blue pillow on the couch, blue in the painting on the wall, and so on. Similarly, whenever you learn a new word, you hear it six times in the next two days.  In like fashion, you’ve probably noticed that after you buy a new car, you promptly see that make of car everywhere.  That’s because people find what they are looking for. If you’re looking for conspiracies, you’ll find them. If you’re looking for examples of people’s good works, you’ll find that too. 

It’s all a matter of setting your mental channel.


- Roger von Oech

Topics: basketball conference, athletic training conference, boston hockey summit

Congrats UW Badgers - 2011 Women's Ice Hockey National Champions

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Tue, Mar 22, 2011 @ 07:03 AM

Congrats to the University of Wisconsin Badgers Women's Ice Hockey team for winning the 2011 National Championship in a 4-1 win over Boston University this past weekend. 

hockey conference

 

Hear UW Badgers Strength and Conditioning Coach, Jim Snider speak at this year's BSMPG Hockey Conference, June 3rd and 4th in Boston MA., as he discusses, "Hockey Specific Dry Land Speed Training".

Learn how this year's National Champions train in the off-season and what you may be missing in your summer hockey strength training programs. 

 

Topics: boston hockey summit, hockey conference, hockey DVD, Jim Snider