Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group, LLC Blog

Updated Presentation - George Mumford - BSMPG Summer Seminar

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Mon, Jun 13, 2011 @ 07:06 AM

We asked what the Giants in Sports Medicine & Rehabilitation, Basketball and Hockey performance training have read or are currently reading and we brought their list to you.  

Click HERE to view our recommended library with an ongoing list from these speakers who presented at the BSMPG "Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants" 2011 summer seminar.

Click HERE to view George Mumford's most updated presentation from this year's seminar.

Click HERE to view George Mumford's reference list from the above presentation.

 

George Mumford

2011 BSMPG speakers, Ray Eady and George Mumford

 

 

Topics: Basketball Related, Art Horne, basketball resources, basketball conference, athletic training conference, George Mumford

Caring by Seth Godin

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Thu, Jun 9, 2011 @ 06:06 AM

Caring

No organization cares about you. Organizations aren't capable of this.

Your bank, certainly, doesn't care. Neither does your HMO or even your car dealer. It's amazing to me that people are surprised to discover this fact.

People, on the other hand, are perfectly capable of caring. It's part of being a human. It's only when organizational demands and regulations get in the way that the caring fades.

If you want to build a caring organization, you need to fill it with caring people and then get out of their way. When your organization punishes people for caring, don't be surprised when people stop caring.

When you free your employees to act like people (as opposed to cogs in a profit-maximizing efficient machine) then the caring can't help but happen.

 

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

What the Giants are reading - Charlie Weingroff

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Wed, Jun 8, 2011 @ 06:06 AM

We asked what the Giants in Sports Medicine & Rehabilitation, Basketball and Hockey performance training have read or are currently reading and we brought their list to you.  

Click HERE to view our recommended library with an ongoing list from these speakers who presented at the BSMPG "Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants" 2011 summer seminar.

 

Charlie Weingroff

Charlie Weingroff:

Topics: basketball conference, BSMPG, athletic training conference, Charlie Weingroff, recommended reading, athletic training books

Success at "Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants" Seminar

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Mon, Jun 6, 2011 @ 07:06 AM

Thanks to everyone for attending this year's BSMPG summer seminar, Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants.  We welcomed over 170 of the top Performance Coaches, Athletic Trainers and Physical Therapists from across the country and the world to Boston for this two day event.  Attendees ventured from countries including England, Ireland, Wales, Holland, and Canada in order to attend what has truly become the nation's leading conference in advanced training and care for the athlete.

Stay tuned for more photos, updated speaker presentations and much more this coming week!

 

 

clare frank

Clare Frank demonstrates during her Intensive Track Breakout session.

 

BSMPG

Mike Curtis, Strength and Conditioning Coach at the University of Virginia and Ray Eady, Strength and Conditioning Coach at University of Wisconsin enjoy lunch during day one.

 

Shirley Sahrmann

Keynote Speakers from day two, Pete Viteritti and Shirley Sahrmann.

 

Topics: Ray Eady, Art Horne, basketball performance, basketball conference, BSMPG, athletic training conference, Mike Curtis, Shirley Sahrmann

Bar Gymnastics by Seth Godin

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Wed, Jun 1, 2011 @ 06:06 AM

athletic training

 

Bar gymnastics

Some people I know work hard to lower the bar at work.

That was my strategy at gym class in high school. Not only did I do the minimum amount permitted, I worked hard to do just a little bit less than that. By the time the semester was over, the teacher was relieved if I even bothered to show up at all.

Most people seek to meet the bar. They figure out what's expected, and do that.

A few people, very few, work to relentlessly raise the bar. She's the one who overdelivers on projects, shows up ahead of schedule, instigates, suggests and pushes.

Raising the bar is exhausting, no doubt about it. I'm not sure the people who engage in this apparently reckless behavior would have it any other way, though. They get to experience a fundamentally different day, a different journey and a different reputation than everyone else.

Why now? What has changed that makes promoting bar gymnastics more than a selfish effort by the boss to get more labor out of the workforce?

Simple. This is the post-industrial era. Success is not about speeding up the assembly line as much as it relies on individuals able to create leaps forward. The person capable of doing that sort of work is in far higher demand than ever before.

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

A Sneak Peek Into Mark Toomey and Dr. John DiMuro's Presentation

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Tue, May 31, 2011 @ 07:05 AM

Mark Toomey

Dr. John DiMuro and Mark Toomey

Every once in a while you'll meet an individual that completely changes the way you look at the world - that person for me was Mark Toomey.  A self proclaimed "knuckle-dragger," Toomey is one of the few people that truly understands the importance and integration of health, strength, and function.

Click HERE to view Toomey's/DiMuro's presentation outline for their June 3rd presentation.

See Mark Toomey, Dr. DiMuro and other national experts in the fields of Sports Medicine, Hockey and Basketball along with keynote speakers which include Tom Myers, Shirley Sahrmann, Clare Frank, Charlie Weingroff and Pete Viteritti at this weeks BSMPG summer conference, "Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants" - June 3rd and 4th.

Topics: Art Horne, basketball conference, BSMPG, athletic training conference, boston hockey conference, Mark Toomey, John DiMuro

BSMPG Salutes Our Troops

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Mon, May 30, 2011 @ 06:05 AM

support our troops

 

From our family to yours - Happy Memorial Day.

Topics: basketball resources, basketball training programs, athletic training conference, boston hockey summit, boston hockey conference, Mark Toomey

Looking For The Right Excuse by Seth Godin

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Fri, May 27, 2011 @ 06:05 AM

Looking for the right excuse

This is the first warning sign that a project is in trouble. Sometimes it even begins before the project does.

Quietly, our subconscious starts looking around for an excuse, deniability and someone to blame. It gives us confidence and peace of mind. [It's much easier to be calm when the police car appears in your rear view mirror if you have an excuse handy.]

Amazingly, we often look for the excuse before we even accept the project. We say to ourselves, "well, I can start this, and if it doesn't work perfectly, I can point out it was the ..." Then, as the team ramps up, bosses appear and events occur (or not), we continually add to and refine our excuse list, reminding ourselves of all the factors that were out of our control. Decades ago, when I used to sell by phone, I often found myself describing why I was unable to close this particular sale--and realized I was articulating these reasons while the phone was still ringing.

People who have a built-in all-purpose excuse (middle child syndrom, wrong astrology sign, some slight at the hands of the system long ago) often end up failing--they have an excuse ready to go, so it's easier to back off when the going is rough.

Here's an alternative to the excuse-driven life: What happens if you relentlessly avoid looking for excuses at all?

Instead of seeking excuses, the successful project is filled with people who are obsessed with avoiding excuses. If you relentlessly work to avoid opportunities to use your ability to blame, you may never actually need to blame anyone. If you're not pulled over by the cop, no need to blame the speedometer, right?

 

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

Who Is Making You UnComfortable? by Seth Godiin

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Wed, May 25, 2011 @ 08:05 AM

basketball resources

 

Who is making you uncomfortable?

 

Who looks you in the eye and says, "given your skills, you could do better..."

"You have enough leverage to really make a difference."

"What would happen if you doubled the amount you donated?"

"Could you set aside the fear and go faster?"

"I know you're holding back..."

It takes love and kindness and confidence to bring the truth to a friend you care about. If you're insulating yourself from these conversations, who benefits?

 

Topics: Art Horne, basketball performance, basketball conference, athletic training conference, boston hockey conference, Seth Godin

Moving Beyond Teachers And Bosses by Seth Godin

Posted by Boston Sports Medicine and Performance Group on Mon, May 23, 2011 @ 06:05 AM

basketball resources

 

 

Moving beyond teachers and bosses

We train kids to deal with teachers in a certain way: Find out what they want, and do that, just barely, because there are other things to work on. Figure out how to say back exactly what they want to hear, with the least amount of effort, and you are a 'good student.'

We train employees to deal with bosses in a certain way: Find out what they want, and do that, just barely, because there are other things to do. Figure out how to do exactly what they want, with the least amount of effort, and the last risk of failure and you are a 'good worker.'

The attitude of minimize is a matter of self-preservation. Raise the bar, the thinking goes, and the boss will work you harder and harder. Take initiative and you might fail, leading to a reprimand or termination (think about that word for a second... pretty frightening).

The linchpin, of course, can't abide the attitude of minimize. It leaves no room for real growth and certainly doesn't permit an individual to become irreplaceable.

If your boss is seen as a librarian, she becomes a resource, not a limit. If you view the people you work with as coaches, and your job as a platform, it can transform what you do each day, starting right now. "My boss won't let me," doesn't deserve to be in your vocabulary. Instead, it can become, "I don't want to do that because it's not worth the time/resources." (Or better, it can become, "go!")

The opportunity of our age is to get out of this boss as teacher as taskmaster as limiter mindset. We need more from you than that.

 

Topics: basketball resources, basketball conference, athletic training conference, hockey conference, hockey DVD, Seth Godin