Having been a professional athlete and a coach of aspiring athletes for over two decades, it is rare that I come upon a product that I feel worthy of recommending.
Many give you the "a lot of hype with little result" syndrome. They prey on the thirst for reaching athetic greatness and all it's rewards, that permeates our sports crazy society.
In working with athletes there are some talents that are deemed "pre-ordained". Anotherwards, you either "have them, or you don't"! Some of these programs are so ingrained that many people accept their limitations as some sort of inherent genetic misfortune and all but resign themselves to the premise that they will never reach athletic supremacy.
It is these limiting beliefs that can be reinforced when inferior products are introduced to the market with promises of "add ten miles to your fastball", "run two seconds faster in two days" etc. The hungry and desperate athlete will sometimes go to any length to reach that next level, even if common sense tells them it is just another marketing gimic.
I stumbled upon http://www.jumplikeapro.com/ in researching potential innovations for sports athletes.
The one thing I look for in any product claim is who is doing the touting? Do they have a pedigree of credentials that are corroborated? Does the product make claims that aren't endorsed by legitimate insiders and experts? What kind of guarantees do you have in the event you find the product or system doesn't work as stated?
All those questions and more were answered with the Vertical Project and it's founder, Luke Lowery, who has taken this program internationally with endorsements from many such as John Kim, President of Jump USA.
So for all aspiring athletes and parents of such who believed in their "limitations" I just wanted to give a "thumbs up"..... no pun intended to this revolutionary training program at www.jumplikeapro.com
More later!
All my best
Scotty D
Former baller Boston Red Sox, Chinese Major Leagues and scout Florida Marlins (1992) and motivational coach "Baseball Intense".
Tuesday, January 1, 2008
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)