Saturday, October 16, 2010

Once in a Lifetime - The Extraordinary Story of the New York Cosmos

Once in a Lifetime - The Extraordinary Story of the New York CosmosThe 2006 World Cup brought a plethora of soccer films (OK, three) to the cineplex. The most entertaining is this '70s-infused documentary of the New York Cosmos and the brief life of the North American Soccer League (NASL). The Cosmos rose to the pinnacle of success in the league, bringing in many famous players from around the globe including German Franz Beckenbauer, Italian Giorgio Chinaglia, and most notably, Brazilian Pele, the most famous athlete in the world. For a brief, shining moment, these players and the league made soccer hip and viable to a country who hardly embraced the sport beyond pre-teens kicking the funny ball around. The film delves in those who knew Warner Brothers honcho Steve Ross, who funded his passion and lingered in the spotlight. The fast and breezy doc has a great array of music to power through the talking heads, including players, commissioners, agents, coaches, and even Henry Kissinger. The high-scoring Chinaglia is painted as a villain type, who charmed Ross and--now on camera--some of us as he recounts the days. Other players, like Cosmos goalie Shep Messing, recall wonderful stories about being a hack one week to playing with the greatest ever the next. The yarn of brining Pele to America is nearly half the film; an incredible story of dreams, egos, and dollars. The fact he is not interviewed for this film is inconsequential. He's better received as a legend, and deservedly so. --Doug Thomas

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PERU EN LOS MUNDIALES DVD

PERU EN LOS MUNDIALES DVDPor primera vez en la historia del futbol peruano, recordemos los momentos mas gloriosos de la seleccion Peruana de Futbol desde la clasificacion contra Argentina para participar en el mundial de Mexico '70. Revivira los goles de "Cachito" Ramirez contra Argentina en 1969, el pelotazo en la cabeza del defensa argentino por parte del "nino terrible". La participacion de la escuadra bicolor contra Brazil de Pele y Garrincha. Los Goles de Gallardo, Cubillas, Cumpitas y Chale. remontemonos al mundial de Argentina '78 y festejemos los goles de Cubillas y Cueto como los partidos del mundial Espana '82 y terminemos con una marinera bien jugada en el Monumental con gol de Oblitas y la marca de Reina Contra Maradona.

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Soccer - fitness training tips for performance on the soccer field


Great soccer fitness training can elevate your game to help you achieve the next level of game or the next level of your career. The right to a good program trainer or a coach can be the difference between going pro and leaving all behind after college or high school. When considering soccer fitness training, it is important to understand the basics to make sure that your training is rounded as well as possible. It is important to ensure that you are hitting on all key areas of training, including proper nutrition, adequate heating and specific exercises for endurance, strength, flexibility and speed.

The diet of football training

While it is obvious to a certain level of fitness is involved in a great football player, also noted that the food you eat are vital to how you play and you become the player. To achieve a healthy diet, you need to consider what you eat. Get rid of the bad, and increase the proper.Take a notebook and save everything that you eat during a semaine.Pour inspiration, rent and watch the movie big format. If that does not change your outlook on Fast-Food, anything goes.

Once you cut Fast-Food and all junk mail, it is important to increase good foods in your diet to a recommended caloric intake can be established with your coach based for your height, muscle development, and activity level.Fresh fruit, whole grains and lean meat are all incredible sources of fiber, protein and iron which you must build muscles and of larger vitesse.Encore that your diet is the food you eat directly before a match.eviter food fried or fatty, whole milk, cheese, meat marbre and something super sweet. It is also a good idea to avoid foods that digest hard, like beans, cucumbers pickled pelts, and spices.

Warm-Up football training

A good warm-up is essential for an efficient daily training and, especially, on game days.A good getting started will increase your heart rate slowly and stretch your muscles well for future strenuous activity.This global warming should include exercises flexibility, a light jog, and a good game of keep away which you and other players circle up to and pass through a variety of challenges jongleries on an exercises and games of possession.It gets your body and your mind prepared for action.

Football training Workout

For your body to manage the stress of soccer intense training action, it is important to have the right type of training to build muscle, you need and develop skills to make your position at eleve.Votre training should include a routine geared around of a variety of exercises, including aerobic, anaerobic, plyometirc exercises balance and some creative to keep your muscles techniques guess and obtain a stagnation in their aerobic developpement.Pour, jogging on a daily basis is a great way to keep your muscles more and work your heart to stay in shape of large cardio.Anaerobie, which is usually in the form of training, is the best way for soccer players increase the speed and endurance .the other forms of soccer training can be developed from your coach, trainer, and doctor to find the best combination of all the exercises various specific body and your goals.








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Soccer-Specific strength and fitness - Warm-Up, expansion and flexibility training

An adequate warm-up program is an important part of any stretching and flexibility regime. The right balance of warm-up and stretching an integral part of any soccer-specific strength and fitness training program. Injury prevention is a crucial consideration and and important reason for an individualized warm up, stretching, and flexibility program. Prior to initiating a workout program, a routine soccer practice or a match, the soccer athlete must be warmed up and have stretched for a period of between 15 and 30 minutes, not only to reduce the risk of injury, but to improve training results and match performance.


The proper warm-up routine has several important elements. The elements of a properly structured warm-up and stretching regimen must be integrated into a holistic strategy designed to properly engage all of the various muscles of the body in such a way as to be ready for peak performance prior to the workout, practice or competition. Every muscle and muscle group must be working together and fully warmed up in order to reduce the chance of injury, regardless of whether it is due to stress, strain or trauma.


Why is warming up so vital to the overall success of a training program?


Proper warm-up before training is important for a number of reasons and is responsible for a myriad of benefits. The properly designed warm-up routine prepares the athlete, physically and mentally, for peak performance and for strenuous, physical and mental exertion. While there are many reasons for this, the most important may be the fact that warm-up increases the body's metabolism and core temperature. As a consequence of an overall increase in temperature, there is accordingly an increase in the temperature of the various muscles involved in training and competition. Increased muscle temperature, and the associated increase in blood flow, allows for muscles that are ready for strenuous activity, being oxygenated, fully fueled, and supple. Additionally, the warm-up will also have a positive, overall cardiovascular effect, increasing both heart and lung function and allowing for more complete delivery of oxygen and energy-providing nutrients to the musculature during periods of peak demand. Once again, this has a ripple effect and the connective tissue, so at risk during periods of strenuous activity, to be warmed up and prepared for activity prior to the workout or competition. The latter is vitally important, as many sports-related injuries are connective tissue based, as in ACL injuries!


How to Develop a Warm-up Program for a Soccer-Related Strength and Fitness Training Program


There are several factors and considerations that come into play when designing a soccer-related strength and fitness training program. Along with diet and nutrition, warm-up, stretching, and flexibility are crucial to the overall success of the program. For that reason, we will spend quite a bit of time on the proper warm-up design and integration in this article.


It goes without saying, or should anyway, that it is very important to begin with the simplest and gentlest movements and tasks first. The idea is to move from one motion and movement to the next, an overall build taking place, and once again a ripple effect leading to a fully engorged and oxygenated musculature prior to strenuous activity. The process of easy to difficult, slow to faster motions and activities, each building and compounding upon the other, fully engaging the athlete's body and optimizing performance regardless of the task involved.


The body, if properly engaged and warmed up, will be at its mental and physical peak prior to strenuous activity and the demands of soccer-related performance, whether for strength and fitness training, practice or match play. With the body at peak readiness, optimally engaged mentally and physically, the likelihood of soccer-specific, sports-related injuries will have been minimized and the soccer athlete can continue into the training or the competitive area fully prepared. The next step, now that we understand why...is how!


The Four Components of an Effective Soccer-Specific Strength and Fitness Training Warm-up


The first stage is a general, overall warm-up program. The second stage is static stretching and differs from the third stage, that of soccer-specific stretching and warm-up. The fourth stage is dynamic stretching, stretching used to engage and involve the entire musculature, synergistically. The four components are equally crucial to the overall success of the program, one building upon the other, all equally vital. The components come together, in very much the same way as muscles do, synergistically, all four working in unison to prepare the body, physically and mentally; and, also preparing the soccer-athlete for whatever is to come. Once again, this process is designed to ensure the soccer-athlete has minimal exposure and consequently risk of sports-related injuries.


Stage One: Overall and General Strength and Fitness Training Warm-up


The overall, general warm-up consists of mild, minimally demanding physical activity. I recommend jogging, no faster that a brisk walk, generally for 400 meters or one-quarter of a mile. We then jump on the stationary bike, increasing the intensity and duration from a low tension setting and a duration 2 minutes, to a high of medium range tension for up to 20 minutes; and, in winter we start off with the stationary bike. The level of difficulty and the length of time on the bike is usually determined during testing and is determined by the soccer-athlete's overall level of fitness. A good indicator that the athlete is starting to warm-up is a moderate sweat and perhaps an elevated heart rate and respiration. The heart rate and respiration are usually tracked by chart at the onset of the program and then weekly; this will help in establishing overall training results, and also will aid in watching for signs of overtraining.


The primary goal of stage one is to increase the pulse and respiration, an indication that blood and oxygen are being moved at a faster rate through the body. As stated, increased heart rate and respiration will thus increase blood flow to the muscles and provide for oxygenation and energy supply to the muscles during strenuous physical training. The increased blood flow and nutrients to the muscles also helps elevate the overall body and muscle temperature; and, this in turn will provide for a better static stretching stage.


Stage Two: Stepping it Up and Static Stretching


Stage two is the static stretching phase and is really the basis for overall flexibility. Given the importance of the static stretch, and of flexibility in general, it is always interesting how few soccer-athletes engage in it...or any other stretching routine for that matter. Static stretching is slow, easy, and constant stretching of the various muscles groups and is usually quite safe; and, it is a very efficient and effective means of achieving overall flexibility. The biggest issue with stretching is in the form and the carry out, how the stretches are actually carried out. The proper way is in a long, ballistic-free motion, one of constant and applied pressure to a specific muscle or group of muscles. If done properly, the static stretch is very safe and quite beneficial. During the second stage of the warm-up and stretching program, the static stretch must include the various major muscle groups, working from largest to smallest muscles groups and then back again. The entire regimen will generally last from five to fifteen minutes, at first; and, taking somewhat less time as training progresses.


In order to properly stretch the muscles during the static phase of stretching, the athlete's body must be in a position in which the muscle or muscle group is under constant, applied tension. To begin with, the muscle or muscle group to be statically stretched is relaxed. Additionally, the opposing muscles are also relaxed. The opposing muscles consist of those muscles "in front of" and "behind" the target muscle or muscle group. Then, carefully and with deliberation, the athlete slowly and carefully places the body under pressure, with emphasis on the area to be stretched, increasing overall tension to the muscle, or muscle group. At the point of greatest tension, the stretch is held in place, allowing the muscles, tendons, and ligaments to stretch and, when possible, to lengthen. This stage of the soccer-related, strength and fitness training program is extremely effective in advancing flexibility. Stage two assists in lengthening muscles and tendons, and in a synergistic fashion impacts ligaments too. The static stretching allows for a greater degree of movement and range of motion. This stage is crucial in sports-related injury prevention, as it, once again allows for a strengthening, as well as the aforementioned lengthening of muscles and tendons.


Stage one and stage two form the foundation for what will follow. The first through fourth stages form an overall and effective soccer-specific warm-up and stretching program. The overall warm-up and stretching program thus laying the basis for the training to follow. It is crucial that the first two stages be completed completely and in the proper fashion before increasing the intensity and moving into stages three and four. The correct implementation of stages one and two will provide for safe and effective exercise in stages three and four.


Stage Three: Soccer-Specific Stretch and Warm-up


Generally, if the focus of the warm-up and stretching was on practice and match play, we would now move to paired stretches and various warm-ups designed to be competition-specific. However, because this is primarily focused on strength and fitness training for soccer-athletes, we usually up the level of the stretching to include another round of static stretching, followed by a number of isotonic-related stretches. The primary focus in stage three must be inside out, largest to smallest and back in. That is, for the upper body a series of stretches including the back, chest, shoulders, triceps, biceps, forearms, wrists, and hands. The neck is very important and great care must be taken when stretching the neck for obvious, and not so obvious reasons. The neck has a number of very small muscles and muscles groups but, as Woody Hayes once pointed out to me, "as the neck goes, so goes the body." While Coach Hayes is obviously a legendary football coach, but his lesson was not lost on his student (yours truly). The neck should always get special attention and, as a soccer player, the neck plays so many roles, its importance cannot be overstated. After the upper body and the neck, the lower body is next. Included in the lower body are stretches for the gluteus maximus and minimus, the hips, quadraceps, hamstrings, calves, ankles, and feet. Finally, the abdominals must be focused on, and they get special attention because, like the neck, they are a determining factor in the overall performance of the body.


Obviously, the stretching program can and often does take up an entire workout session, particularly at first and until the routine is set. There are myriad stretches available and any number of them will suffice. However, if you would like to have a personalized program, one effective and designed just for you, you must engage the services of an experienced, and knowledgeable (they are not always the same), strength and fitness coach, one experienced in dealing with soccer-athletes, in particular.


By the time the athlete has completed stage three, he or she should be perspiring and their heart rate and respiration should be significantly elevated. The idea is to integrate the warm-up and stretching into the overall conditioning program is such a way that it has a number of cascading affects and effects on the body of the athlete, all with one thing in mind, optimizing overall development and match performance gains. In other words, it is my desire to see them be able to put it on the pitch!


Stages Four: Soccer-Related Strength and Fitness Training, Warm-up and Dynamic Stretching


Ultimately, the proper warm-up must culminate in a series of exercises known as dynamic stretching exercises or simply as dynamic stretches. Significantly, dynamic stretches often result in injury. The main reason for the high incidence of injuries due to dynamic stretching has to do with athletes who are not trained properly by coaches who are experienced in working with soccer athletes, or athletes in general, or the athletes themselves simply do not adhere to training guidelines. For the reasons stated above, dynamic stretching should only be engaged in when training with a competent strength and fitness instructor; and, not just someone who likes to work out and thought it might be a great business to get into! Dynamic stretching has to do with what I refer to as neuro-muscular coordination and is about muscle conditioning, rather than simply flexibility, as the name would seem to imply. The dynamic stretch regimen is usually designed and best suited for top-level amateur and professional soccer-athletes, those individuals who are well-trained, and are highly-conditioned, competitive athletes. A dynamic stretch routine is usually implemented as a final, ultimate step in a flexibility program adhered to for quite some time and it is obvious to trainer and trainee that the "next-level" is appropriate.


Dynamic stretching usually involves controlled movement, a bouncing or pendulum motion, forcing the muscle beyond its normal range of motion. Gradually and over time the degree of bounce and the range of the swing is heightened and increased to achieve an exaggerated range of motion and enhanced flexibility. The best example of this done in an incorrect fashion may be when young athletes attempt to stretch their hamstrings, one foot crossed in front of the other, bouncing up and down to stretch the biceps femoris. Done in this fashion, the young athlete may cause a micro-tearing of the hamstring and risk serious injury. But they see others do it and they model the behavior. A recipe for disaster...or at the very least a blown hamstring! During stage four, it is crucial that the athlete integrate dynamic stretches that are soccer-specific. Stage four the culmination of the soccer-specific, warm-up, stretching and flexibility program and will result in the soccer-athlete achieving peak mental and physical preparation prior to training and/or match play. At this point in the training session, the trainee is prepared for the what will come next, the rigors of an intense soccer-specific, strength and fitness training program.


Finally, the most neglected aspect of any training regimen, the warm-up and stretching, must come first. Without adequate preparation, both physical and mental, the soccer-athlete cannot hope to achieve peak performance and optimal training gains. The four stage training program is a workout in and of itself and will generally take between twenty-five and forty-five minutes to work through. As the trainee becomes used to the routine, its system and its rigors, the amount of time it takes to get through it is lessened. Interestingly, as time lessens, intensity increases...but so does the fitness level of the athlete. So, when integrating and off-season, soccer-specific strength and fitness training program into your training routine, it is imperative you recognize the importance of diet and nutrition, combined with a proper warm-up and flexibility regimen. With the above two components in place, we are ready to move on to the next ingredient, the actual soccer-specific strength and fitness training program.


I have been coaching top-level amateur and professional athletes for more than 30 years! Should you desire more information concerning soccer-specific strength and fitness training, including personalized programs, please visit me, "CoachZ" at:


Ultimate Soccer-Specific Training


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John P. J. Zajaros, Sr.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Force football - the best Workout football is right here!


Football strength training workouts should focus on improving completely your total athletic. Front, enables optimum packaging and athletic is a requirement in the game of soccer. In order to improve your game soccer you include kettlebell training in your personal lifting and strength training program.

Training Kettlebell is an ancient art form that has been used to forge some of the greatest athletes in the world for more than three centuries. Kettlebell training is very dynamic in nature and relates to the training and handling of muscle movements, rather than the isolation of specific muscle groups. The basis of the kettlebell lifts is kettlebell swing double arm. This exercise is ideal for the training of your glutes, jambiers, shoulders, back, hips and heart from a single hard hitting exercise of power. Kettlebell training is strength training for many different muscle groups. Using this dynamic style exercise, it is that will have your athletic to a whole new level. By doing these kettlebell lifts challenge you your body by teaching to manage an external load via the basis of body movements.Why this style training on both translated football.En becoming an athlete stronger, faster and better conditioning field, you'll become a better player soccer.

If you want to take your soccer game to a new place, then you have included the kettlebell training in your personal strength and fitness training.It is the combination of training cardio perfect resistance for your game to the highest level u.n. performance 'feel free to access the rest of my articles on the subject of DNA' forget not that anyone can train hard, but only smart champions!








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125 Dynamite Drills

Makes teaching martial arts is easy with more than 125 thumping heart, blood boiling karate drills and exercises.  Check it out!

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

The best Workout fitness football


Fitness is particularly important for football players as they will be called on a game to run up to 90 minutes, with no judgment in time and only sporadic shutdown action. Preparing for the upcoming season soccer, it is best to play the beautiful game of soccer as a way to get the most useful, because there is no substitute for the game. Same face small-game 15, 20 or 30 minutes intervals help increases fitness and endurance.

As a separate training away from the game, it is preferable to alternate sprinting football players, the distance and the interval during a workout of fitness.Avec each workout, players should gradually increase patterns and improve times.

Here are the best exercises for a soccer fitness training:

300: on land League, initially on the finish line and sprint to mid-high field and return 6 times (50 meters x 6 = 300). High school players should try to execute these less than 70 seconds.  After each 300, rest for two minutes and try again.  

Hills: find a stable sloping Hill (no "baby" hills) sprint up to the Hill and scroll down. The simultaneous jogging recovery time, this can be done slowly.  Once players reached the bottom, the should turn surrounding and sprint up to the Hill again. After five (5) hills, then take a rest for two minutes and do more than five (5).

Cones: these are occupaient.Placer cones approximately five (5) yards apart for 25 yards.Players should spring first cone and back then, and then the second Cone and then back and thus suite.Cinq maximum cones and back is a repetition. Do representatives of ten (10), then a 1 minute rest.More then ten (10).

Disputed yet?We just put on the way...

30-30: it training .Joueurs should begin by jogging for a few minutes and then fun commence.Est then to other 30 seconds of jogging with 30 seconds of sprinting.Make a set of five five (5) (5) 30-30, and two (2) minutes, and then five (5) more rest.

120 ' s: it's a full sprint the length of field of players football.Lycee should try to do it in less than 20 secondes.Apres have reached the opposite end, line players should rear wheel, to 60 seconds recuperer.Faire these 7 - 10.

Cooling down and stretch: players should always take fifteen to twenty minutes to cool and stretch to conclude fitness training.

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A Minor Miracle [VHS]

Fans of The Great Escape and The Longest Yard will cheer venerable director John Huston's rousing 1981 adventure that pits Allied prisoners of war against their German captors in a soccer match. Michael Caine, who starred in Huston's The Man Who Would Be King, heads an international all-star cast as true-Brit John Colby, a former soccer champion, who heads the rag-tag squad. Max Von Sydow costars as the humane German officer who proposes the match, improbably staged for maximum propaganda impact in a stadium in Paris. As the Allied team, which includes real-life soccer legends Pele and Bobby Moore, practices, the officers' only goal is an audacious half-time escape. Sylvester Stallone is somewhat out of his league as the American determined to join the team. As an actor, Pele may not be on the same playing field as his Oscar-winning costars, but he is thrilling to watch as he executes some awesome, game-winning kicks. --Donald Liebenson

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