10 years ago, coaches told Allie Kieffer she wasn’t thin enough to be a great runner. So she dieted, broke down, and quit. A few years ago, she restarted and didn’t obsess about weight. Now she’s a world beater. https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nytimes.com/2018/10/27/sunday-review/allie-kieffer-weight-marathons-body.amp.html …
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There is just way too much bad advice floating around in the sports coaching. Problem is that a lot of the advice is not good for the health (or long term success) of the people who do the sports.
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Yep. They're superstitious. A model works and they get stuck. Also lack of understanding of multiple pathways. I used to play pick-up basketbal. I'm hopelessly short for that
but give me an unguarded moment and I had killer 3-pointers—my other sport, thai-boxing=strong arms! - Show replies
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Exactly. Tall and short seemed to work pretty well here.pic.twitter.com/C6RURhGAuJ
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The raw, brutal truth, is that Mr Bolt destroyed the time run by the fastest doped athlete in history. Never before has a clean athlete, at that level, beaten a doped athlete until Bolt. Not simply beat, but destroyed his time. If true, why dope?
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