TEXTBOOKS BY M C SIFF

 


TEXTBOOKS BY M C SIFF

SUPERTRAINING  (Siff MC  & Verkhoshansky YV 1999   500 pages)

Editorial: 'Fitness and Sports Review International'  29(3/4)  BOOK REVIEW:

SUPERTRAINING . . . .  by far one of the most important books that each of
you should possess. It is, without doubt, the most complete and comprehensive
book on just about every aspect of training an athlete. This book can
probably answer most of your questions on different aspects of training an
athlete. Some of the topics covered in this book include various types of
plyometrics, strength training, explosive isometrics, starting strength,
explosive strength, strength endurance, and speed-strength. Important factors
such as the energy systems, adaptation, increasing the working effect of
strength, flexibility, neuro-muscular stimulation, methods of special
strength training, programming and organization of training, models for
structuring the annual training, PNF as a training system, designing sport
specific strength programs, and more are covered in detail.

Some of these topics are quite unique in that not only are they new to most
athletes and coaches in the Western world but are explained and illustrated
by Yuri Verkoshansky, the creator of these modern training methods. It should
also be noted that the information is not limited to only what the authors
have to contribute since there has also been a careful review of pertinent
literature from the West and other countries. This is a book that has no
equal! Nor is there a book that is even comparable to the extent and depth of
the information presented.

SUPERTRAINING belongs in the library of every athlete, coach, researcher,
sports medicine doctor, trainer, and physical education and sports teacher.
In essence, anyone who deals with an athlete, should have a copy of this book.
_______________________________________________________________

SUPERTRAINING CONTENTS

PREFACE  

1.  STRENGTH AND THE MUSCULAR SYSTEM   

    Objectives
    What is strength?
    The origins of strength training science
    Pioneers of Strength Training
    The fundamental principle of strength training
    Neural changes with training
    Strength deficit

1.1  Preliminary Issues  

    1.1.1  Resistance training for different purposes   
    1.1.2  Factors limiting strength production   

1.2  Fundamental Biomechanics of Strength
1.3  A Philosophy of Physical Training 
1.4  Specificity in Training  
1.5  Strength and Fitness  
1.6  The Nature of Strength  

    Determinants of strength
    Shock training and plyometrics
    Strength and connective tissue

1.7  The Muscle Complex  

    1.7.1  The structure of muscle   
    1.7.2  A model of the muscle complex   

         Further information on collagenous tissues
         The structure and function of ligaments and tendons
         Mechanical loading of collagenous tissue
         The role of stored elastic energy
         The influence of exercise on connective tissue
         A modified muscle model

    1.7.3  Implications of the Muscle Model for Flexibility  
    1.7.4  The Relationship between Stability and Mobility 

1.8   Classification of Muscle Actions  
1.9   Cocontraction and Ballistic Movement  
1.10  Types of Muscle Contraction 
1.11  The Triphasic Nature of Muscle Activity  
1.12  Types of Muscle Fibre  

      The implications of ballistic research

1.13  The Mechanism of Muscle Growth  

      The effects of high versus moderate intensity exercise

1.14  Neurophysiological Aspects of Exercise  
1.15  Bioenergetics and the Energy Systems   

     1.15.1  The energy systems and types of activity  
     1.15.2  Energy mechanisms   
     1.15.3  The short-term energy system   
     1.15.4  The intermediate energy system   
     1.15.5  The long-term energy system   
     1.15.6  Implications for physical conditioning  
     1.15.7  Hormonal factors and strength training  

1.16  Adaptation and the Training Effect  

     1.16.1  The General Adaptation Syndrome  
     1.16.2  The Biochemistry of Adaptation in Sport  

           The Specificity of biochemical adaptation
           The sequence of biochemical changes during training

     1.16.3  General Theories of the Training Process
     
            Single-Factor Model of Training
            Two Factor Model of Training
            The concept of Progressive Overload Training
 
     1.16.4   A Model of Physical Fitness  

2.  SPECIAL STRENGTH TRAINING FOR SPORTS MASTERY  

   The Russian system of classifying athletes
   The early stages of strength training

2.1  Schemes for Perfecting Movements  

     2.1.1  Increasing the working-effect of movements  
     2.1.2  Perfecting the motor structure of movements  

          The kinematic pair
          The kinematic chain
          The kinematic system

    2.1.3  The biodynamic structure of sporting movements  

2.2  Specialisation to Develop Sports Mastery 

    2.2.1  Specific forms of producing muscular strength   
    2.2.2  The functional topography of the muscular system 
    2.2.3  Motor specialisation in developing sports mastery 

         Heterochronicity
         Specialisation processes

2.3  Characteristics of Physical Fitness  

    2.3.1  The structure of physical fitness   
    2.3.2  The interrelation between motor abilities   

         General and partial connections
         Essential and non-essential connections
         Positive and negative connections
         Direct and indirect connections

    2.3.3  The structure of motor abilities   
    2.3.4  General concepts of the structure of physical fitness  

3.  FACTORS INFLUENCING STRENGTH PRODUCTION  

3.1  The Regimes of Muscular Work  
3.2  Qualitative Characteristics of Strength  

    3.2.1  Explosive strength   

          Quickness and reactive ability
          Speed, speed-strength and quickness

    3.2.2  Strength-endurance   

3.3  The Influence of External Conditions on Strength    

    3.3.1  The influence of the pre-working state of the muscles  
    3.3.2  The effect of the load on speed of muscle contraction  

         Contraction speed and strength in acyclic activity
         Contraction strength and speed in cyclic activities

    3.3.3  The effect of strength on speed of muscle action  

         Speed-strength and strength-speed
         The interrelation between strength and other fitness factors
 
    3.3.4  The relationship between strength and posture  

         3.3.4.1   Strength variation with postural change  
         3.3.4.2   Strength, safety and pelvic tilt  
         3.3.4.3   The effect of head position on strength  
         3.3.4.4   Strength, symmetry and limb alignment  

    3.3.5  The dependence of strength on bodymass   
    3.3.6  The relationship between strength and height  
    3.3.7  The relationship between strength and age   
    3.3.8  The relationship between strength and gender  
    3.3.9  The increase in human strength over time   

3.4  Factors increasing the Working Effect of Strength  

    3.4.1  The warmup  
    3.4.2  The after-effect of muscle activity   
    3.4.3  Additional movement   
    3.4.4  Preparatory movement   
    3.4.5  Coordination in muscular work   
    3.4.6  Efficiency of energy expenditure   
    3.4.7  Emotion and other psychological factors  
    3.4.8  The effect of cold application   
    3.4.9   Breathing and strength production  
    3.4.10  Strength development and proprioception   

3.5  Flexibility and Sporting Performance  

     3.5.1   A definition of flexibility  
     3.5.2   The effects of stretching  
     3.5.3   The neuromuscular component of flexibility  
     3.5.4   Components of joint flexibility  
     3.5.5   Parameters of flexibility  
     3.5.6   Soft tissue biomechanics and flexibility  
     3.5.7   The influence of exercise on connective tissue  
     3.5.8   Stretching techniques   
     3.5.9   Low flexibility versus non-functional muscle tension  

3.6  The Stretching Matrix System  
3.7  The Movement Matrix System 
 
    The Limitations of Anatomical Movement Analysis  

4.  THE MEANS OF SPECIAL STRENGTH TRAINING  

4.1  The Problem of Training Means  

4.1.1  Characteristics of strength increase  
4.1.2  The effect of strength training means  

4.2  Neuromuscular Stimulation for Strength Development 

4.2.1  The physiological effects of electrostimulation  

      4.2.1.1  Reasons for conflicting research  
      4.2.1.2  Clinical applications of electrostimulation  
      4.2.1.3  Further research findings  
      4.2.1.4  An integrated theory of electrostimulation  
      4.2.1.5  The use of electrostimulation in training  

4.2.2  Resistance and strength training  
4.2.3  Kinetic energy and strength processes  
4.2.4  Isometric training  

      Isometric training and angular specificity
      Other aspects of isometric activity
      Loadless training

4.2.5  Eccentric training  

4.2.6  Isokinetic and other training means  

      4.2.6.1  The isokinetic training  method   
      4.2.6.2  Limitations of the isokinetic method  
      4.2.6.3  Static-dynamic methods   
      4.2.6.4  Choice of muscle training regimes  

4.2.7  The use of training machines 

      4.2.7.1  Functional resistance machines  
      4.2.7.2  Non-functional resistance machines  
      4.2.7.3  Machines and the variable resistance philosophy  
      4.2.7.4  The training safety of machines  
      4.2.7.5  The efficiency of machine training  

4.2.8  The concept of symmetric training  
4.2.9  The concept of muscle isolation  

4.3  Dynamic Correspondence as a Means of Strength Training  

4.3.1  The amplitude and direction of movement  
4.3.2  The accentuated region of force production  
4.3.3  The dynamics of the effort   
4.3.4  The rate and time of maximal force production  
4.3.5  The regime of muscular work  
4.3.6  Correspondence of  training means to the sports movements   

4.4  Strength Training and General Endurance  

    Oxidative capacity and muscular endurance
    Strength training and general endurance
    The process of functional specialisation
    Factor Analysis

5.  THE METHODS OF SPECIAL STRENGTH TRAINING  

5.1  The Problem of Methods  

5.2  General Principles of Special Strength Training  

     5.2.1  The development of maximum strength   

          The repetitive effort method
          The brief maximal tension method

     5.2.2  Autoregulating Progressive Resistance Exercise (APRE)  
     5.2.3  The development of speed-strength   
     5.2.4  The development of explosive strength and reactive ability  
 
          The plyometric method
          Plyometrics as a discrete training system
          The fundamental theory of plyometrics
          The prescription of plyometric exercise
          Asymmetric plyometrics
          Non-impact plyometrics
          Analysis of popular texts on plyometrics
          Plyometrics and The Brain
          Various Shock methods

5.2.5  The development of strength-endurance  

5.3  Application of Special Strength Training Means 
     
    5.3.1  Interaction between different training means  
    5.3.2  A sequential system of training means   
    5.3.3  The conjugate sequence system of training means  

5.4  The Principal Aims in Organising Special Strength Training   

     5.4.1  Converging the partial effects of strength training means 
     5.4.2  Acceleration of specific adaptation   
     5.4.3  Specific correspondence of the training effect  
     5.4.4  Maintaining the strength training effect  

5.5  Cross Training as a Conditioning Variation  

5.6  Circuit Training  
5.7  Concluding remarks  

6.  PROGRAMMING AND ORGANISATION OF TRAINING  

6.1  The Development of Training Organisation  

     Ways of organising training

6.2  Periodisation as a Form of Organisation  

      6.2.1  Types of Periodisation   
      6.2.2  Calculation of the parameters of periodisation  
      6.2.3  The relationship between intensity and volume  

6.3  Training as an Objective of Management  

6.4  Prerequisites for Organising Training 

6.5  Classification of Sports  

6.6  Characteristics of the Training Process  

    6.6.1  Adaptation to Intense Muscular Work   
    6.6.2  Structural-Functional Specialisation in Training  
    6.6.3  The Structure of Special Physical Preparedness  

6.7  Preparedness and the Training Load  

     6.7.1  The Training Load and its Effect   
     6.7.2  Factors determining the Training Effect  
     6.7.3  The Contents of the Loading   

          Specificity of the load
          Training potential of the loading

6.7.4  The Volume of the Training Load  
6.7.5  The Organisation of Training Loads 

6.8  The Long-Term Delayed Training Effect  

6.9  The Dynamics of Training in the Annual Cycle  

6.10  Principles of Programming and Organising Training 

6.10.1  Forms of Constructing Training  
6.10.2  Organisational Aspects of Structuring Training  

      Complex training
      Unidirectional training
      Concentrated loading
      Problems with concentrated loading
      The use of concentrated loading
      Use of the conjugate sequence system

6.10.3  Constructing Training by Functional Indicators  

6.11  Primary Aims in Programming Training   

6.12  Models for Structuring Annual Training 

      Examples of descriptive modelling
      The composition of the concentrated loading volume

6.12.1  A Model for Sports requiring Explosive Strength  
6.12.2  A Model for Medium Duration Endurance Sports    
6.12.3  A Model for Long Duration Endurance Sports  
6.12.4  A Model for Sports requiring Tricyclic Periodisation  

More advanced use of concentrated loading

6.12.5  Practical Principles of Programming  

6.13  A Sequence for Programming Annual Training  

6.14  Managing the Training Process  

6.15  The Future of Programming Training  

7.  A COMPENDIUM OF STRENGTH TRAINING METHODS   425

7.1  Resistance Training Methods  

     Maximal Methods
     Supramaximal Methods
     Circamaximal Methods
     Reactive Methods
     Miscellaneous Methods

7.2  PNF as a Training System   434

7.2.1  Definition and Scope of PNF
7.2.2  Relationship of PNF to physical conditioning  
7.2.3  The fundamentals of PNF  

      7.2.3.1  The principles of PNF   
      7.2.3.2  Procedures of PNF   
      7.2.3.3  Patterns of PNF   
      7.2.3.4  Positions and Postures of PNF  
      7.2.3.5  Pacing in PNF   

7.2.4  Modifications to PNF  
7.2.5  Functional Neuromuscular Conditioning  

7.3  Muscle Training 

     7.3.1  A summary of movements of the joints 
     7.3.2  Examination of some Joint Actions  

7.4  Use of the Strength Training Compendium  

8.  DESIGNING SPORT SPECIFIC STRENGTH PROGRAMMES   449

8.1  Preliminary Considerations  

8.2  Needs Analysis and Sports Modelling  

8.3  The Training Programme  

8.4  Classification of Exercises for Sports Training

     Weightlifting Exercises
     Powerlifting Exercises
     Hybrid Lifting Exercises

8.5  Overtraining 

8.6  Restoration and Stress Management  

     Stress and restorative measures
     Application of restorative measures
     Restorative means
     Massage methods
     Massage variables
     Complexes and Periodisation in Restoration
     Research into Restoration Methods

8.7  The Use of Testing

8.8  Principles of Safety in Strength Training  

8.9  Safety and Training Apparel  

     8.9.1  Lifting, belts and breathing  
     8.9.2  Shoes and safety  

8.10  Safety and Machine Training  

8.11  Protection by the muscles  

8.12  Towards the Future

     Non-physical Factors
     Lessons from Modern Physics
     Changes of State
     Fuzzy Fitness
     Applications of New Methods
     Innovations in Testing
     Kinaesthetic Manipulation and Education
     Advances in Methods of Coaching

References and Bibliography 

For further information or ordering, write to:  mcsiff@aol.com
__________________________________________________________

FACTS AND FALLACIES OF FITNESS  (Mel C Siff  2000 )  300 pages

BACK COVER INFORMATION

Toe touching is dangerous.  Squats damage your knees.  Deadlifts cause
slipped discs.  Aerobic exercise is essential for cardiac health.  Never hold
your breath during exercise. Ballistic stretching is harmful.  Resistance
training is bad for children.  Weightlifting slows you down and makes you
muscle bound.  Straight leg situps destroy your lower back.  Injuries are
caused if your muscles have the wrong strength ratios. You must do special
exercises to strengthen the rotator cuff muscles.  Leg extensions are safer
than squats.

If you are even vaguely interested in fitness, sport and health, you will
have come across these proclamations and many more.  Have you ever checked to
see if they are true?  Or do you simply follow them blindly?

This book uses biomechanics, physiology, science and logic to investigate
these and hundreds of other beliefs drawn from many years of the author's
experiences in strength training, aerobics instruction, competitive lifting,
sports coaching, sports science and university teaching.  What emerges is a
startling exposé which reveals that many ideas accepted as gospel in the
realm of fitness and sport are more fallacy than fact.

Its heretical chapters will take you on a controversial tour through the
halls of fitness and sports mythology and change your views forever.  Some of
the unique material here has been presented at many conferences throughout
the world and has already made a major impact on the way in which fitness and
sports training is viewed and taught.

If you are a personal trainer, group fitness instructor, sports coach,
physical therapist, any other worker  in the health professions, or simply a
fitness fanatic, then this book is for you.  It will help you raise your
level of professionalism and serve as a valuable resource for years to come.

The author is an internationally renowned sports scientist, consultant and
presenter, who has helped numerous athletes, teams and organisations in their
quest for excellence. He also co-authored Supertraining, one of the most
authoritative textbooks yet published in strength training.

Dr Yuri Verkhoshansky, renowned Russian scientist who pioneered plyometrics:
"Dr Siff is one of the world's leading specialists in sports science,
well-known in many countries.  His encyclopaedic knowledge is most impressive
and is considered by our scientists to be very important for sports science,
as it contains valuable unique ideas and practical methods of training in all
sports."

CONTENTS
___________________________________________

1.  INTRODUCTION  

2.  ALL THOSE FALLACIES 
  
A Compendium of Popular Fitness Fallacies  
Before You Go Any Further  

3.  A DISSECTION GUIDE 

Rules of Exercise?  
How to Distinguish Fact from Fallacy 
Techniques of Persuasion 

4.  DISSECTING THE EXERCISES  

Our First Dissection  
Fallacies Among General Fundamentals  
Fallacies of Cardiovascular and Aerobics Fundamentals 
Strength Fallacies  
Postural Fallacies  

5.  SOME MORE DISSECTIONS  

Fallacies of Warming Up and Stretching  
Fallacies of General Popular Exercises  
Fallacies of Aerobics Classes  
Fallacies of Resistance Exercise  
Fallacies of Equipment and Apparel  
Fallacies of Special Population Training  

6.  FUNDAMENTAL ISSUES    

What is Fitness?  
Fitness in Sport 
Are the Fit Healthier?  
Fat and Fit? 
Is Exercise Testing Necessary?  
What Research does not Tell You  
Pain and Gain  
What is Stability?  
The Specificity of Movement Patterns  
Is Lactic Acid a Toxin?  
Spinal Terminology  
What is Fatigue?  
Is Muscle Fibre Typing Valuable?   
Types of Muscle Contraction   

7.  CARDIOVASCULAR ISSUES    

Matters of the Heart  
An Irregular Heart may be Healthier  
Oxygen Debt?   
Heart Rate and Cardiovascular Fitness  
How Strenuous is that Exercise? 
The Heart is not just a Pump  

8.  BIOMECHANICAL ISSUES  

Myths of Antagonistic Muscles  
A Flat Back?  
Back Facts and Figures  
Back Pain and the Mind  
Strength and Connective Tissue  
Back Pain and Evolution  
Foot Mechanics and Shoes  
The Effect of Head Position on Strength  
What is Hyperextension?  
The Dogma of Isokinetics  
Strength Training and Muscle Tension 
What Newton really Said  
Correct Pelvic Tilt?  
Safe Lifting  
Correct Lumbar Lifting Posture?  
Lifting Revisited 
Weight Training and the Back 
Lumbar Pelvic Rhythm 
Inflexibility or Spurious Muscle Tension?  
Triphasic Muscle Action  
Diaphragm and Stabilising 
Correct Sitting Posture? 

9.  AEROBICS ISSUES       

What is Aerobics Really?  
Is Low Impact Safer? 
Dumbbells in Aerobics Classes  
Plyometrics in Aerobics ?  
Heart Rate in Low or High Impact Aerobics  
Elastic Band Aid for Aerobics  
Structural Exercises?  
Callanetics?  
PNF Aqua-Exercise  
Toe-Heel Doctrine in Aerobics 
Mind-Body Aerobics 

10. FLEXIBILITY ISSUES   

Is Flexibility Training Necessary?  
Active, Passive and Other Stretches 
Do You need a Warmup?  
Facts on Warming Up  

11. GENERAL TRAINING ISSUES 

Progressive Overload? 
Structural vs Functional Training  
The Bodybuilding Paradigm 
Is Symmetric Training advisable?  
Autoregulating Progressive Resistance Exercise  
Hybrid Training - A Strength Training Innovation 
Loadless Training  
Using PNF in Training  
What is Periodisation?  
Comparison of Training Regimes 
Design of Sports Training Programmes 
Gorilla Power 

12. STRENGTH AND RESISTANCE ISSUES   

Scientific Resistance Training in Sport  
Resistance Training for Different Purposes 
Bigger, Faster, Stronger?  
Speed-Strength Training  
Eccentrics and Muscle Soreness  
Strength and Size  
Closed vs Open Chain Exercise 
Slow Training and No Momentum? 
Strength and Gender  
Peripheral Heart Action  
Competitive Lifting for Juveniles? 
Muscle Hypertrophy Formulae? 
The Hardgainer 
Muscle Pain for Gain? 

13. SAFETY ISSUES  

Exercise Readiness Questionnaire  
Dangerous Exercises: Fact or Fiction?  
Safety Mania  
Safety in Exercise  
Contraindicated Exercise May Protect  
Muscles may not Protect  
Are Ballistics Dangerous?  
Types of Overtraining  
Personal Liability  
Safety in the Health Club  
Equipment Safety 

14. PERSONAL TRAINING ISSUES    

The Personal Trainer  
Becoming a Successful Personal Trainer  
Instructions and Performance  
The Art of Public Speaking  
Fitness Guru Kit  
Skinfold Champions  
Bodybuilding Anorexia  
Rules of Treatment

15. SPECIFIC EXERCISE ISSUES   

Abominable Abdominals  
Ab Mania  
Abdominal and Trunk Exercise  
Beyond Bent Knee Situps 
Straight Leg Situps  
Leg Raises - Sane or Insane?  
Why Situp Testing? 
Islated Muscle Testing? 
Is there a Bicep Curl?  
Special Rotator Cuff Exercises?  
All Squats the Same?

16. EQUIPMENT ISSUES   

Training Machines  
Safety and Machine Training 
Machine Testing? 
Equipment Purchase Questionnaire  
Passive Exercise Systems  
Lifting, Belts and Breathing  
Shoes and Safety  
Ball Balance Training  
 
17. PLYOMETRICS ISSUES   

What is Plyometrics?  
Understanding Plyometrics  
Powermetrics, Not Plyometrics! 
Non Impact Plyometrics   
Asymmetric Plyometrics 
Plyometrics and the Brain - The Missing Dimension 

18. BRAIN  AND MIND ISSUES    

The Brain-Mind Link 
Neural Changes with Training 
Mental Preparation in Sport  
The Mind and Body Shaping 
The Endorphin Story  
Auto-Mind Training 

19. HEALTH ISSUES   

Exercise and Stress 
AIDS Tales 
Losing Weight? 
Spot Reduction Revisited  
Slimming with High Carbohydrate Diets
Bouncing for Life?  
X-Rays and Your Health  
The Greatest Medical Challenge? 

20. NUTRITION AND DRUG ISSUES  

The Cholesterol Debate 
Butter or Margarine? 
Fat Substitutes 
Fad Diets  
Food Consumption to Test Fitness? 
Low Fat Dairy Substitutes?  
Slim Before Breakfast  
Sugar for Energy? 
Calorie Counting  
Health Watch:  Paracetamol, IUD, Inderal and Other 
Left Handed Food  
Nutrition for Performance 
Synchronised Sports Nutrition  
The Steroid Game 
Steroids for Endurance?  
The Farce of Steroid Testing 
Food and Behaviour 
Eat Right For Your Blood Type 
The Creatine Story 

21. EASTERN TRAINING ISSUES        

The Chinese System of Quantal Training  
Chinese Secrets  
Adaptogens and Other New Ideas 
Kinaesthetic Manipulation  
Sports Restoration and Massage 

22.  CONCLUSION    

23.  SOURCES OF INFORMATION  

For further information or ordering, write to:  mcsiff@aol.com
_______________________________________________________

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