View Full Version : Does anyone own any Ebooks?
baseballplaya92
10-11-2007, 03:20 PM
Does anyone have any weight training for baseball or any baseball in general ebooks
?
Jake Patterson
10-11-2007, 03:28 PM
Does anyone have any weight training for baseball or any baseball in general ebooks
?
I published one for new coaches a few years back. Are you looking for help on publishing one or are you looking to purchase?
Jake
baseballplaya92
10-11-2007, 03:47 PM
what is the difference between publishing and purchasing?
Jake Patterson
10-11-2007, 06:42 PM
what is the difference between publishing and purchasing?
The question would indicate you are looking at buying. I would PM DeezleDogg and ask him or visit his site and ask -
http://www.maxxtraining.com/
Go Cardinals
10-11-2007, 09:46 PM
what is the difference between publishing and purchasing?
did you really just ask that>?
Purchasing is to buy something.... publishing is to basically be the writer and to have people by it.
Encinitas
10-11-2007, 10:14 PM
did you really just ask that>?
GoCardinals if I could give you some friendly online etiquette advice without sounding like a jerk. I noticed tonight that every single thread I had not previously read showed GoCardinals as the last person to post. While I admire your desire to become a ballplayer, there are times when it's prudent to just learn and not try and comment on every single thread on the site. This is generally true with most boards on net where there is a group of folks discussing a common interest item.
I know that on many sites people without large post counts are sometimes ignored but I don't think that's the case here.
In my case I try and keep with the site daily, and since this site makes it easy with the View Unread link at the top of the thread, it's easy to keep up with conversations. But I don't feel the need to comment on every single thing out there.
Certainly the kid who posted wondering what the difference was between publishing and purchasing gave us all a little chuckle, but it doesn't mean we need to comment. Sometimes you can just let a thread die. Of course I could do the same with this thread, but I just think you shouldn't feel like you need to jack up the post count. Study more clips, do some long toss, keep swinging, that's much more important to your success than commenting on so many threads.
JackB1
10-12-2007, 07:56 AM
there are times when it's prudent to just learn and not try and comment on every single thread on the site.
Agreed. You will come off like a "know-it-all" and people do not like that kind of person at all. Especially when your answers are not correct...like your definition above of what a "publisher" does. He was asking about which area the previous answer was referring to...not that he didn't understand the difference between the two words. You are a 15 or 16 year old kid...now is the time to listen and learn.
baseballplaya, what are you looking for specifically? There are a number of books and websites that I can recommend for training....
baseballplaya92
10-13-2007, 10:32 AM
mostly like training programs for baseball
Right now, the best resource I can recommend is the book "Power Training" by Dos Remedios. He was selected as the NSCA's college strength coach of the year last year. The book is very informative and easy to read. Also it is pretty inexpensive on Amazon. It is definitely the best source of current training information for athletes. PM me if you want some web site sources......
bronxkid
10-13-2007, 05:28 PM
GoCardinals
Study more clips, do some long toss, keep swinging, that's much more important to your success than commenting on so many threads.
GoCardinals,
I think the best posts show your development over time. If we see your posts daily and clips daily we can't distinguish what was bad or good. Sounds like constructive criticism to me, less posting and more working on your baseball skills. :applaud: