Posts Tagged ‘President-ISPA’

Coaches Need Credentials-Think ISPA

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

Last night I spoke to a group of coaches on bullying and teasing. What impressed me about this group was the wide variations in the range of knowledge about working with young people in athletics. It reminded me and energized me that our mission at the International Sports Professionals Association-ISPA is a valuable one. COACHES NEED TO BE CREDENTIALED to assure that they keep continuing to learn and also adhere to high standards of ethics to work with young people.

Here at ISPA we credential coaches. Coaches should also keep in mind that this credential is important for their career advancement. Even if you are a volunteer coach it is important to be credentialed. Look through our web site for more details.  www.TheSportsProfessionals.com

Dr. John E. Mayer, President-ISPA

Not a bad year for ISPA Pres.

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

Hi All;

Well, Sunday was the 32nd running of the Chicago Marathon. I am pleased to say I finished with a PR. On September 13th I ran the Chicago 1/2 Marathon and also set a PR. In June I ran the Seattle Marathon and in January both Justin (Justin Mayer-Executive Director of ISPA.) and I ran the Arizona Marathon. It was the first time we ran together the entire distance as he always beat me in any event we ran in. (Talk about a good example of Family Fit!) All in all it was a good year for running for me. I’m looking forward to next year.

BTW, the crowds lining the streets in Chicago were amazing. There were more people out watching this year’s race than I have ever seen. That was kind of bitter sweet as it reminded me of what could have been for the 2016 Olympics.

John Mayer, President-ISPA

ISPA Position Opening

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Position Opening:

Title: Recruitment Director- International

Description:

The International Sports Professionals Association-ISPA, has an opening for an individual to solicit professionals in the following categories: Psychologists, Physicians, Social Workers, Counselors, Pastoral Ministers, Ministers, Chiropractors, Nutritionists, Physical Therapists, Coaches, trainers, school counselors, and students in all these areas; to apply to become credentialed through our organization so that they can enhance their careers in serving the field of sports in many aspects or to start a career in sports. The professionals in ISPA serve sports at all levels.

In these trying economic times the field of sports along with the entertainment field have maintained its viability. There is no better time to encourage professionals to look into new revenue streams and professional opportunities.

The model this position is based on is the independent sales representative model that is traditional in many industries.

Qualifications:

  • The individual should be capable of working independently with accountability to the main office.
  • Ideally, the individual should have strong background in sports and possibly contacts in the sports world.
  • The candidate should be self-motivated.
  • The candidate should adhere to the highest standards of professionalism in their professional demeanor, appearance and communication skills.
  • The candidate should have excellent writing skills, computer and Internet skills, and be experienced in Internet sales techniques.

Compensation:

Negotiable commission commensurate upon experience and skills.

Contact:

Dr. John E. Mayer, President ISPA

JMayer2@aol.com

Email inquires only. Submit resume and letter of interest and qualifications.

~Position Open Immediately~

Athlete Hero

Monday, September 14th, 2009

This week’s Sports Illustrated, September 14, 2009 issue, has a story for all of us. Written by Selena Roberts and appearing on the very last page of the magazine in the ‘Point After’ column, she writes a poignant article about a high school athlete.

It is an article about what is most joyous and what is most sad in the lives of our teenagers. The article is about a high School athlete, Kaleb Eulls, an outstanding student and athlete from Mississippi. Kaleb was on a bus one morning when another student, a 14-year-old girl took out a gun from her backpack and threatened revenge for being bullied. Kaleb was able to disarm her (Please get this magazine and read the article) and save anyone from getting hurt. Ms. Roberts details how modest and hardworking Kaleb is in his everyday life apart from this incident. He remained that way throughout the national attention he received as a result of this heroic deed.

In the last two weeks I have given many presentations on bullying and teasing at schools in my professional role as a clinical psychologist. I have also just finished publishing a very affordable and comprehensive manual for schools to apply to their school to STOP and PREVENT bullying and teasing behavior among students. My goal is to provide schools with tools they can use without expending enormous resources and money. (Comparable programs cost in the thousands of dollars-mine is a straightforward, hard-hitting manual for schools for $25.)

The appearance of this article, in a magazine devoted to sports underscores the seriousness of this problem of bullying and teasing among students of all ages. Children, teens, adults are being hurt and killed by this behavior. It is time we stopped it in our society. In the next few weeks I will have a booklet available on www.NogginPower2.com, I call them Mini-Manuals, for parents on this issue as well.

We could have lost this special young man, Kaleb Eulls, innocently because of this deadly behavior of teasing and bullying others. Help stop it NOW!

Dr. John E. Mayer-President, ISPA

Position Opening-ISPA

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Position Opening:

Title: Recruitment Director- International

Description:

The International Sports Professionals Association-ISPA, has an opening for an individual to solicit professionals in the following categories: Psychologists, Physicians, Social Workers, Counselors, Pastoral Ministers, Ministers, Chiropractors, Nutritionists, Physical Therapists, Coaches, trainers, school counselors, and students in all these areas; to apply to become credentialed through our organization so that they can enhance their careers in serving the field of sports in many aspects or to start a career in sports. The professionals in ISPA serve sports at all levels.

In these trying economic times the field of sports along with the entertainment field have maintained its viability. There is no better time to encourage professionals to look into new revenue streams and professional opportunities.

The model this position is based on is the independent sales representative model that is traditional in many industries.

Qualifications:

  • The individual should be capable of working independently with accountability to the main office.
  • Ideally, the individual should have strong background in sports and possibly contacts in the sports world.
  • The candidate should be self-motivated.
  • The candidate should adhere to the highest standards of professionalism in their professional demeanor, appearance and communication skills.
  • The candidate should have excellent writing skills, computer and Internet skills, and be experienced in Internet sales techniques.

Compensation:

Negotiable commission commensurate upon experience and skills.

Contact:

Dr. John E. Mayer, President

ISPA

Email inquires only. Submit resume and letter of interest and qualifications.

~Position Open Immediately~

The Success of Pro Sports

Friday, August 21st, 2009

It is astounding that pro team owners focus their energy on the raw materials (players) in their businesses and not on what obtained the lofty status of pro sports in the US, that is marketing, sales and branding of sport. They treat this raw material as if it is a precious commodity, when in reality it is not. There is plenty of raw material available. Pro sports in the United States didn’t get to be such a lucrative industry because of the raw materials, the players, it got to be lucrative because of how it was brilliantly sold to the American Public.

We would have less problem with the thug mentality in pro sports, cheating in pro sports, scandals, doping, etc. If the focus was put back on what made pro sports successful in the first place. It wasn’t the raw materials it was the SELL.

Dr. John Mayer, President

Young Athletes and Rest

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

This is an article I wrote for our ISPA newsletter, please review it and remember as soccer and football camps open up here in the next weeks that athletes need recovery (rest) time. More injuries occur because the young body is over taxed than any other cause.

Recovery Time

Recovery time between intervals during workouts is often a neglected part of training. We would encourage you to pass this information along to the athletes and programs you are working with as professionals. Optimizing recovery time can enhance performance greatly.

High intensity performance/workout – long recovery Workouts or performances that only last 20 to 30 seconds are typically at a person’s maximum exertion. To get the most out of your performance, you have to be able to produce maximum power, which means the recovery period between efforts has to be long enough to allow your muscles to fully recharge. Such short and intense workouts call upon the body’s ATP-CP system, its immediate energy system. In such high intensity exertion you burn through your available immediate energy supply within seconds. To recharge that energy source you need 5-8 minutes of recovery time. Encourage easy walking/jogging/ coasting on the bike, gently floating in the water, etc. to recover.

High intensity performance/workout – equal recovery We’re talking here about all-out workouts/performances that last longer than sprints, like speed work and VO max intervals. If this is a workout, the purpose is to adapt to repeated maximal efforts. For this training to be effective, you don’t want to have complete recovery of the immediate energy system (see above) before the athlete performs/works out again. To do this keep the recovery times the same as the interval time. So, if we are talking about 30 seconds to 4-minute performance/workout interval add more intervals or an additional set rather than make each effort longer.

Longer workouts – shorter recovery If your workouts are designed to improve your maximum sustainable pace then your intervals should be 10-30 minutes long, maybe longer. The intensity for these intervals should be near and a little below your lactate threshold (the maximum sustainable intensity you can hold over 8 or more minutes). The idea behind this type of work is to accumulate as much time possible at this workload to push your body to adapt. These workouts help to run a faster marathon or ride a faster century. Good recovery time between efforts – typically 50-75% of the duration of the work period (8-minute effort/6 minutes recovery, 12-minute effort/8 minutes recovery, 20-minute effort, 10 minutes recovery)- allows you to maintain the right intensity/pace in your second, third, and maybe even fourth interval. A common mistake we see is that athletes often shorten their recovery periods during these workouts because they feel rested well before the next interval is supposed to start. What results is that you will fatigue in the middle of your third or fourth interval and have to spend more time overall resting from the entire workout.

Max Workouts/performances – no recovery Runs, rides, swims at a steady aerobic pace. These are very long—20 minutes on up to an hour or more. These efforts are sometimes split into two or even three intervals, you may stop or slow down during this extended effort, but a true recovery period is not necessary between those efforts. Your recovery period starts when you finish your workout or performance. These workouts build overall endurance.

We talked about this recovery in the context of running, biking, and swimming, but coaches, be mindful of these needs for team sports as well. Another common practice we see is coaches, especially at the younger levels not giving athletes time to recover during team practices, football summer drills, etc.

Dr. John Mayer, President, ISPA

Young Athletes& Social Skills

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

By now, you’ve heard the news of the altercation between the NHL star, Patrick Kane, and a cab driver in Buffalo, NY. Our comments here won’t be to take sides and jump into the latest media circus, rather to emphasize the need for young star athletes to be educated in the ways of the world. This is not exclusively the need of professional athletes. Athletes, star athletes, at all levels are so often ‘taken out of society’ by coaches, parents, school officials, handlers and so forth. When this is done, basic social skills are lost. So many of the professionals who are credentialed by ISPA work with athletes call for this need. And, so many of our credentialed professionals can provide this type of life-coaching. I myself, years ago wrote a book titled, You’re Not the Only One on This Planet about the lost art of civility among us.

Idea, new professional contracts could set aside 1/2% for social training. That would be more than enough fees for one of our professionals to offer mentoring on social skills.

Dr. John Mayer

President-ISPA

Juiced!

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Why I Juiced-Article

For a well written expose on steriods and professional athletes check out the article in today’s Chicago Sun Times:

http://www.suntimes.com/sports/baseball/1681419,CST-SPT-parque23.article

Written by a former major league ballplayer, it details how he got involved in steriods and the thinking behind his actions.

Dr. John Mayer, President

International Sports Professionals Association

High School Football Warning

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Believe it or not but high school football practice is in full swing around the US. A new study reported in The Journal of Athletic Training that high school football players experience greater acceleration forces to their heads when they collide with other players than college players do increasing the danger of injuries such as concussions. The lead investigator of the study, Steven Broglio of the University of Illinois recommends that coaches spend more time teaching the fundamentals in techniques to players, especially keeping your head up and avoiding using the top of the helmet to collide with another player as this can increase the possibility of cervical injury. Pass this alarm onto high school coaches you work with.

Also, speaking of football, congratulations to my friend, Coach Frank Lenti of Mt. Carmel High School in Chicago who was just named by Chicago Magazine in their ‘Best of Chicago’ article as the best football coach in Chicago. Yes, best football coach, not high school football coach, football coach, period. Congratulations Frank!

Dr. John Mayer, President

The International Sports Professionals Association