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Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Ball games
Dave Pelz's Short Game Bible is the first book in a four-book series, The Dave Pelz Scoring Game Series. The next volume in the series will be Dave Pelz's Putting Bible.
"He who rules the short game collects the gold." --Dave Pelz's Golden Rule of Golf
Fed up with trying to imitate the pros, buying the latest expensive equipment, and seeing your handicap stay the same? The first book by bestselling author and internationally revered golf instructor Dave Pelz since Putt Like the Pros, his bestselling classic, Dave Pelz's Short Game Bible can show you the way to lower scores by improving your short game. The result of decades of scientific research studying thousands of golfers, Dave's philosophy is as simple as it is revolutionary and groundbreaking: Instead of practicing the wrong things the right way, or the right things the wrong way, Pelz shows you how to find your own personal weaknesses and how to improve them to efficiently lower your scores. Packed with all the knowledge, charts, and photos needed to learn from the master, Dave Pelz's Short Game Bible is the essential book for every golfer who's looking to improve his or her game.
Dave's approach to golf is easy to understand: 80 percent of the strokes golfers lose to par are determined by their play within 100 yards of the green--the crucial scoring game. The most important and yet the least focused-on aspect of golf, your short game, can indeed make or break your entire game. And nobody teaches the short game like Dave Pelz. His renowned golf schools and clinics focus exclusively on putting and the short game, attracting top players like Tom Kite, Colin Montgomerie, two-time U.S. Open champion Lee Janzen, reigning PGA champion Vijay Singh, Steve Elkington, Payne Stewart, Peter Jacobsen, and many LPGA players including Annika Sorenstam and Liselotte Neumann. The pros know, as you are about to learn, that while others teach golfers how to swing, Dave Pelz teaches golfers how to score . . . and win.
A former physicist for NASA, Dave brings a scientific rigor to his research and instruction that has made him the top short-game expert in the world. Dave has observed and then taught thousands of golfers to improve their ability to score better. The years he has spent studying the short game, including chipping, lobs, pitches, distance wedges, and bunker play, have resulted in an unequaled expertise and a fascinating body of knowledge on golf, with the statistics and data to back it up. In this new book, Dave for the first time shares the understanding and techniques he has taught the pros, including a wide array of innovative tests and exercises for mastering those deceptive and high-pressure shots of the short game.
Dave Pelz's Short Game Bible is an essential book for golfers of all levels. Covering everything golfers need to know to improve their short game, Dave's system can--and will--help you to consistently shoot lower scores.
Explores the luxury lifestyle surrounding the leisure activity of
Behind the Silver Fern is a comprehensive history of rugby's most
famous yet enigmatic team, the New Zealand All Blacks, told by the
men who have had the honour of wearing the iconic black jersey.
From the legendary 1905 'Originals' all the way through to the
World Cup team of 2019, this unique history of the All Blacks lifts
the lid on their experiences like never before. Thanks to
exhaustive archival research and exclusive new material garnered
from a vast array of interviews with players and coaches from
across the decades, Tony Johnson and Lynn McConnell unveil the
compelling truth of what it means to play for the most successful
team in the history of sport - all the glory and the drama on the
field, the great friendships off it, and the bonds of a brotherhood
that extend far beyond the bright lights of a Test match. Absorbing
and illuminating, this is the ultimate history of All Black rugby -
told, definitively, by the men who have been there and done it.
The 1994 Major League Baseball season promised to be memorable.
Long-standing batting and pitching standards were threatened,
including the revered single-season home run record. The Montreal
Expos and New York Yankees were delivering remarkable campaigns. In
August, acting commissioner Bud Selig called a halt to the season
amid the League's latest labor dispute. The shutdown led to a
lockout as well as cancellation of more than 900 regular season
games, the scheduled expanded rounds of playoffs, and that year's
World Series. Like all labor struggles, it was fundamentally about
control--of salaries, of players' ability to decide their own
fates, and of the game itself. This book chronicles Major League
Baseball's turbulent '94 season and its ripple effects. It
highlights earlier labor struggles and the roles performed by
individuals from John Montgomery Ward, David Fultz, and Robert
Murphy to Marvin Miller, Andy Messersmith, Jim "Catfish" Hunter,
and Donald Fehr. Also examined are the ballplayers' own
organizations, from the Players League of the early 1890s to the
still potent Major League Baseball Players Association doing battle
with team owners and their representatives.
Since the first edition of this widely acclaimed text the landscape
of Golf Tourism has changed considerably. A focus on family
holidays has emerged, with an increased emphasis on the
customization of vacations. Marketers are more inventive, packaging
golf with wine, cycling, food and spas. Expectations have also
increased in terms of customer service and value for money, and
technology and social media have revolutionized both the
decision-making process and booking procedures for golf holidays.
Golf continues to represent the largest sports-related travel
market valued at GBP30 billion with over 50 million golf tourists
travelling the world to play on some of the estimated 40,000
courses. Golf Tourism is the leading text for both students and
practitioners and the completely updated and revised new edition
discusses the latest issues.
The first book published in either English or Spanish about the
cultural significance of Maradona. Covers Maradona as portrayed in
fiction literature and cinema, documentary films, non-fiction
literature, mass media and music, among other platforms. Includes
chapters on Maradona as represented in the culture and media of
Argentina, Italy, Mexico, Spain and the UK, highlighting the global
appeal of a volume that is already focused on an international
figure. By discussing how a sporting icon is constructed, codified,
and imagined in popular culture, the book's relevance goes beyond
the specific case of Maradona and appeals to any scholars and
students interested in the links between sport, culture, and
society.
Inspired by and written for the devout Angels fan, this lively and
detailed book explores important facts and figures from the
baseball team's storied history. Decades of tradition, victories
and defeats, name revisions, and Hall of Fame inductions are
distilled into an entertaining list that journeys from one to
100 into what makes a true fan of the Los Angeles Angels of
Anaheim. From the essentials, such as the Nolan Ryan
era, to the lesser-known tidbits, including the team's origin
and what started the Rally Monkey, this book is the ultimate
resource to Angels knowledge and trivia and even suggests the best
places to eat and drink before a game.
Candid, outspoken and supremely honest, and including interviews with those close to him, 2 Sides is Rio's unique story: from his early days in Peckham, through to picking up the Champions League trophy on a rainy summer's night in Moscow, 2 Sides is the tell-all account of an extraordinary and controversial life in the game.
On winning and losing; on defending and attacking; on Moyes, management and fellow players; on John Terry, lost friendships and ongoing rivalries; on the love and hate of the beautiful game; and on playing for club, country and for yourself - this is a full
spectrum of life at the very top of the footballing tree, and a superb retrospective of a truly fascinating career.
Very few people are aware that women were active in baseball in the
United States as early as 1866. In this volume, Gai Berlage reports
the histories of the umpires, players, owners, and sportswriters as
well as the teams. Professional and amateur teams are covered as
well as hard and softball. In 1974, when the Supreme Court forced
Little League to change its charter and permit girls to play
baseball on boys' teams, feminists cheered, heralding the decision
as a significant victory. How short their memories were! Had
investigators only looked to baseball history, they would have
learned, much to their surprise, that women had been avidly playing
baseball for over a hundred years--as far back as 1866. In 1928,
one female Indiana player helped lead her team to the state
championship and on to the national tournament in American League
Junior Baseball. And during World War II, Wrigley started the
All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. In fact, not until
1952 was there a rule barring women from being professional
players. Women in Baseball offers the details of this compelling,
largely overlooked aspect of baseball history, introducing the
reader to a whole new cast of little-known stars on men's teams:
Lizzie Arlington, a pitcher in 1898; Alta Weiss, a pitcher for 15
years in the early 20th century; Lizzie Murphy, who played first
base for the American All-Stars against the Boston Red Sox; Jackie
Mitchell, who became a media sensation in 1931 when she struck out
Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. The author also reveals the stories of
women's professional and amateur teams--Josie Caruso and her Eight
Men, the Chicago Bloomer Girls, and the all-black Dolly Vardens of
Philadelphia--and introduces women who distinguished themselves as
players, umpires, and team owners. Women in Baseball explores the
history of women in baseball from a socio-cultural perspective,
analyzing how it was forgotten in the light of residual Victorian
values that governed women's lives for so many decades.
What was it that made Steve Bloomer, the 'Destroying Angel' so
special? A remarkable goalscoring record and a supreme ability
count for much, but so do an enigmatic personality and
incident-packed life that has never been fully explored - until
now. In this marvellously entertaining story of his life, we
accompany Bloomer on his dramatic rise from tough Black Country
beginnings in 1874 to goalscoring feats straight out of Boy's Own
Paper. His famous playing career shares the stage with remarkable
episodes in Bloomer's life never before fully researched, including
his sorrow and bravery through four years in a German prison camp,
and his first tentative steps into the pioneering world of coaching
in Germany. Holland and Spain, where his triumphant managerial
spell brought glory to 'the Accrington Stanley of Spanish
football', not to mention a novel use for olive oil. Then there are
the twilight days as a scout, respected pundit and honorary old un
at the Baseball Ground. Steve Bloomer died in 1938 but 60 years
later, at their new Pride Park Stadium, Derby County ran out to the
unique anthem Steve Bloomer's Watching. Over a century since he
made his debut, his name is still the most famous in the club's
history.
The '27 Yankees is the story of the most legendary and revered team
in the annals of baseball: the 1927 New York Yankees, whose magical
name even today evokes the standard of excellence in America s most
treasured sport. The book is the definitive historical account of
the men and their accomplishments from Spring Training through the
World Series. Through the detailed and carefully crafted
recreations of each game and events off the diamond, the reader
follows the exciting day-to day exploits of Yankee legends Babe
Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Tony Lazzeri, Earle Combs, Waite Hoyt, Herb
Pennock, and teammates. Action coverage of all American and
National League games and pennant races are also chronicled plus
much more.
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Blindsided
(Paperback)
Michael Lynagh, Mark Eglinton
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Discovery Miles 2 180
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Former Australian rugby union legend and World Cup winner, now
acclaimed television sports pundit, on his glittering career in the
game - and how close he came to losing his life. Few players in the
history of the game have had as illustrious a career as Wallaby
fly-half and captain Michael Lynagh. In an era when Australia took
the rugby world by storm with their glittering array of mercurial
talent, in chief orchestrator and courageous captain Lynagh they
had a pivotal figure at fly-half who shaped their style of play and
at the same time played a major ambassadorial role in the world
game. Yet fast forward to that April day in 2012, as Lynagh lay
partially blinded in intensive care at the Royal Brisbane Hospital,
his life hanging by a thread following a major stroke, his wife and
three young boys on the other side of the world. The day that
defined the rest of his life. Lynagh's story is one of corruscating
highs and crippling lows. It's the personal tale of a sportsman
playing to the extremes of his profession, but also a human tale of
surviving debilitating trauma and finding a new meaning to life.
When we first meet him, Michael Oher is one of thirteen children by
a mother addicted to crack; he does not know his real name, his
father, his birthday, or how to read or write. He takes up
football, and school, after a rich, white, Evangelical family
plucks him from the streets. Then two great forces alter Oher: the
family's love and the evolution of professional football itself
into a game where the quarterback must be protected at any cost.
Our protagonist becomes the priceless package of size, speed, and
agility necessary to guard the quarterback's greatest
vulnerability, his blind side.
The bestselling author of Bo chronicles the amazing story of the
first string Michigan basketball team--composed entirely of
freshmen--that took the 1992 NCAA Tournament by storm and began the
1993 season burdened by more expectations than any team in
collegiate history. 8 pages of photos.
Martin O'Neill is one of the most fascinating and respected figures
in football. On Days Like These tells the story of his remarkable
career. For the first time, Martin O'Neill reflects on one of the
most varied and successful football careers in the British Isles.
He made his breakthrough playing for Distillery in Northern Ireland
before joining Brian Clough's legendary Nottingham Forest team,
becoming one of the few players who made the epic journey from the
Second Division to the glory years: winning the First Division
championship, two League Cups and back-to-back European Cups.
O'Neill represented Northern Ireland over sixty times, playing
alongside George Best and captaining the side at the 1982 World
Cup, where they reached the quarter-finals. As a manager, O'Neill's
celebrated leadership of Celtic saw them win seven trophies,
including three Scottish Premier League titles; and in England he
successfully led Leicester City to two League Cups and Aston Villa
to an unprecedented three consecutive top six Premier League
finishes. He oversaw the Republic of Ireland reaching the Euros in
2016, when they made it to the second round for the first time in
their history. With a career spanning over fifty years, Martin
tells of his exhilarating highs and painful lows; from the joys of
winning trophies, promotion and fighting for World Cups to being
harangued by fans, boardroom drama, relegation scraps and being
fired. Written with his trademark honesty and humour, On Days Like
These is one of the most insightful and captivating autobiographies
and a must-read for any fans of the beautiful game.
'MASTERFUL' Time Out 'REVELATORY' Scotland on Sunday 'GLORIOUSLY
READABLE' Metro 'FASCINATING' Independent 'EXCELLENT' Telegraph
'ABSORBING' Guardian Winner of the British Sports Book Awards
Football Book of the Year The fifteenth anniversary edition, fully
revised and updated, of Jonathan Wilson's modern classic. In the
modern classic, Jonathan Wilson pulls apart the finer details of
the world's game, tracing the global history of tactics, from
modern pioneers right back to the beginning, when chaos reigned.
Along the way, he looks at the lives of great players and thinkers
who shaped the sport, and probes why the English, in particular,
have proved themselves unwilling to grapple with the abstract.
Fully revised and updated, this fifteenth-anniversary edition
analyses the evolution of modern international football, including
the 2022 World Cup, charting the influence of the great Spanish,
German and Portuguese tacticians of the last decade, whilst
pondering the effects of footballs increased globalisation and
commercialisation.
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