athletic training
Today's athletes face tremendous pressure to excel physically, academically, and to be role models in the community. This pressure often leads to frustration, anger, violence, abuse, self-doubt, alcoholism, drug addiction, inability to study, and negative outlets for stress.
Uncommon Results Athletic Program is designed to make a difference with athletes both on and off the field. Our program is designed to motivate players to set and achieve goals far beyond their current reality. We challenge players to be better athletes and better human beings.
Some of the intended outcomes that you will see after your team participates in an Uncommon Results Athletic Program include:
- better season records;
- improved team morale;
- team cohesiveness;
- team support;
- increased individual commitment;
- more enthusiasm and positive attitudes;
- reduction in missed practices;
- increased attendance of classes;
- new excitement towards learning;
- championship attitudes;
- decreased violence; and,
- increased self esteem.
- Then there are the results that won't be as obvious, better communication with loved ones, lighter tempers, more self-control, and an understanding of consequences and ramifications which will insure better decision making skills.
Uncommon Results Athletic Program is also successful because we deal with all of the baggage that the players bring with them. Many student athletes come from broken homes, have absent parents, are raised in poverty, and exposed to violence. Over the years Uncommon Results has worked with people from all walks of life, ranging from corporate executives to youth in prison-- and they are all in some way motivated and controlled by their past. A component of the Uncommon Results Program includes exploring the past, in order to become responsible and in control of the future. A person cannot change how they were raised, or what happened to them, but the past does not have to dictate the future. Uncommon Results breaks the mold of past behavior to create openness for a new future.
We are confident that our program will make a tremendous difference and compliment your current athletic program.
In fact, according to a study at University of Massachusetts and Northeastern University, where they studied ten major universities between 1991 and 1993, student athletes only made up 3.3% of the student body, but were responsible for 19% of reported assaults on women.
Scarlet Knights - March 1999
Scarlet Knights 2 - March 1999
Wenonah High School - November 1995
Wenonah High School 2 - November 1995
Peter D. Goodson
- January 2002
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