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There is no book on how to do competitive diving like this one on the market today that could help improve the performance of any coach, diver, or judge. Hobie Billingsley is regarded as the World's Greatest Diving Coach. His wealth of experience, knowledge, and teaching methods and cues will shorten the learning curve of any serious coach or diver.This is truly the science of competitive diving. Hobie's application of physics that are not well understood are explained in great detail how to perform every dive. The dives are grouped in categories: Forward, backward, reverse, inward, twisting,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
There is no book on how to do competitive diving like this one on the market today that could help improve the performance of any coach, diver, or judge. Hobie Billingsley is regarded as the World's Greatest Diving Coach. His wealth of experience, knowledge, and teaching methods and cues will shorten the learning curve of any serious coach or diver.This is truly the science of competitive diving. Hobie's application of physics that are not well understood are explained in great detail how to perform every dive. The dives are grouped in categories: Forward, backward, reverse, inward, twisting, and concludes with tower diving.This book belongs in the library of every serious coach and diver or school with a competitive diving program. Coaches who run summer diving camps would do well to provide this as a bonus to every one of their dive camp participants to help them learn the correct way to do dives.
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Autorenporträt
Against all odds to be a success, Hobie overcame insurmountable odds to become the World's Greatest Diving Coach in the history of the sport.At the young age of 3 his father walked out on the family leaving him and his older brother and mother penniless during the Great Depression. He fought through hunger and homelessness with the help of two men who mentored him at the Erie, Pennsylvania YMCA.At an early age, he taught himself to swim and when the team needed a diver he tried out and liked the challenge. Eventually he would also become a gymnast and cheerleader for the high school.As his diving skills improved to become the Pennsylvania state high school champion, the coach suggested he compete at the National AAU Championships. There, the top Ohio State University divers gave him pointers he could take back to his coach, and he became the first high school diver to place in the finals of a national championship.He enrolled at Ohio State and became the first All-American for all four years. World War II called him into service in Okinawa where the war with Japan ended and he resumed his college diving career, and head athletic cheerleader on the sidelines for all the football games.After college, Hobie and Bruce Harlan formed a popular clown diving act performing at schools, hotels, and country clubs all over the United States. After a short high school coaching stint, he became only the 2nd diving coach ever hired by a college or university. In 1959, he came to Indiana University to start an unequaled diving dynasty that continues today. He started with very poor facilities and no committed divers with any skills. Then Rick Gilbert came to Indiana when they moved into the new Royer Pool facility. Rick became his first national champion his freshman year that attracted other great talent to the school.He was the first to coach women in any sport, and did so without pay well before Title IX guaranteed equal rights for women athletes in 1972.Along with head swimming coach, Doc Counsilman, together they won 23 Big Ten Championships and 6 NCAA Division I titles.Hobie was selected as the Olympic Diving Coach 5 times and coached 132 National Champions. After retiring in 1989 he gave diving clinics and judged major competitions all over the world, and in 1996 was selected to administer the Olympic Oath to all the judges at the Atlanta Olympics - a great honor.His leadership was evident by forming the World Diving Coaches Association and the United States Diving Coaches Association. In 1983, he received the high honor of being inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame.He continued to have a profound effect on the diving community with the publication of - Diving Illustrated and A Comprehensive View of Competitive Diving, and lectures to divers in summer camps, high school students, and collegiate athletic departments. Born December 2, 1926. Died July 16, 2022