
The Athlete's Shoulder is an outstanding text written by a vast array of experts in the shoulder rehabilitation field - Kevin Wilk, Mike Reinold, Glenn Fleisig, James Andrews, and many, many others. It's also over 800 pages worth of research, summaries, protocols, images, diagrams, and evidenced-based rehabilitation programs - all of it on the shoulder alone!
I've leafed through a copy that a physical therapist friend owns, but he's highly protective of it and keeps it at his side at all times in his office. So, I finally broke down and picked up a copy for myself. My first reaction was: "Good lord, this thing is enormous!" And at 800+ pages, you better believe it is.
However, the book is a must-own for any trainer who works with overhead athletes - tennis players, baseball pitchers, volleyball strikers, handball throwers, and so forth. There's just a gold mine of information in the book that you can't find anywhere else. Though the price tag is steep (about $120 on Amazon), it's well-worth it - just ask any physical therapist or trainer who works with injured athletes, and they'll confirm that belief.
I also picked up a copy of Low Back Disorders, written by back guru Stuart McGill. This book personally hits home for me, as I've been rehabilitating a herniated disc in my spine around L4-L5. I've been seeing a chiropractor, neuroscientist, and have been following the excellent advice in the $10 book Treat Your Own Back by Robin McKenzie. However, I wanted to pick up a book that had a little more substance to it, and McGill's book comes highly recommended by trainers and physical therapists around the world.

I've only briefly skimmed a few pages of the book, but I can immediately understand how it will be useful in designing training protocols for both healthy and injured populations at Driveline Baseball.
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