Comments about ‘Dave Stroshine in the business of making athletes faster, stronger’

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Published: Tuesday, May 25 2010 12:01 a.m. MDT

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SLCguy

As I understand NCAA by laws. (and pretty well, thank you)

Mr. Harmon it is illegal to use any NCAA athlete to publicize a business. ANY Business.

Congratulations. As this is clearly a thinly disguised advertisement, your lack of knowledge of the rules has just endangered both Heimuli and Harrison.

Fiddler

How would those 2 get in trouble for something Harmon did. You either don't know the rules well enough or it is a horrible rule.

That would mean that if I wanted to get some Ute in trouble, I could just buy commercial time and say that this guy worked with this guy. I don't think you know what you're talking about.

bslack

Wow, SLCguy. I am sure Mr. Harmon is worried as are the athletes you mentioned since you understand the NCAA by laws pretty well, thank you.

Great article on Dave Stroshine providing some excellent training for young athletes.

Expert

The only way that it gets the athlete in trouble is if the athlete benefits from the publicity, such as Dave paying those guys for letting him use their name or recieving a portion of the proceeds. Their is no harm done here. That's neat to know we have someone like this here in Utah.

SLCguy

Or if they workout there for free.

That is a clear violation as well. Hopefully both kids have all their receipts when the NCAA comes calling.

fender

Based on what's reported, I don't see anything special with this program. Any good weight program is tailored to be sport (movement)specific. What are the guy's actual credentials? Is he nationally certified as a strength and conditioning coach? What is his background in physiology? This article does sound more like an ad than a report.

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