Baby Soccer
baby soccer
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Reusable Cloth Sandwich Bag – Black Soccer $7.55 Think outside the (plastic) bag! These high-quality lunchskins are perfect for sandwiches and snacks on the go and can also be used for messy cosmetics, dog treats, pacifiers, toys and crayons. Available in a variety of hip patterns and colors, these multi-use baggies are the answer to reducing plastic. Take a look at our snack and sub roll sizes in complementary colors and patterns…. |
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ReUsies 2 Pack Snack and Sandwich Reusable Bags The EPA estimates 500 billion to 100 trillion plastic bags are used worldwide every year. A typical school/work lunch contains 3-4 plastic sandwich bags each day amounting to upwards of 1,000 each year for one person. These bags will all be around long after we are gone! ReUsies are a reusable alternative that will keep these baggies out of our landfills. ReUsies come in two convenient sizes, snac… |
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LSU Tigers Apron $13.99 Our fan-friendly sports apron is what every backyard chef will want to wear to their next tailgating event…. |
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Baby Pro: Let’s Play Ball: Baseball- Basketball- Soccer Sports $13.70 BabyPro Let’s Play Ball DVD For your aspiring lil slugger, the BabyPro Let’s Play Ball DVD is a vibrant, stimulating instruction to baseball, basketball, and soccer. Most sports imagery is quick-paced and features many players, a format which is difficult for babies to follow. BabyPro uses bright, vivid sports imagery and slow-motion action sequences to depict the progression from baby to pro. L… |
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Baby Soccer $6.00 A Playful Introduction to Sports (Ages 0-4) Introduce your babies and toddlers to the wonderful world of sports with these fun athletic-themed videos. Involvement in team sports can help build confidence, improve social skills and lead to a lifetime of ph… |
Baby Soccer Hero

Baby Boomers Sports And Gym Injury Risks|avoid Over 40s Exercise Injuries
Due to health care education, more people, who are over forty, those born in 1946 to 1964, commonly known as the baby boomers, are realizing the benefits of taking up sports or exercising in a gym.
This is well and good since exercising regularly severely cut the risks of contracting aging and obesity related potentially killer diseases such as diabetes, heart diseases, stroke, some forms of cancers and many other diseases.
It is indeed heartening to know that more baby boomers are taking charge of their health through regularly exercise to improve their cardiovascular health thus becoming fitter and stronger. However, with more middle aged people exercising and playing some form of sports, instances of injuries sustained from these activities have risen substantially.
In the United States, these gym or sports injuries have become the number 2 reason for people visiting the doctor’s office just behind the common cold, reported by the National Ambulatory Medical Care in 2003.
A Consumer Product Safety Commission research in 1998 found that sports related injuries to baby boomers had risen by 33 percent since 1991 and contributed to US$18.7 billion in medical costs.
Outdoor sports such as tennis, jogging and golf are very popular with people over forties. Not to be outdone, the more body conscious over forties baby boomers are also joining gym memberships in the multitudes.
Gyms all over the developed world are happily reporting booming new memberships year after year with a large pool of their members being the over forty baby boomers brigade, male or female baby boomers irrespective.
As baby boomers get older, their susceptibility to sports injuries rise proportionately. As people age, their body degenerate along with the aging process, although exercising regularly is known to slow down this very degeneration process.
This is particularly so for the risky weekend warriors who take to the running tracks or lifting weights to build their body with gusto during the weekend putting their aging bodies and joints to sudden busts of unaccustomed stressful activities, causing damages to their own bodies unknowingly.
What are the common baby boomer’s sports injuries? How to avoid them?
• Shoulder injuries – Common for those playing squash, tennis, badminton and lifting weights in the gym using wrong form and techniques.
• Elbow injuries – People who play racket games and bodybuilders.
• Back injuries – A very common occurrence in the gym amongst baby boomer bodybuilder wannabes. Also a common injury for golfers who often have to swing their spine.
• Knee injuries – For baby boomers who participate in sports with sudden movements and changes of directions such as squash and soccer.
•Ankle injuries – Usually striking the runners and joggers of long distances.
How to avoid the risks of sports injuries for the over forties?
This is largely common sense which most people know but few do it regularly as part of their exercise routine in so doing, risking injuries which can be avoided.
• Thorough warm of the muscles and joints which will be involved in the exercise or sport.
• Stretching adequately and correctly. Many people stretch in the wrong manner which then may cause even more injuries.
• Take the exercises or sports one step at a time, then as endurance and strength build up over time, you can then increase the intensity of the sport or the exercise.
• Exercise regularly. Not just over the weekend. Your body may not be able to cope with the sudden outburst each weekend.
• Hire a sports personal trainer who can tailor an exercise program suitable to your health condition and guide you safely through the exercises.
So baby boomers, don’t become a victim of your exercises. You want to be fit and healthy, not suffering from pain and despair from what could have been an enjoyable game of healthy sporting activity. Over 40s sports injuries can be avoided.
About the Author
Chris Chew is a personal trainer of actors, pageant winners, models and celebrities. He is the author of Burn Fat Fast, Build Muscles Fast! and runs a fitness school Singapore’s Personal Trainers
Soccer baby clothes?
where can i find footy (soccer) clothes for infants/babies. Im talking about man u, barca, juventus, etc not shirts that say “soccer star” or “soccer player” and crap like that.
check out Worldsoccershop.com you can shop by teams many have kids kits ect.
http://www.worldsoccershop.com/shop-by-team-manchester-united-football-club-manchester-united-07-09-kids-kit–age-3-7-.html
Does it seem like soccer aficionados speak a language all their own? It sure seems like it to me, and I’ve been playing the game for over 20 years. I put an article on the front page of this blog to help explain the most common soccer terms in plain English. Hopefully this list will help soccer moms everywhere (and soccer dads too, for that matter)to better understand what their little athlete is talking about! Click Here For Access: Soccer Terms.
