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#Spinning bike workout registration#

Names Aerin Shaw as Chief Operating Officer".

Mad Dogg Athletics has trained over 200,000 instructors in its Spinning program and has reached millions of fitness enthusiasts in over 80 countries worldwide through a network of over 35,000 fitness facilities. The partnership includes the development of three new commercial Spinner bikes along with collaborations on new products, marketing solutions and education programs in the future. In 2015 Mad Dogg Athletics partnered with Precor, a leading provider of personalized fitness solutions, to create a new line of commercial Spinner bikes. In 2004 Goldberg retired from Mad Dogg Athletics and the Spinning brand. In 2003 Star Trac became the bike manufacturer. “It was unique-the first time equipment, training, and philosophy was sold together,” Goldberg said in 2004. Goldberg and Baudhuin trained thousands of instructors. By 1996 there were more than a thousand Official Spinning Facilities spanning over 30 countries. The Spinning program expanded in the United States and worldwide. Goldberg and Baudhuin made a deal with Schwinn, which debuted bikes at a trade show in 1995. By 1994, however, Spinning made national news on Rolling Stone Magazine’s “hot list as the ‘hot exercise’ you need to try.” The first Spinning brand indoor cycling programs were held in Crunch gyms in New York, but were only regionally popular at that time. In 1993 Goldberg and his business partner, cycling enthusiast John Baudhuin, launched the Spinning indoor cycling fitness program in Santa Monica, California, through their business entity Mad Dogg Athletics, Inc. In 1992 he moved the class to Karen Voight Fitness, in Hollywood, for more exposure. In 1989 Goldberg opened the Johnny G Spinning Center, in Santa Monica, California, with bikes he built. Goldberg's early Spinning prototypes were targeted toward endurance athletes as a substitute for outdoor bicycle training, and allowed the athlete to train year-round regardless of outdoor weather conditions.

The Spinning indoor cycling program was developed by South African endurance bicycle racer Johnny Goldberg (known as Johnny G) in the mid-1980s after he was struck by a car while training for a race at night.
