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I stopped blogging to rethink blogging. My plans for my website was to help my student swimmers keep their swimming fresh and current.
My students did like the blog and mentioned it to me. In addition to my students, the blog was popular with other coaches. Because my goal is not to pass on ideas to other coaches or debate other coaches on my blog, I will most likely change the blog to be a Q&A for my students.
If you are one of my students and would like to ask a question, you can post it here for everyone’s benefit or send me an email. Either way, I would be happy to hear from you!
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From my experience, nearly every swimmer starts their triathlon swim too fast. Like high school milers running the first quarter mile under sixty seconds, which would have them breaking the four minute mile, they then “die” about half way through and finish the mile between five and six minutes.
Case in point was a a good athlete this morning swimming a 40 second fifty on the way to a 8:34 500yd swim. Each fifty was progressively slower and he ended up doing some 55 – 57 second fifties.
During the second 500yd swim, I had him start out slow. I wanted a 60 second fifty; but, he gave me a 50 second first fifty and then settled down. We also had him adding a couple breaststrokes each length for sighting. His final time was 9:00 for an easy 500yd swim.
On the final 500yd, I made a change to his head position on the breaststroke and he started off at the right pace. Almost every 50yd lap was faster than the previous one. His freestyle stroke was also better after his breaststroke sighting. His final 500yd swim was his fastest and most comfortable at 8:26. I think we felt this was a pace he could swim for 2000 yd even while sighting every 25 yd.
If you are having trouble swimming longer distances, seriously ask yourself if you are starting out like a high school miler.
Enjoy your swims!
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While I was doing my best running, training at sub seven and six minute pace in the heat of San Antonio, I often jumped in the pool to cool down.
It was an easy swim and slow walk around the pool to cool the legs and body off. If a pool was not available we used cold water from a hose to cool off our legs like they do with race horses.
The Australians in particular were known to combine swimming, running up sand dunes and distance running to produce champions like Herb Elliot.
A light swim after a run helps runners recover. If you are a runner and don’t know how to have a light swim, I highly recommend the Total Immersion program if you want the best swim coaching available.
Enjoy your runs and your swims.
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Google swimming and depression and the most popular articles involve swimming with dolphins to reduce depression.
Yet, it seems like swimming without dolphins also reduces depression per the research below.
Does swimming next to a really, smooth swimmer (animal or human) reduce tension, anxiety and depression better than swimming next to a poor swimmer? How do you feel after a swim and does it matter how they are swimming in the lane next to you?
Think about it.
http://medwelljournals.com/new/5/detail.php?id=5&jid=rjbs&theme=5&issueno=18&articleno=368
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Abstract: |
Swimming can increase the compatibility of depressed patients and reduce their disease symptoms. To assess the effect of swimming as a therapeutic management on depressed Male university students. Among 300 participants from Tabriz medical university 74 student were chosen by using the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), whose scores was higher than 19 and were divided randomly into two groups (control groups = 37 and trial group = 37) then therapeutic method of swimming was used in trial group for 12-15 sessions. At the end of the course 2 groups were again evaluated by the device (BDI). Findings showed that swimming as a therapeutic management has been meaningfully caused the reduction of severity of depression in trial group (p<0/001). and in control group that haven’t received this treatment method, found no statistically reduction in test scores (p>5%). This research suggest that swimming sport could reduce depression symptoms and therefore can be used lonely or with other clinical management to reduce of depression severity.
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We perform like we are in “a zone” when training or racing goes far better than expected.
One of the primary characteristics of being in “the zone” is a higher level of performance compared to perceived effort.
Swimming is a sport where “zone” performance might be more frequent than other sports because we can float and we can use mental focal points rather than effort to enhance our performance. Here are some suggestions to increase the frequency of “zone” performance in swimming.
1) Focus on ease and speed, not effort and speed.
2) Think of a positive focal point like great balance, good push off, high elbow, etc and enjoy the benefit of the focal point. Think positively about the gain attributable to that one focal point and check your times on some laps to reinforce the performance compared to effort level.
3) “Zone” performances often occur when not expecting them. Pressing workouts leads to higher performances for a short durations. Yet, a week or a month of consistent swimming while not trying to peak, will produce unexpected “zone” performances.
4) Swimming the same distance in the same amount of time and with a feeling of great ease is a “zone” performance. A personal best is not always a “zone” swimming performance.
Enjoy swimming!
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Back from Charleston, SC workshop and it is very satisfying seeing swimmers improve.
Most people looking at the three students that I had last weekend would wonder why they would even want swimming lessons because the three already were swimming.
Yet over the weekend their stroke counts went from 21, 18 & 17 to 11, 11 & 10 as an efficiency measurement. They were also swimming 25s in twenty to twenty-two seconds at a fast, easy effort. Their level of ease greatly increased and they learned a little breaststroke from me in order to sight directly ahead of themselves for triathlon swimming.
Because swimming is so much about technique, we can be much better swimmers when we take the time to understand what makes us better.
I find personal improvement in this way to be very satisfying.
Congratulations to those three swimmers and I wish them success with their goals this year.
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It’s such a joy to be able to swim. It is clearly the easiest activity that I do daily. In many ways it’s easier to have a good swim than a good night’s sleep. Is your swim as easy as lying down and getting comfortable?
Today I focused on a focal point that Jamie commented about awhile ago. I focused on “the catch”. Specifically, I focused on getting to ” the catch” immediately which added length, quickness and speed. It was a good focal point and reinforces that it pays to think and pay attention as I swim.
While teaching a swimmer today, it really jumped out at me that timing is so key to swimming comfortably. While a swimmer can have great balance, a kick, a stroke and can naturally breathe, the timing of those activities is key to success.
Timing is a challenge. I know I could demonstrate and teach timing faster than I could accurately describe it in writing, though over time I will try.
Simply said, when your swimming timing is just right it feels like “one motion” and swimming can be the easiest thing we do.
Enjoy the weekend. I will be in Charleston teaching with limited or no blogging.
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It really pays to swim with our heads down. It’s very tough to raise the head with out sinking the hips when swimming freestyle. Tucking the head downward with each breaststroke also provides a shallow diving motion giving us more ease and speed.
While I do not want a swimmer aiming the head to the bottom of the pool to achieve balance, the problem more often than not is lifting the head while swimming.
Aim the head towards the wall when swimming. The sky and the bottom of the pool make for poor targets when swimming.
Enjoy the water today.
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With the recent hikes in gas prices and the likelihood of gas prices continuing to rise, I am thinking of creating a smaller world for myself where I could bike, run or walk and then swim before work. The swim would cool me down and keep me from sweating for an hour or two.
I would probably have to live closer to work too. It’s one thing doing a Sprint triathlon on a daily basis. It’s another thing to do an Olympic distance or longer on a daily basis.
Cars and low gas prices have enabled us to live spread out lives and maybe spread too thin too. On the individual level, perhaps large towns like Atlanta can become smaller towns within a town.
If one can swim, bike, and run or walk, then one can get around town. Stay healthy.
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As triathletes we sometimes short change our turns in a pool thinking that turns at the end of the pool are an advantage that we won’t have in open water.
Consider these situations that I have observed:
Triathletes taking three to five seconds to turn are probably using more time turning than they would take in the open water. This would add five to ten seconds every fifty yards in a twenty five yard pool.
Triathletes often approach the wall faster than they push off. Many triathletes think that because we can not push off in open water, then we should not push off hard in the pool. Why push off slower than one approaches the wall though?
Why not go for a really good push off the wall and then try to maintain that speed for as long as possible? This tactic would be similar to cycling where we use drafting or a tailwind to get used to going at faster speeds.
Using the side of the pool to our advantage will have us thinking and thinking will make us better triathletes.