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Don’t Think About Going Fast …

By Al Dodson

Seldom, do people who think about going fast achieve what they want. The success rate is much higher if they think about the things that make them go fast. The result of thinking about going fast is usually thrashing in the water, choppy strokes, over-kicking, not relaxing on the recovery phase of the stroke, improper pacing, and other forms of inefficient swimming. Thinking about the things that make them go fast, places the athlete’s focus where it belongs and places an emphasis on efficiency.

DON’T THINK ABOUT THE RESULT

I have often heard swimmers, when asked what they were going to do in an upcoming race, reply 2:00 (or such and such time for a particular distance). If a swimmer has never done that time, how does he/she know how that feels at different parts of the race? How does he/she know if what he or she is doing is correct? Thinking about results is useless. Concentrating on the way to reach the desired result makes much more sense. The more intelligent way of doing 2:00 mentioned above would be to think of one stroke reminder and one pace hint. Examples might include … get up on your side and reach and build 50s so that the first 50 is controlled, the second 50 is hard, the third is very hard, and the last 50 is a sprint. If a swimmer isn’t sure what his/her concentration point or points should be, he/she should ask his/her coach. If the swimmer and coach choose the correct emphasis and the swimmer truly follows through on the concentration, the chance of success will be greatly increased.

DON’T THINK ABOUT TOO MANY THINGS

The swimmer should not give himself/herself too many things to think about. The nervous system can effectively think of only one or two things while conducting a motor activity such as swimming. Concentrating on more than one or two points is useless and only serves to detract from the proper focus and may be confusing. When I’m advising swimmers, I usually ask sprinters to concentrate on one start or turn tip and one stroke technique hint and usually give middle-distance and distance swimmers one technique hint and one pace reminder. Examples of start and turn hints for sprinters might include …

  • React to the first sound on your start
  • Remember to keep your streamline through your first stroke
  • Explode through your breakout on both your start and turn
  • Throw your hips at the wall going into your turn
  • Remember to streamline under the incoming wave on your turn

Examples of stroke technique focal points for sprinters include: keep your stroke long and don’t spin your wheels, or think about exploding through the back of your stroke, or limit your breathing, or roll and reach. Examples of stroke reminders for middle-distance and distance swimmers include …

  • Build your hand speed throughout your stroke
  • Keep your stroke long
  • Count your stroke on the first length of each quarter of the race (e.g. in a 500, count strokes on the 2nd, 6th, 11th and 16th lengths)
  • Stay up equally on both sides
  • Don’t over-kick
  • Remember your kick only stabilises you, so control your feet
  • Accelerate into each turn
  • Build your kick out of your turns and don’t kick too soon

Almost all of my pace comments revolve around building quarters of the race. Many coaches split 25s and 50s for all distances. I have found that this is ineffective in teaching pace. No matter what the distance, I take ¼ splits (i.e. for a 100, I take 25 splits, for a 200, I take 50s, for 500, I take 125s, etc.) and address comments accordingly. So hints include…

  • Build 125s
  • Build every five lengths
  • Keep your stroke consistent but increase your stroke rate
  • Control the race, don’t let it control you

The purpose of all the above-mentioned suggestions is intelligent swimming.

A MEET IS TOO LATE

REHEARSE…REHEARSE…REHEARSE

A Meet is certainly not the time to begin thinking about what makes you go fast. By the time swimmers get to a Meet, they should have rehearsed their race over and over. Many swimmers … and I’m afraid to say many coaches … think that practices are for only getting in shape. While building strength and cardiovascular conditioning is extremely important to swimming success, this philosophy ignores what I feel is the most important benefit of training – neuro-muscular development. Swimming is a nervous system oriented sport and at least portions of training sessions should be treated as learning experiences and Meet rehearsals. Related to the premise of don’t think about going fast, think about the things that make you go fast, training sessions should be the stage for launching success in Meets. I think that isolated technique and drill work, integration of concepts learned in these isolated situations into training sets, and then utilisation of these skills in competition is the best, if not the only, progression to success. Isolated technique or pace drills should be used to initially teach a skill, correct flaws, or reinforce fundamentals. Next, these skills (i.e. technique or pace) should be integrated into other training sets. These sets may alternate drill/swim or combine drill/swim within the same interval or utilise skills taught in technique/drill situations. When integrating concepts into training sets, the goal should be to increase the use of the concepts and fade the use of the drills. Last comes using the newly learned skills during competition. An example of a technique progression related to distance per stroke might be…

  • Isolated drills – do two sets of 3x25 Freestyle – #1 easy; #2 at 200 pace; #3 sprint – hold same number of strokes for all 25s
  • Integration into training sets – swim a 500 Freestyle holding 15 strokes per length or a set such as … 1x400 (level 1); 3x25 strokes per length drill; 2x100 (level 3) – hold same number of strokes for all lengths
  • Utilisation during competition – during your 400, count laps 2, 4, 6, and 8 and keep the same stroke count but increase your stroke rate for each 100 or have another swimmer or coach count strokes and provide input

All the areas of the progression require coaching input. Isolated drills allow for the most input. Input during the integration into training sets should be geared to teaching the feeling of correct mechanics or pace and teach the swimmers self-coaching techniques. During competition swimmers need to be self-correcting, however coaching input should follow the race and directly relate to concentration points. Concentration should not be stagnant. When one skill is successfully learned, integrated into training, and utilised in competition, it can be expanded, refined or changed. The important thing is that training sessions and competition should be learning situations and present rehearsal opportunities.

GOOD FOR EVERY STROKE AND THE IM

Even though my examples have related to Freestyle, the same principles should be used for all strokes and the IM. The IM presents a somewhat unique situation because it includes four strokes. I usually give swimmers a separate suggestion for each stroke and either a pace or stroke exchange hint. The reminders may differ with strokers or IM’rs but the principles remain the same.

CONCLUSION

I have had enough success utilising the idea of focusing on one or two points that I am confident that it works. Most importantly…

DON’T THINK ABOUT GOING FAST … THINK ABOUT THE THINGS THAT

MAKE YOU GO FAST!!

 

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