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Top 5 drills
#1
Posted 12 January 2003 - 06:34 PM
U.S.A. Weightlifting cert
"Sports Performance Coach"
Sports nutritionist
#2
Posted 13 January 2003 - 05:06 AM
I can reduce his list down to 5, though:
1. Vertical kick. Doing vertical kicking (with or without rotations in deep end of pool) seems to help my overall kick much more than kicking with a board.
2. Kick on side. This is the balance drill where in TI terms you are in your "sweet spot," with one arm extended in front of you. You can also do this with a rotation downward to perpendicular to the water, or adding a stroke cycle (what TI calls "stop stop switch.")
3. Fist. Swim either with fist gloves, with a tennis ball in each hand, or the no-equipment way, with your fingers closed in a fist. This drill helps reinforce high elbow recovery, full arm extension during glide phase and bent elbow during pull phase.
4. Single arm. Swim an entire length using one arm only--the other arm can be at your side or extended out in front. This helps to balance out your stroke, and I find it also helps you "see" your pull better so you can work on it.
5. Catch-up. The stroking arm stays extended on top of the water until the other hand enters the water. Some schools have you touch hands; I believe this is bad because if you practice crossing your hands over your centerline during practice you will do it while swimming. Just keep your natural extension parallel to your body.
I do all of these drills (about 100 yds. each) each swim session during warmup using Zoomer fins. Some purists don't use fins, but I find it helps me focus on what's going on with my core and stroke rather than trying to kick madly to keep myself afloat.
If you are unsure how to do the drills, find a coach or friend who does, so they can check your form. Doing drills poorly is just as bad as not doing them at all!
#3
Posted 16 January 2003 - 09:34 AM
One good thing to try is to keep your head and eyes down at the bottom of the pool. Far too many swimmers, myself included, swim with their eyes looking forward and their heads cocked forward. It a natural tendency that ends up wrecking your body position, increasing your drag.
#4
Posted 16 January 2003 - 10:26 AM
That is why I said it is critical to do the drills properly. If you are not sure or if the drill feels "wrong," you probably need someone to watch you do them. Because if you do them wrong you will just be reinforcing poor habits.
Good point on looking down. Checklist when watching someone swim or being watched:
eyes looking down, not straight ahead.
top third of head is above water
bottom goggle is in water when rolling to breathe
arms do not cross centerline of your body
rotation is equal to both sides, even on non-breathing strokes
high elbow recovery
legs are not splayed when kicking
kicking is consistent and doesn't stop when breathing
#5
Posted 20 May 2003 - 07:19 AM
#6
Posted 20 May 2003 - 09:19 AM
1. keep chin tucked & aligned with head/ as in standing straight with good posture.
2. problem with pressing with chest, try the "zipper drill"
3. breathe by just turning your head to the left or right, No angling of the head.
kinda hard to verbally describe swimming tips
U.S.A. Weightlifting cert
"Sports Performance Coach"
Sports nutritionist
#7
Posted 20 May 2003 - 12:38 PM
#9
Posted 10 September 2005 - 02:43 PM
#10
Posted 18 October 2008 - 11:33 AM
Dobkanize.com - Triathlon Swimming Tip: Ankle Stretching
#11
Posted 14 November 2008 - 02:08 PM
1:Zip Up - Pull your finger tips lightly along the body, from your hip to your arm pit
2: Stutter - As your hand exits the water, stop the movement briefly while you glide forward
3: Finger drag - As you extend the arm forward, drag the finger tips along the surface of the water lightly
4: Catch up - Combine all 3 of the above - we all know catch up.
5: Stroke counting - using all 4 of the above, see how low you can get your stroke count per length, and work to keep reducing it over the months.
#12
Posted 05 May 2009 - 02:43 AM
that is my list of the best 5 swimming drills with some resource where you can read more about it.
1) CatchUp
2) One arm Front
3) ""Water Polo"
4) Roll Over Drill
5) Leg Kick with frontal breathing
These are the drills I make my swimmers do all the time. They are very effective in helping them to develope the correct technique and to improve the feeling in the water.
Remember that swimming is as much strenghts and endurance as it is traction. ou need to work on your traction, aka drills, or you won't get much faster and effective. If I may suggest a resource I am putting together to help swimmers I would suggest you go and have a look at Effective Water Fitness - Freestyle Techniqe
Please leave some feedback on the site and feel free to download the free 4 weeks swimming traning plan". All feedbacks ar welcome good or bad.
Gab

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