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All Strokes - Ankle Flexibility

Posted by Glenn Mills on Apr 12, 2011 08:34AM (8,031 views)

The greatest swimmers have something very important in common... ankle flexibility.  Here are a couple quick exercises you can do to help with your ankles.

Why do it:
Increasing your ankle flexibility will allow you to grab as much water as possible with all of your kicks.  This makes your kick more effective, and the potential to swim faster becomes a reality.

How to do it:
1)
 First, as with all stretches, go very slowly, and if you feel any knee pain with these, stop, or don't press down as far.
2)  Start with your feet as flat on the floor as possible in a hands and knees position.
3)  Slowly lower down to your feet, with your ankles directly under you.  Sit on to your feet.
4)  Put the feet a bit wider than you, and try to sit flat on the floor with your feet to the side.
5)  Hold each position for a little while to allow the stretch to really take effect.

How to do it really well (the fine points):
This is a bit more advanced drill, and should be done with much care.  This position is specifically for grabbing water at the top of the breaststroke kick.  Start in the same kneeling position, only point your toes to the outside.  Slowly lower yourself until you're able to sit flat on the floor.  When you become more and more comfortable with this, you can lean back.  If the model was younger, you may even see him lay flat on the floor with the feet in this position, but since there was nobody else around, he was afraid he wouldn't be able to get back up. :)

Above all, take this slowly, and be consistent.  The more often you practice this, the better your ankle flexibility till become.




Responses

Responded Apr 12, 2011 09:51PM

Good. The next strech drill for the shoulder please. I'd like improve my high elbow catch.

Responded Apr 12, 2011 10:28PM

LOL. :))
I'm of the duck-footed type too but I cant do this stretch to the point of sitting right down - can get to about 3 inches off the floor. I guess the trick is to know just exactly where to stop - the knee discomfort seems to increase exponentially beyond a certain point.

Responded Apr 12, 2011 10:33PM

Absolutely Tony. Be careful and take your time. I'm still able to do this because that's how I sit anyway. If you don't keep it up, it goes away... so I've kept it up like a parlor trick. Oh... it also helps my breaststroke kick too. ;)

Responded Apr 13, 2011 09:04AM

"but since there was nobody else around, he was afraid he wouldn't be able to get back up. :)"

hahah, Glenn you're so funny.

I am one of those who can lie back on the floor with no arched back whatsoever. However in the water I am able to turn my toes out only a tiny bit out so that all coaches tell me all the time that I should be turning my toes out on BR. My only reaction then is "but I am... trying."

Another exercises that I really love is like the first one shown here but you not only sit down on the feet but also and stand up immediately afterwards. You can support your weight on a chari/ table or just lean on a wall, which is harder. I do 4sets of 20 reps so far. It is very advanced and remember to do that on a soft mat.

Responded Apr 13, 2011 11:46AM

Glenn, you exercise with feet kept parallel. Some exercise with toes pointed very much inwards. What is better ?

Responded Apr 13, 2011 12:10PM

Don't know Camy... which can you do? I think where the feet point is going to be what's natural for you on this.

Responded Apr 15, 2011 10:55AM

I did try this exercise oh boy I was struggled! cos when I nearly completed this exercise, I felt something on my hips and knee stretched and its hurts! but unfortunately not ankles one.....

Responded Apr 15, 2011 04:43PM

how many time and reps for each exercise?

Responded Apr 15, 2011 07:51PM

2 Sprinter: this drill is about passive flexibility, but passive flexibility is only a required pre-requisite for active flexibility. So, even if you excel in static flexibility, you still need to train the active one.

2 Sealander: a generic rule of thumb for static stretching is: 20--30 seconds hold, 20--30 seconds rest between holds, 4--5 reps.

2 All: when you have your feet under you, try to raise knees from the floor to increase ankle stretch. Please be conservative, careful, and help yourself with your hands pushing the floor.

Responded Apr 15, 2011 07:56PM

... and then don't forget to do active flexibility work for ankles. The drills were posted here some time ago (recall the nice socks! :-) )

Responded Jul 26, 2011 03:05PM

Glenn,
I can pretty much sit flat and lie down perfectly fine, but during my breaststroke, i cannot really get my toes to point outwards like your supposed to. How could i change this?

Responded Oct 27, 2011 01:43AM

Have you tried the Finis "Rack"?

Responded Oct 27, 2011 08:52PM

Watch the Lezak video. ;)


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