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All Strokes - Race Day

Posted by Glenn Mills on May 17, 2011 06:00AM (5,140 views)

Getting your swimmers to REALLY perform in practice sometimes requires a combination of surprise and excitement.

Why do it:
Replicating actual "race day" environments in practice is a difficult thing, but something elite athletes have learned to do for years.  Imagining a set, or swim in practice carries the same weight as the championship meet means you'll be more used to performing, even if you're not ready.

How to do it:
1)
 This is a good way to use the now illegal "tech suits".  This can increase the excitement of the day.
2)  Set up an actual "meet" in practice.  Create a sign-up form for the swimmers, and to practice punctuality, don't tell the swimmers when the "meet" is coming, and whoever shows up first, gets to sign up for the events they want.  Once the events are full, they have to move on to the next.  Don't get the events you want, and you may end up swimming the 200 fly!
3)  We used a college format splitting the events into three days, and unfortunately didn't have time for the miles.  We also skipped the relays.
4)  Move from one event to the next, and allow the swimmers to warm-down around the other swimmers.

How to do it really well (the fine points):
Require that the swims be performed within a percentage of the swimmers "life time best" times... or the swims will be repeated at the end of the meet.  (This makes them go a bit faster the first time).  The most important aspect of "Race Day" is to race, and to inspire intensity.  It can be very fun... but it can also be very tiring.  Have fun!




Responses

Responded May 17, 2011 10:01PM

Was that 100 yds or 100 m?

Responded May 17, 2011 10:05PM

There are only 50 meter long pools, not 50 yards.

Responded May 18, 2011 09:10AM

I asked because in my humble opinion, maybe you should have filmed from the opposite side of the pool, your perspective doesn't hignlight the swiming speed of the guy. In the last meters he struggles and as you follow him with the camera he seems to slow down more than what he actually did.

Responded May 18, 2011 11:00AM

Not sure how that ties to the original response of meters or yards... or how being 8 lanes away would give more impression of speed.

Responded May 18, 2011 12:13PM

Very nice pictures of the four strokes, taken at the right point, and very fast swimmer. I like the plock-plock we can hear when she enters water. Her feet are very high, sometimes it seems they are above water ? or just a video effect ?

Responded May 18, 2011 04:05PM

The first time I watched the video I didn't believe he made 54 s, he looked so slow at the end!
Never mind.

Responded May 18, 2011 04:08PM

I put a clock in, plus unless the sound was down, you should have also heard his coach yell out the time. Sorry, thought I made that one clear.

Responded May 18, 2011 04:48PM

Yes, the sound was off the first time. Then I take the time with my watch.
Here you have an example of how being a bit farther can enhance the speed impression:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HSLgDjEaPWg

The swimmers look like they're going to crash against the wall.

Anyway it is a subjective impression of mine.
I think your videos are great to learn technique. I never learnt fly very well when young(my stroke was breaststroke) and I find them very helpful now.

Responded May 18, 2011 05:00PM

See... I guess it's all about perception. I didn't get any impression anyone was going to crash into anything. Fast swimming for sure, but I guess we just see things differently.

Responded May 18, 2011 07:42PM

Nice video. Looks like you were racing a distrance swimmer against a sprinter. I like the open recovery and rotary timing of the sprint stroke. Looks a little like Matt Target's stroke to my (untrained I will admit) eye.

Responded May 19, 2011 12:34PM

Very interesting recovery, however fast swimmer :) Whattime of the year do you do race days? Tapering?

Responded May 19, 2011 01:15PM

Not necessarily... these are tough days in which you have to perform very fast swims in a short time frame. It's good to do in season when swimmers aren't ready to perform at their peak... it's more demanding that way. Too much full race all out swimming during taper probably isn't a good thing. Just my opinion.

Responded May 19, 2011 02:00PM

I love this idea and we'll introduce it at some point for our age groupers. I think it's brilliant not to tell them when it's going to be (or I am I just a sad coach!)

Responded May 20, 2011 09:15AM

Now when you said that I remember doing 5-6 200s for time personal stroke at the end of a hardcore session...and it wasn't tapering at all... thanks for reminding me :)


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