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There
is no easy way - being a distance swimmer
This
is one of the best articles i have found on long ditance swimming.
It was posted on a forum by Wayne Goldsmith at http://www.coachesinfo.com
There
is no easy way - being a distance swimmer means more sessions
and more time in the water. However, here are some ideas that
might help:
- As
you will be swimming longer sessions and putting more stress
and strain on your body, you should see a sports physiotherapist
and ask for a MUSCULOSKELETAL SCREEN. This is a series of
simple tests performed by a qualified sports physiotherapist
to identify the physical characteristics that my limit your
dream of getting to the top of women's distance swimming.
The physio will look for things like strength, flexibility
and abnormal movements around your joints to identify possible
and potential problems before they happen. With swimming injuries,
PREVENTION is definitely better than CURE.
- In
the early stages of your distance program, work on swimming
long, slow easy, kilometres. Concentrate on relaxing in the
water, swimming with a steady, even, constant, flowing rhythm
with controlled breathing. Some swimmers find it helps to
sing or hum under the water to develop the skill of holding
a set rhythm. Get comfortable with swimming long steady swim
sets like 8 x 400, 12 x 200, 4 x 800, 1 hour swim for distance,
5 kilometre swim for time etc. at slow speeds with short rests.
- Learn
to swim at an exact pace. For example, in a training set like
20 x 50 meters, aim to swim an exact time (pace) for each
50. If your target pace is 40 seconds, you must swim each
50-metre effort between 39.8 and 40.2 seconds (no more than
a point 2 of a second variance). As you get fitter and learn
to hold an exact pace over 50 meters, try "doubling up",
i.e. if you can swim 40 seconds for 50 meters, hold exactly
1:20 for 100 meters, 2:40 for 200 meters and so on with the
same precise pacing skills. Try the same thing with stroke
count - hold a steady even stroke count for the 50 metre repeats
then aim to hold the same stroke count over longer distances.
Remember that the overall goal is MAXIMUM SPEED with MINIMUM
STROKES and MINIMUM BREATHS.
- Learn
to even split. This means swimming the first half and second
half of your training efforts at precisely the same speed.
If you are aiming to swim 2:40 for a 200 metre training swim,
even splitting means swimming the first 50 meters in 40 seconds,
the first 100 in 1:20, the first 150 in 2:00 minutes and finishing
in exactly your target time of 2:40. This helps develop the
ability to maintain speed when you get tired and is a great
way to develop mental toughness. As with all distance swimming,
control your breathing throughout your training swims.
Try to fit in some "resistance pull" every workout.
Aim to complete around 20-25% of your workout with a pull
buoy and band. Try to develop rhythm and efficiency with your
upper body by doing pull with BAND ONLY, ie no pull buoy.
Use paddles occasionally, but keep it to less than 5% of your
total pull work. As with all distance work, control your breathing
throughout your training pull sets.
- Increase
your training distance slowly and methodically. Aim to increase
your training volume by no more than 2% per week. In this
way, you should be able to develop the capacity to cover 7-8
kilometres in a two-hour training session within a time frame
of two years.
Be consistent. If school or other commitments make you miss
a workout, find time on the weekend to make it up. Target
10 sessions per week, 44-48 weeks per year.
- Stay
healthy. With increased training comes an increased need for
good nutrition, a balanced diet, plenty of rest and sleep,
regular stretching and a sensible strength training program
targeting particularly lower abdominals, and upper and lower
back stability. Get plenty of sleep - an extra hour sleep
each night is an extra night's sleep each week!
- If
you can get to the pool a little earlier or can stay a little
later, get in the water and swim a kilometre or two extra.
Take every opportunity to develop a winning edge in your fitness.
Run or cycle to the pool instead
- At
all times focus on the four T's of distance swimming:
TECHNIQUE
- Keep your stroke long and strong and smooth, with a constant
flowing rhythm at all times.
TIMING
- Swim with a balanced even timing.
TOUGHNESS
-Train hard and maintain great technique and speed no matter
tough things get. For example, ask your coach if you can do
time trials at the end of your workouts and aim to even split
plus swim within 2 seconds of your best time per 100. Challenge
yourself to do everything faster, with fewer strokes and fewer
breaths. Distance swimmers are PHYSICALLY FIT, TECHNICALLY PERFECT
and MENTALLY TOUGH.
TEMPO
- (another word for rhythm)- The key to success in the longer
races is to develop a pace clock "in your head" and
to be able to swim with a constant tempo and stroke rhythm.
Distance swimmers love their own company and spending time in
their own heads thinking, singing, counting, doing mental homework
and other brain stuff.
Being
a great distance swimmer means being very, VERY physically fit.
If you can't get to the pool, keep fit by playing team sports,
running, cycling, rowing etc. Join a dance, martial arts or
aerobics program. This will not only help keep you fit, but
will help you develop a sense of timing, balance, co-ordination
and rhythm, just the thing for great distance swimming.
Dream
it. Believe it. Work hard for it. Go for it!!!
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