Swimming
Drills
By Rich Strauss
In the last 5 months I have been providing
swim coaching to a small group of my clients. This has been
80% stroke technique work. During this time I have had to
radically realign my perception of what is efficient, fast
swimming and how to best teach these skills to triathletes,
not to full-time swimmers. In short, triathlon swimming is
about efficiency, then fitness and speed. For full-time swimmers,
technique was learned at a very early age and so swimming
is much more about fitness, power and speed. These differences
demand radically different approaches to all aspects of swimming.
Please start by reading my article,
Improving
Your Swim Technique. This article is meant to give the
essence of what I'm talking about here, and to give you a
few very valuable measurement tools. I will explain common
swim technique errors and the drills used to fix them. The
first section delves into the subject of Balance and Side
Swimming, the second section will be devoted to explaining
some common drills, and then provide a matrix of common swim
problems and associated drill fixes.
So Many Problems, So Many Drills. Where do I begin?
Just as our fitness training follows a logical progression,
our skills training does as well. It's difficult to fix
C if A and B are also jacked up. My progression is as follows:
- Proper Balance: this refers to a swimmers ability
to perform all movements fluidly around a natural point
of buoyancy. This skill is reflected in a proper horizontal
body position and smooth transition from side to side
while swimming. For some athletes, improper balance can
be caused by an ineffective kick. I have included a Fin
Progression below to help you fix this.
- Side Swimming: It's my term, I don't know if
someone else has already claimed it. By this I mean that
the swimmer should try to spend as much time as possible
swimming on his side. This accomplishes at least two things:
a) Reduces frontal area exposed to the water, thus
reducing drag.
b) Gets the large lat and shoulder muscles into the
pull of your stroke. A flat shoulder style of swimming
recruits the smaller delt muscles.
- Propulsive movements: this refers to the stuff
that makes you go forward. These are drills that teach
you how to catch and pull the water more efficiently and
effectively.
Balance and Side Swimming
You will hear "Balance" a lot these days in triathlon
circles. I suspect it's because some very smart folks realized
that they had to teach something to non-swimmers that swimmers
could already do instinctively from years of practice: maintain
a horizontal and streamlined position in the water. Fortunately,
the most common drills that solve balance problems also
develop side swimming skills.
You swim in a tube. Anything sticking outside of this tube
creates drag. Drag slows you down. The most common source
of drag is your legs. We have all seen people that swim
with their legs 12-18 inches below the water line. This
is a huge source of drag and must be fixed before we can
move on to anything else.
Kicking/Lower Body
Balance and Side Swimming Drills
- Stomach Kick: Kick on your stomach, head first,
arms are at your side. Try to achieve horizontal body
position by using buoyancy to bring legs up.
Head: Neutral to down. Experiment with head
position to bring feet to surface.
Arms: Both arms held loosely at your sides.
Legs: Toes pointed, ankles relaxed. ³Boil
the water on the surface, no big splashes. Small kick.
Breath: Roll head easily to side. This is
the hard part. It helps to exhale slowly and smoothly
while your head is underwater.
Remarks: Imagine that you have a float in
your chest. Push down on this float to bring your
feet up. Use this downhill swimming technique and
head position to bring feet up, NOT a harder kick.
Buoyancy vs Power.
- Right Side Kick (RSK): Kick on your right side,
with right shoulder pointed to the sky.
Head: Relaxed, underwater, look at the side
of the pool. Advanced it to look at the bottom, but
be sure to maintain vertical shoulders when on your
side: shoulders perpendicular to bottom of the pool.
Arms: Left arm extended, right hand rests
on left thigh.
Legs: Toes pointed, ankles relaxed. Keep
width of kick within "tube" created by your
body: relatively narrow.
Breath: Take a small sculling motion with
right hand and roll head easily to breathe. Exhale
slowly and smoothly.
Remarks: Keep shoulders perpendicular to
pool bottom. "Point belly to the side of the
pool." Relatively narrow kick. Smooth breath
by rolling your head up to the sky.
- Left Side Kick (LSK): Kick on your left side,
with left shoulder pointed to the sky.
Head: Relaxed, underwater, look at the side
of the pool. Advanced is to look at the bottom, but
be sure to maintain vertical shoulders when on your
side: shoulders perpendicular to bottom of the pool.
Arms: Right arm extended, left hand rests
on right thigh.
Legs: Toes pointed, ankles relaxed. Keep
width of kick within "tube" created by your
body: relatively narrow.
Breath: Take a small sculling motion with
left hand and roll head easily to breathe. Exhale
slowly and smoothly.
Remarks: Keep shoulders perpendicular to
pool bottom: "Point belly to the side of the
pool." Relatively narrow kick. Smooth breath
by rolling your head up to the sky.
- Single Switch (SSwitch): 1 arm pull to move
from right to left side. Start with Right Side Kick. 6
kicks, then pull and roll over to Left Side Kick. 6 kicks
left side, roll, repeat.
Head: Relaxed, underwater, look at the side
of the pool. Advanced is to look at the bottom, but
be sure to maintain vertical shoulders when on your
side: shoulders perpendicular to bottom of the pool.
Arms: Left arm extended, right hand rests
on left thigh. Pull with left arm to initiate roll,
right arm return over the water to Left Side Kick
position.
Legs: Toes pointed, ankles relaxed. Keep
width of kick within "tube" created by your
body: relatively narrow.
Breath: Breathe when you pull and roll to
alternate side. Exhale slowly and smoothly.
Remarks: Keep shoulders perpendicular to
pool bottom. Relatively narrow kick. Smooth roll from
right to left and back again. Roll from the hips,
as well from the shoulders. Think "Point belly
to the side of the pool."
- Triple Switch (TSwitch): 3 arm pulls to move
from right side to left side. Start with Right Side Kick.
6 kicks, then pull three arms strokes, ending up on your
left side. Kick 6 kicks on your left side, then take 3
arm pulls to rotate over to your right side. Repeat.
Head: Relaxed, underwater, look at the side
of the pool. Advanced is to look at the bottom, but
be sure to maintain vertical shoulders when on your
side: shoulders perpendicular to bottom of the pool.
Arms: Left arm extended, right hand rests
on left thigh. Pull with left arm to initiate roll,
right arm return over the water to Left Side Kick
position.
Legs: Toes pointed, ankles relaxed. Keep width
of kick within "tube" created by your body:
relatively narrow.
Breath: Breathe when you pull and roll to
alternate side. Exhale slowly and smoothly.
Remarks: Keep shoulders perpendicular to
pool bottom. Relatively narrow kick. Smooth roll from
right to left and back again. Roll from the hips too.
Think "Point belly to the side of the pool."
Focus on transferring "Side Kick" skill
to "Side Swimming" skill.
Kicking/Lower Body
Balance and Side Swimming Drill Progression
Application: poor horizontal position,
"dragging the legs," caused by poor balance (has
not found buoyancy "sweet spot.") and/or inefficient
kick. Inefficient transfer from side to side, with too much
"flat shoulder" swimming. If inefficient or ineffective
kick, use Fin Progression below.
Purpose: it is helpful if you understand
the purpose of this progression. First, we get you comfortable
with kicking on each side: good body position. Then we get
you comfortable with switching from side to side, by taking
an arm pull. Then we get you comfortable executing this
switch with three arm pulls (TSwitch). From there is it
only one small step (just swimming normaly) to swimming
with:
- Good horizontal body position.
- Good body roll (swimming on your side as much as possible).
Distance: These drills are not about
fitness. Do not keep track of how far you go when performing
these drills. Instead, move to the next drill in the progression
when you are comfortable and have achieved the other criteria
below.
- Stomach Kick Drill
1. Try to relax, slowly exhaling while your head is
under water helps.
2. Use buoyancy (downhill swimming and head position)
to bring feet to the surface, NOT a more powerful kick.
3. Point your toes and relax your ankles.
4. Breathing is what gets people with this drill. I
recommend slowly turning your head and one shoulder
to the side and breathing. Lifting your head to breath
causes your legs to sink and is counter productive to
the drill.
5. Take as much rest as you want. This is not about
fitness. Relax.
6. Graduation Criteria: when your body is horizontal,
feet boiling the water, and you are comfortable, move
to next drill.
- Right Side Kick Drill
1. Relax, exhale slowly under water.
2. "Point your belly to the side." "Look
at the pretty girls in lane 8." Kick on your side,
shoulders perpendicular to pool bottom.
3. This is where we begin to develop side swimming
skills, as well as balance. Lead hand extended, try
resting ear on your shoulder. Try resting trail hand
either on your thigh, or even put it behind your thigh.
This will pull your top shoulder back a bit and help
maintain perpendicular shoulder.
4. Limit width of kick to the tube created by your
body.
5. Take as much rest as you want. This is not about
fitness, relax.
6. Graduation Criteria: when you can maintain a proper
perpendicular body position and are comfortable breathing,
move to next drill.
- Left Side Kick Drill, until comfortable (see
guidance for Right Side above)
- Single Switch (SSwitch)
1. Refer to Side Kick guidance.
2. When rolling from one side to the other, pull naturally
with the lead arm.
3. Try to think of recovering the trail arm along the
same plane form by your shoulders. In other words, don't
swing it out to the side, but instead recover it over
the water along the line formed by your body.
4. "Point your belly to the side."
5. Again, take as much rest as you want.
6. Breathe AFTER you have completed the switch and
are back into position. If you try to breath while you
are making the switch, you will lift your head and your
hips will sink.
7. Graduation Criteria: when you are comfortable breathing
and transitioning from side to side, move to next drill.
- Triple Switch (TSwitch)
1. Refer to SSwitch guidance.
2. This drill is the same as SSwitch, except you simply
take 3 arms strokes to go from right side to left side.
3. Breathing guidance is the same as SSwitch. In fact,
the hardest part about this drill is probably just learning
when to breath
Sample Workout
This is an example of how to use this progression
in a workout. Only go as far as you are able to in the progression,
according to your ability to satisfy the Graduation Criteria
of each drill. Don't take short cuts and skip steps. Exercise
Patience and Discipline.
Warm-up
- 5' easy swimming
- 4 x 25 swim w/:30 rest
- 2 x 50 Add-Up
Main Set 1:
- 15 x 50yd/m w/:30 rest
- #1-3: Stomach kick
- #4-6: Right Side Kick
- #7-9: Left Side Kick
- #10-12: Six Kick Change
- #13-15: Six/Three Swim Transition
*if you need to, do more or fewer 50's of a particular
drill. Again, mastery of a drill determines progression,
not yardage.
- 1 x 50 easy, relax
Main Set 2:
- 4 x 25 swim w/:30 rest. Apply balance and side swimming
skills.
- 2 x 50 Add-Up. How did you do compared to first set
of Add-Ups?
Cool Down:
- 5-10' easy swimming.
- Stretch afterwards and immediately take some notes on
your session. What worked, what didn't, observations,
questions, concerns, frustrations and victories.
Fin
Progression
First, if you have difficulty maintaining a horizontal
body position, try fixing it using the Balance Progression
above, not by applying more power to your kick, in an effort
to kick your legs to the surface. This is wasted energy.
Body position and buoyancy are free.
This progression uses fins to teach your legs how to kick
efficiently and effectively. A larger fin actually forces
your legs to kick more effectively. We use a larger fin
to create this muscle memory, and then decrease the fin
size. When we get to "feet," you should have an
effective kick.
This is a lot of kicking. You may need to split this up
over 2 sessions.
Warm-up
- 5' easy swimming
- 4 x 25 swim w/:30 rest
- 2 x 50 Add-Up
Main Set 1:
- 10 x 50yd/m w/:30 rest. Use a larger fin, like the cheap
black ones you see at pools. The muscle memory is created
by the larger fin + wide kick.
- #1-3: Right Side Kick, #1 is very wide kick, #2 is less
wide, #3 is normal
- #4-6: Left Side Kick, #4 is very wide kick, #5 is less
wide, #6 is normal
- #7-10: Six Kick Change Side Kick, #7 is very wide kick,
#8 is less wide, #9-10 are normal.
Main Set 2:
- Repeat Main Set 1, but with a smaller fin, like Zoomers.
Main Set 3:
- 4 x 50 kick w/:30 rest, NO FINS. Right, Left, Six-Kick,
Six-Three-Transition
- 50 easy swim
Main Set 4:
- 4 x 25 swim w/:30 rest (these are optional)
- 2 x 50 Add-Up. How does this compare to first set of
Add-Ups?
Cool Down:
- 5-10' easy swimming.
- Stretch afterwards and immediately take some notes on
your session. Your ankles may feel fatigued. What worked,
what didn't, observations, questions, concerns, frustrations
and victories.
Drill Application
PROBLEM: Ineffective kick
DRILL: Vertical Kick Drill
- Kick a normal freestyle (flutter) kick, with your body
in a vertical position. Keep hands at side and experiment
with feet wide, narrow, slow, fast, bent knee, straight
knee. Find the best way to keep your chin above the water.
For swimmers with very weak kick, hold on to the side
of the pool and experiment. Progress to letting go for
a few seconds at a time.
- Once this is accomplished, practice rotating 90 degrees
by using your core and kick to initiate the movement.
PROBLEM: Dropping Elbow on Catch
DRILL: Fist Drill
- Swim regular freestyle with a closed fist for a half
length, then open your hand and feel the increase in power.
- Use normal to fast arm speed and do not use fins. Concentrate
on pulling with the forearms.
PROBLEM: General Stroke Mechanics
DRILL: Single Arm Drill
- Keep one arm extended out in front and use the other
to stroke. "Reach, Catch, Crank, Snap, Line."
- Drill allows you to focus on the dynamics of pulling,
on arm at a time. Use fins with this drill.
PROBLEM: General Stroke Mechanics
DRILL: Catch-Up Drill
- Each arm takes a full stroke, coming to rest in the
forward position, before the other arm starts its pull.
- Good for working on rotation and timing of your stroke.
Hold for 2 seconds, then 1, then touch and go.
PROBLEM: Short Finish
DRILL: Flicker Drill
- Aggressively accelerate the hand at the end of the stroke,
brushing your thumb against your thigh. Hand exits explosively
and "flicks" water behind you. Do half lap of
Flicker, half lap swim. Keep the acceleration and thumb-to-thigh,
lose the flicker.
- Finishing your stroke, every stroke is critical. When
swimming, always brush your thumb against you thigh. This
is adds 3-4 inches to every pull, but requires more tricep
endurance.
PROBLEM: "Wind-milling"
DRILL: Finger Tip Drag Drill
- Drag your finger tips along the water during the arm
recovery. Also, work on the "Line" portion of
your stroke.
- Helps the "Line" and relaxation of your recovery.
Pool Toys
Essential
- Fins: help maintain speed and proper body position.
Helps swimmer experience fast swimming and encourages
streamlining. When used in a progression of large fin
to smaller fin, to no fin, can be used to create the muscle
memory of efficient kicking. Also increases ankle flexibility,
which is a common problem among runners.
- Stretchcordz: these are bands of surgical tubing
attached to paddles, very useful for sport specific strength
training. Go here for an excellent training protocol by
Coach Gordo Byrn.
Non-Essential
- Pull Bouy: useful for strength building sets.
However, can also hide body position flaws and can become
a crutch. Do no more than 25% of a workout pulling and
pay close attention to maintaining proper body roll.
- Paddles: use paddles with holes drilled, to reduce
resistance. Useful, when use during easy swimming, to
develop feel for the water and the "catch" phase.
For more advanced swimmers, paddles are useful to add
resistance and build strength. However, new swimmers should
avoid high intensity sets with paddles, as the risk of
shoulder injury is greatly increased.
- Ankle band, small inner tube, drag suits:increase
drag during pull sets, increasing resistance. Again, only
for experienced swimmer.
Useless Gadgets
- Fistgloves: these are used to close your fist,
for use during fist drill. It's better to perform this
drill as half a length fistdrill, half length open hand,
so you can feel the transition. This is not possible with
fistgloves.
- Kickboard: should be used sparingly, if at all.
Kickboards give the body unnatural support and do not
allow the swimmer to incorporate rotation with the kick.
It is an inefficient use of training time to improve kicking
fitness, as the power of the kick should be deemphasized
in distance swimming. Instead, do drills that produce
an effective kick and then incorporate this kick into
an efficient swimming stroke.
Considerations
for Swim Workouts
- Volume vs intensity: because swimming is non-impact
and generally much less stressful than either running
or cycling, think of swim training in terms of track sessions.
The key difference is that once you have established a
good base through a period of easy aerobic swimming, you
can then perform swimming interval sessions at the same
or higher intensity and with greater frequency than you
can with track sessions. The common mistake that triathletes
make is to equate run training with swim training. Swim
training should be more intense, as there is less risk.
- Importance of continued stroke work: swimming
is a very technical sport. ALWAYS include drill sets in
every workout, and count your strokes all the time. Continue
to focus on technique, regardless of volume or intensity.
- How do I structure a workout?
- Warm-up: focus on relaxed breathing. Include
Add-ups at the end to establish a baseline.
- Drills: work on your weaknesses. Consult
drills matrix for ideas.
- Main set: interval based workout. Measure
intensity by pace or PE. Can also use pulse at the
neck, 10 seconds x 6 = HR.
- Short sprints: 25's or 50's, to develop economy
and speed.
- Cool Down
- Dryland Exercises: Core, cords, and stretch.
- Do I need to do long swims? In my opinion, I
think it is better to build your endurance with shorter
intervals (5-10 min) at a pace slighly faster than race
pace. It is good to do a long, continuous swim on occasion,
to get you use to swimming for this length of time, but
this should be the exception rather than the rule. Swimming
long and slow makes you very good at swimming long and
slow.
- How should I fit in open water swimming? As stated
above, quality pool sessions will build your endurance,
technique, and speed. Maximize these adaptations by extending
these sessions far into your season, saving the open water
swimming for closer to race time. If, however, you have
some anxiety about open water swimming, get familiar with
it sooner rather than later.
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