Swimmers and coaches often set workout targets like 90% effort or 95% effort for practice swims. I've always found these directives to be less than useful. What is "90% effort"? I've taken to setting time targets of race time plus a certain percentage. For example one could specify the set:
5x(100 free @ race + 15%)/2:00.
That is, five 100 free swims on the 2:00 (120 sec.) interval with a target time of race time + 15%. (This would be a painful lactate production set in my estimation.)
Based on my own experience, I constructed this chart giving qualitative descriptions of the effort level associated with a practice swim from a push to achieve race time plus a percentage:
7283
A few notes:
This would correspond to the effort level of the first swim in a group. Obviously even race +25% will constitute a very hard effort after you have done a lot of them.
Generally, it appears to be easier to swim at race pace + x% for longer swims.
It is easier to swim near race pace for backstroke than freestyle. I suspect that this is simply due to the fact that a freestyle dive start gives more of an advantage over a push than a backstroke race start.
I pose the following two questions to the forum community:
1) How do these effort levels compare with your experience? I'd love to see similar charts for other swimmers.
2) How much time do you spend in practice at each effort level? This will certainly depend on the time of the season. Early in the season I expect one might do a lot of "blue" swims up to some yellow, whereas later in the season one needs to spend a lot more time in yellow with frequent excursions into in the "red zone".
But at the same token shouldn't the coach know or at least be able to look up what the speed of the swimmers are, if he can't how does he know what he is doing is working?
Exactly. Any decent coach who knows the swimmers should be able to give them goal times for the set. My coach (who I've known for a very long time), will sometimes give a 100 FAST on 5 min, and tell me he wants me to go 1:03 (ha! he'd probably say 1:00), off the block. It is something I may be able to do, but maybe not. But given that we've known each other for about 15 years, he has a good feel for what I can do on what interval (although I do sometimes manage to surprise him).
Heck, a year or so ago while visiting Vegas I swam with a group there, it was sprint day. The coach--who I had never seen before--was able to give me 50 LCM goal times--that were nearly spot on. Actually when he gave them I rolled my eyes and thought, "no way," and surprised myself when I made them.
But at the same token shouldn't the coach know or at least be able to look up what the speed of the swimmers are, if he can't how does he know what he is doing is working?
Exactly. Any decent coach who knows the swimmers should be able to give them goal times for the set. My coach (who I've known for a very long time), will sometimes give a 100 FAST on 5 min, and tell me he wants me to go 1:03 (ha! he'd probably say 1:00), off the block. It is something I may be able to do, but maybe not. But given that we've known each other for about 15 years, he has a good feel for what I can do on what interval (although I do sometimes manage to surprise him).
Heck, a year or so ago while visiting Vegas I swam with a group there, it was sprint day. The coach--who I had never seen before--was able to give me 50 LCM goal times--that were nearly spot on. Actually when he gave them I rolled my eyes and thought, "no way," and surprised myself when I made them.