High Stroke Rate

Former Member
Former Member
This is my first post here. I started swimming four years ago. I grew up with a pool at our house and swimming was always an important part of summer for me, but I never swam competitively. Fast forward a few decades (I'm 47 now). I started swimming because running was becoming too painful for my knees and back, and I was tired of other problems (shin splints, for example). I started out with breaststroke but now I swim almost nothing but freestyle. I started practicing bilateral breathing just a few months ago because my goal is to enter triathlons starting next year (Olympic distance), and I found that being able to breathe on both sides would be an immense asset after a few open water swims in which I breathed only to one side. After a timed swim last week in which I tried to do bilateral as much as possible during a 1500m swim, I came up with a time that was slightly better than normal, and this even though I deliberately took it easy for the first half of the swim. I knew it must have been the higher stroke rate that this unnatural style forces me to use. Yesterday, I timed myself again for 1500m and ended up under 28 minutes for the first time ever (27:48). I again used bilateral breathing and the higher stroke rate. Now I'm sold on a higher stroke rate! When I breathe to one side, it's very smooth (almost no bubbles even when I push myself), but I pause for a second with my right arm in the water. Has anyone else experienced something similar with a higher stroke rate?
Parents
  • Welcome Make a video of you swimming freestyle Put it on youtube provide the link here and ask for feedback 27:48 is holding 55.6 per 50 or 1:51.2 per 100 There probably are many things you can do to swim faster. You'll get your biggest improvement from correcting your technique. Stroke, turns, breathing, & push offs. Your next biggest will come from training harder further faster more often. You'll get some if you wear a faster suit. In any distance race, I suggest breathing every other stroke or every 2, in longer swims breathing is very important. We are humans we need air. Breathing every 3rd stroke as opposed to every 2nd stroke means you will get way less air over the race and you will have to wait longer between breaths. lets say you take 36 strokes for each 50 meters, if you breathe every 3 you get 12 breaths, if you breathe every 2 you get 18 breaths. That's 50% more breaths. If you're holding 55.6 per 50 and breathing every 2, you're getting a breath every 3.0 seconds if you're breathing every 3 you're getting a breath every 4.6 seconds. Lastly a higher stroke rate could be due to inefficiency, focus on efficient steady and sustainable strokes.
Reply
  • Welcome Make a video of you swimming freestyle Put it on youtube provide the link here and ask for feedback 27:48 is holding 55.6 per 50 or 1:51.2 per 100 There probably are many things you can do to swim faster. You'll get your biggest improvement from correcting your technique. Stroke, turns, breathing, & push offs. Your next biggest will come from training harder further faster more often. You'll get some if you wear a faster suit. In any distance race, I suggest breathing every other stroke or every 2, in longer swims breathing is very important. We are humans we need air. Breathing every 3rd stroke as opposed to every 2nd stroke means you will get way less air over the race and you will have to wait longer between breaths. lets say you take 36 strokes for each 50 meters, if you breathe every 3 you get 12 breaths, if you breathe every 2 you get 18 breaths. That's 50% more breaths. If you're holding 55.6 per 50 and breathing every 2, you're getting a breath every 3.0 seconds if you're breathing every 3 you're getting a breath every 4.6 seconds. Lastly a higher stroke rate could be due to inefficiency, focus on efficient steady and sustainable strokes.
Children
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