I wasn't sure if the Workouts forum was the best place to put this, so I put it here. I'll go ahead and ask my essential question:
What's the best way to train as an all-around but especially middle-distance freestyle swimmer, in the pool and in the weight room?
If you don't want to read my whole post you don't have to go any farther but I'm going to try to be pretty specific.
A little background info: I'm a 17 year old male high school swimmer (rising senior) and I don't have any club swimming experience (I know my age might be a little weird for Master's swimming but this is the only really active swimming forum I could find). Compared to my fellow high school swimmers, some of whom have swum for club teams but stopped, I feel that I'm pretty good at the 200 and 500 freestyle (SCY). I don't think I've had enough training to really excel in any other strokes in the past, but I'll get more into that in a second. I've improved fairly consistently over my high school career especially in the 200 and 500, from 2:08 freshman year > 2:02 sophomore year > 1:56 junior year in the 200 and 6:04 freshman year > 5:37 sophomore year > 5:19 junior year in the 500. I think I can especially do well in the 500 because no one else seems to want to swim it. All 3 seasons we've done about 3000-4000 yards a day 5 days a week, and I never go to the gym on a regular basis. Some of my club team friends say they do 8 workouts a week for swimming including 2-3 sessions in the weight room, and I think if I try and do more than what I've done these past 3 years that I can maybe swim in college at a D2 or small D1 school.
So basically my plan this summer is to try ramp up my swimming training for my senior year of swimming.
The problem is I haven't been really able to find structured plans online for middle distance swimmers. My idea was to combine what I could find for distance and sprint training and do what I feel what helped me during the winter season to a larger extent, along with doing sessions with my high school coaches to work on technique and helping me structure my workout plan. The problem is that my coaches are a little busy with a summer league team they run so their assistance is sort of limited, and without their help I don't entirely trust myself with coming up with a workout, not being a real professional at any of that stuff.
The other issue is I don't want to completely specialize in one stroke or event in the case that I do swim in college. But I also don't really know how to put well-roundedness into a workout plan let alone combine it with the middle distance training program I don't know how to design.
Here's the general workout plan I came up with on my own just as a guide. I borrowed some ideas from various sources.
For 12 weeks:
Sunday: Rest
Monday: AM- Rest, PM- Weight Room
Tuesday: AM- Go for high volume, PM- Work on IM
Wednesday: AM- Pace work (I feel that this really helped me during the season), PM- Weight Room
Thursday: AM- Go for high volume, PM- Work on IM
Friday: AM- Pace work, PM- Weight room
Saturday: Rest
I'm not too sure if that's a great plan, and I especially need help on what to do in the weight room, as I've never gone on a regular basis, although I do have a pretty good understanding of how to do most exercises.
If you have suggestions on anything I've said please share, I would really enjoy as much input as I can get.
Again, in case you don't want to scroll back up, my question was:
What's the best way to train as an all-around but especially middle-distance freestyle swimmer, in the pool and in the weight room?
PS- I don't really want to join a club team. I like not having a concrete schedule (despite what the plan I designed implies) but I think I have enough self-accountability and motivation to be able to carry the plan I outlined. EDIT: I also can work on technique with my high school coaches, so that isn't much of an issue for me either.
I think swimming more often would be helpful, doing dry land post practice, supplemental to swim training and proportional to yardage. Otherwise, separate dry land sessions would take away from your swimming.
Here's an example of Michael Phelps training from 2002
7 variable swim sessions
51,000 yards total / average 7300 yards a session / range 4500 to 9000 yards
4 post practice (after practice, not separate)
1) 30' running, 15' stretching
2) 500 abdominals + stretching
3) dryland
wall sit 2'
3x8 pullups, assist if needed
2x15 dips, no weight
pushups / 10x +5 clap (elbows in / elbows out / opposite / reverse opposite)
ab wheel 2x15
3x10 ball squats
3x10 squat jumps
stretching!!!
4) dryland
medicine ball (repeat 3x)
chest pass 10x
behind head pass 10x
right to right pass 10x
left to left pass 10x
between front pass 10x
squat pass 10x
dyna disk 3x30 seconds balancing each leg
foam rolls 3x30 seconds
ab wheel 3x25
stretching!!!
Swimming Technique Jan/Feb 2003
"American Flyer" by Bob Bowman, with Michael Scott
I think swimming more often would be helpful, doing dry land post practice, supplemental to swim training and proportional to yardage. Otherwise, separate dry land sessions would take away from your swimming.
Here's an example of Michael Phelps training from 2002
7 variable swim sessions
51,000 yards total / average 7300 yards a session / range 4500 to 9000 yards
4 post practice (after practice, not separate)
1) 30' running, 15' stretching
2) 500 abdominals + stretching
3) dryland
wall sit 2'
3x8 pullups, assist if needed
2x15 dips, no weight
pushups / 10x +5 clap (elbows in / elbows out / opposite / reverse opposite)
ab wheel 2x15
3x10 ball squats
3x10 squat jumps
stretching!!!
4) dryland
medicine ball (repeat 3x)
chest pass 10x
behind head pass 10x
right to right pass 10x
left to left pass 10x
between front pass 10x
squat pass 10x
dyna disk 3x30 seconds balancing each leg
foam rolls 3x30 seconds
ab wheel 3x25
stretching!!!
Swimming Technique Jan/Feb 2003
"American Flyer" by Bob Bowman, with Michael Scott