Issues with sprinting

Former Member
Former Member
Hey there. I'm a sprinter and my main events include 50 fly and free. However, at most times, after finishing my race I feel like I could've gone much faster and done much better. I don't feel tired at all. When I try to go faster during the race, it's like something is holding me back. I'm not tired, I'm trying to go fast but it just doesn't happen. I don't go fast even if I pull more efficiently and kick with more power. I've tried doing 100s but I absolutely suck at them. What would you advice? Also, I lot of people have told me that this happens because I don't sprint properly. Any tips on how to sprint properly?
Parents
  • A few things that have helped me: 1. Swimming 25 & 50 build sets where I increase my stroke rate up to the point where my stroke starts to break down and lose my hold on the water. 2. Focus on maintaining my stroke length even as I increase my turnover rate. Extend and reach for the wall on every stroke. Keep my catch out front. 3. 50's leave little margin for error and the details are important. Work on your starts and "walls". Accelerate into your turns and get into a tight streamline coming off the wall. Don't start kicking until you take full advantage the speed from your push off the wall. Everyone is different, so experiment on what works best for you. 4. Breathing slows you down. Elite swimmers swim 50's on one or two breaths. Practice breathing every 2nd or 3rd stroke cycle and don't breath from the flags to the wall. Again, practice different things to see what works best for you. 5. Practice like you race. Streamline and do your dolphin kicks off every wall in practice until it becomes second nature to you. Finish hard to the wall every time, don't coast in during practice. I had the chance to watch Olympian Kelsi Worrell train for a couple of weeks at my pool last December - she would push off and do hard underwater dolphins out to the 15 meter mark EVERY lap. It was awesome watching her. That's the kind of discipline that you need to reach your potential. Good luck.
Reply
  • A few things that have helped me: 1. Swimming 25 & 50 build sets where I increase my stroke rate up to the point where my stroke starts to break down and lose my hold on the water. 2. Focus on maintaining my stroke length even as I increase my turnover rate. Extend and reach for the wall on every stroke. Keep my catch out front. 3. 50's leave little margin for error and the details are important. Work on your starts and "walls". Accelerate into your turns and get into a tight streamline coming off the wall. Don't start kicking until you take full advantage the speed from your push off the wall. Everyone is different, so experiment on what works best for you. 4. Breathing slows you down. Elite swimmers swim 50's on one or two breaths. Practice breathing every 2nd or 3rd stroke cycle and don't breath from the flags to the wall. Again, practice different things to see what works best for you. 5. Practice like you race. Streamline and do your dolphin kicks off every wall in practice until it becomes second nature to you. Finish hard to the wall every time, don't coast in during practice. I had the chance to watch Olympian Kelsi Worrell train for a couple of weeks at my pool last December - she would push off and do hard underwater dolphins out to the 15 meter mark EVERY lap. It was awesome watching her. That's the kind of discipline that you need to reach your potential. Good luck.
Children
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