Slamming face on water - Breaststroke

Former Member
Former Member
Hi there, am asking for advice on my breaststroke technique. I'm doing the over the water recovery, lunging forward with both arms over the water and shooting forward as much as possible. I try to keep my face downwards and looking at the lane line. However, I still feel the impact of the water hitting my goggles especially, creating uncomfortable suction on my goggles and it doesn't feel great on the rest of my face obviously. However, when I try to duck my head and hit the water with my forehead, I don't feel an impact on my face but it shortens my recovery distance with my arms and negatively affects my time. Any suggestions? Does anyone else experience this? Thanks in advance!
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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 7 years ago
    A video would help. I'd say you shouldn't "try" to recover your arms over the surface. I often recover my hands above the water at sprint speed, but that is because I am riding higher in the water.Most elite breaststrokers recover their hands right at the surface. You may be having too much up and down movement, or it may be a timing issue.Again, a video would help. I'll have to see if I can get someone to take a video of me... unfortunately at the time I swim (5am), everyone is 100% focused on their own swim understandably, and the lifeguard on duty can't for liability purposes. If I had to guess, I think the times I do a face plant has to be where use my arms to shoot them forward without initiating the action from the body. There's a disconnect between my arms and my head/body when the forward action is initiated from the arms instead of the body and then... face plant. Swam approximately 2500 yards this morning, and didn't feel the impact on my face; I focused on using my body/head to throw my arms forward, instead of shooting the arms out with the shoulder.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 7 years ago
    A video would help. I'd say you shouldn't "try" to recover your arms over the surface. I often recover my hands above the water at sprint speed, but that is because I am riding higher in the water.Most elite breaststrokers recover their hands right at the surface. You may be having too much up and down movement, or it may be a timing issue.Again, a video would help. I'll have to see if I can get someone to take a video of me... unfortunately at the time I swim (5am), everyone is 100% focused on their own swim understandably, and the lifeguard on duty can't for liability purposes. If I had to guess, I think the times I do a face plant has to be where use my arms to shoot them forward without initiating the action from the body. There's a disconnect between my arms and my head/body when the forward action is initiated from the arms instead of the body and then... face plant. Swam approximately 2500 yards this morning, and didn't feel the impact on my face; I focused on using my body/head to throw my arms forward, instead of shooting the arms out with the shoulder.
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