One leg weaker than the other

Former Member
Former Member
So I have a problem: one of my legs is significantly weaker than the other. I think I've always known this, but swimming really made me aware of it because whenever I do a kicking session with a kickboard, I always drift to one side of the lane and usually end up hitting the pool wall or lane divider. This happens with flutter kick, frog kick, and scissor kick and it's my left leg that's the weaker of the two. It's gotten to the point where I'm getting hip strain in my right hip from my right leg picking up all the slack. How do I isolate the left leg to make it stronger in the water? Maybe wear a small fin on that leg?
Parents
  • Samusx, I encourage you to do a bit of data collection before jumping to the assumption your left leg is weaker because you drift in one direction. You may have a tighter left flexor than the right. You could have a left hamstring weakness/tightness. Either of these will change your kick balance. Your left ankle could also be less flexible than your right which would cause drag and change in direction. You could also be overkicking with your right leg (bigger range than desired) and not realize it. Could be either leg doing this for that matter. Yes, it could be your left leg, but it could be other things as well. Paul
Reply
  • Samusx, I encourage you to do a bit of data collection before jumping to the assumption your left leg is weaker because you drift in one direction. You may have a tighter left flexor than the right. You could have a left hamstring weakness/tightness. Either of these will change your kick balance. Your left ankle could also be less flexible than your right which would cause drag and change in direction. You could also be overkicking with your right leg (bigger range than desired) and not realize it. Could be either leg doing this for that matter. Yes, it could be your left leg, but it could be other things as well. Paul
Children
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