Fitness swimming

Former Member
Former Member
At the convention I kept hearing... "Swimming is the number one choice of exercise in adults" and "Ask anyone and they'll be able to tell you gow beneficial swimming is" and similar phrases... Well, I can't dipute the facty that swimming is good for you, one of the best forms of exercise there is. Now, having said that, I can't help it notice that even in this 'day and age' where so many people are close to obsessed with fitness and exercise - especially in California - the USMS membership of some 40,000 is only 0.15% of the population of the US. This leads me to think that we (the USMS) has missed the boat somewhere!!! Coming back from my fiorst convention, I see that thewre is a lot of focus on competetive swimming, and most of the delegates and BOD nad EC are either current or former competetive swimmers, and naturally the focus would be on competing. That alone is wonderful... BUT... It is my understanding that close to 80% of the USMS membership consists of fitness swimmers. Also, I hear that : - in the last 2-3 years the USMS membership has been stagnating. - USMS does want to grow in membership. And... at the convention, I see 'fitness' as being an auxiliary, almost a stepchild focus to the competetive side. Don't get me wrong, I love to compete myself, BUT... Competetive adult swimmers are a very narrow demographic and if USMS wants to grow, they (we) need to find more attractive ways to "build-educate-service" our potential fitness swimmers. I find it puzzling that many 'fitness swimmers' will readily enter open water swims, but when they hear of a swim meet, they don't think they're good enough for it... I've done both, and let me tewll you, swim meets are much easier, especially for a first timer, then an open water mile swim in an ocean or a lake. I also see coaches right here in this forum that are having a hard time explaining to their fitness swimmers why (other then insurance that some clubs require) they should be members of USMS. I think USMS is failing in it's core objectives when it comes to attracting membership, servicing them and educatiing them, which I strongly believe will mostly come from the fitness side. Well, this is all that comes to mind at the moment. I'm hoping to eventually refine the thoughts. Comments, thoughts anyone? I'd love to have some dialogue about this and hear what other people think.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Originally posted by breastroker One thing that puzzeled me was one of the first fitness articles. It was written at a level that professional coaches would like, but way above what a fitness swimmer would or could use. There should be no acronyms used, and they should be easy to understand. If we are to communicate to our fitness swimmers, we should survey them to see if they are understanding it all. As I often say " If your people can't understand you, then perhaps you need to look within and not at them" Boy, do I agree on that one! I get a chance to work with newbies on our team (I help out woith clinics a lot) and in our intro to masters clinic, most people don't know what a circle swim is, much less the need to know how to do it. Also, I hear that we are trying to keep the website void of as many graphics as possible because it 'slows it down' but in reality that is starting to be a thing of the past. Some photos, diagrams and other illustrative aids would really go a long way, and I think there is room to use them effectively and still spoaringly, wiothout overloading the site. Especially with diagrams etc... you can make a simple gif file that barely contains 10-100K to it, and effectively convey a lot more information then a 50K of text might.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Originally posted by breastroker One thing that puzzeled me was one of the first fitness articles. It was written at a level that professional coaches would like, but way above what a fitness swimmer would or could use. There should be no acronyms used, and they should be easy to understand. If we are to communicate to our fitness swimmers, we should survey them to see if they are understanding it all. As I often say " If your people can't understand you, then perhaps you need to look within and not at them" Boy, do I agree on that one! I get a chance to work with newbies on our team (I help out woith clinics a lot) and in our intro to masters clinic, most people don't know what a circle swim is, much less the need to know how to do it. Also, I hear that we are trying to keep the website void of as many graphics as possible because it 'slows it down' but in reality that is starting to be a thing of the past. Some photos, diagrams and other illustrative aids would really go a long way, and I think there is room to use them effectively and still spoaringly, wiothout overloading the site. Especially with diagrams etc... you can make a simple gif file that barely contains 10-100K to it, and effectively convey a lot more information then a 50K of text might.
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