Upcoming meets...your advice appreciated

Hi again and thanks for the welcoming comments in my other thread. Of course after lurking a few weeks, I've got to jump in with a splash, posting a bunch of times in a single day! ;) But thought this should be a separate thread: I'm planning on two meets in the next few weeks. 1. Senior Games 50 yd freestyle. This one's iffy b/c so far I haven't received the entry form, yet it's generally held around mid-June. 2. A master's meet at the Upper Main Line Y on 6/19. (I'm from the Philly area.) I plan to do the 50 free in that one too. Here are my questions: 1. Two things I know I need to work on: the dive and the flip turn. Dive: The coach told me he'd help me w/ the dive next session. I know basically how to dive, just wondering if there are any additional tricks to diving off the starting block. Flip turn: The flip turn's coming along--as in, I can now SOMETIMES manage to get a decent semblance of a flip turn. (Sometimes what I get is ... a flip gone all wrong. I tend to want to do the flip too far from the wall.) In the second of the two meets, the pool is 50 yards, but in the first, I'm pretty sure it's 25 yards. I'm wondering if it's better simply to do an open turn when racing unless I feel very confident in the flip turn. 2. Obviously in a 50 yard freestyle, I'll never be more than 50 yards behind anyone, BUT so far the best time in workouts (without diving, 26 yard pool, open turns) has been 55. That's definitely not going to put me right up there in the running for hardware, but is it going to leave me so far in the back as to have officials looking impatiently at their hour glasses and reading all of War and Peace while they're waiting for me to finish? ;) Is it possible that simply the dive into the pool and the race day adrenaline will shorten this time? (Also, I suppose doing 5x50 is a bit of a different experience than simply concentrating all one's efforts into a single one.) I'm not afraid to finish last. Someone has to and I have experience (going to masters' track meets and getting clobbered, but competing mainly w/ myself anyway). But it would be nice to at least be in the mix for second-to-last place. ;) Bottom line...I'm still willing to try it b/c I figure nothing that happens in the pool either time is likely to be fatal. I'm healthy and there are a lot of ppl who wait and don't try things, afraid of looking foolish, then have regrets if they lose their health. Still, any tips that will help me do the best I can (not worried about others) will help!
Parents
  • Since she was not still after the kids take their mark, she got DQ'd. That is not what the rule reads She does not have to be motionless only stationary.. And on the whole, I have found that you cannot argue with the meet officials, it gets you no where. And since they are volunteers, I don't want to make their lives hard anyway. Having been a certified official for 14 years, I am glad that you do not want to make the officials life difficult. It is nice to know that we are appreciated. However, we are in it for the swimmers - USA Swimming has a program called for the kids. When you question an official, dont go there to argue, go there to find out what the problem is. You should be able to get an answer to What did the official see? What was the rule that was broken? Was the official in position to see it? If you (or your coach) asks the ref, s/he will go ask the official (starter or deck ref) those questions. If the official says the swimmer was moving the back foot, ask if the swimmer was stationary. Ask to see the rule that was broken. All officials should be able to give an answer to those questions. I should point out with some embarrassement that I was at the officials meeting at the Summer USA Championships at Stanford when the motionless question came up. There were many officials who would have missed the correct answer (including me). It was a learning experience. As I said we are in it for the swimmer, and it is important that we get it right. michael
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  • Since she was not still after the kids take their mark, she got DQ'd. That is not what the rule reads She does not have to be motionless only stationary.. And on the whole, I have found that you cannot argue with the meet officials, it gets you no where. And since they are volunteers, I don't want to make their lives hard anyway. Having been a certified official for 14 years, I am glad that you do not want to make the officials life difficult. It is nice to know that we are appreciated. However, we are in it for the swimmers - USA Swimming has a program called for the kids. When you question an official, dont go there to argue, go there to find out what the problem is. You should be able to get an answer to What did the official see? What was the rule that was broken? Was the official in position to see it? If you (or your coach) asks the ref, s/he will go ask the official (starter or deck ref) those questions. If the official says the swimmer was moving the back foot, ask if the swimmer was stationary. Ask to see the rule that was broken. All officials should be able to give an answer to those questions. I should point out with some embarrassement that I was at the officials meeting at the Summer USA Championships at Stanford when the motionless question came up. There were many officials who would have missed the correct answer (including me). It was a learning experience. As I said we are in it for the swimmer, and it is important that we get it right. michael
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