The Need for SPEED !

I have been swimming for 50 years - highly competitive at all levels of swimming - and yet I have never ever done a real SPRINT workout. What am I trying to say when I say Sprint workout ? Its actually very simple - first of all it has to be an actual workout - not a taper session - resting and taper is different than a sprint workout - why ? Because in a workout you are building sth - in taper you are resting your body to recover from all the work you did building...

Imagine you are a sprint coach for runners and you have to give a workout for a 100/ 200 dash runner - swimming and running I always use 4x for distance vs time - 50 Free = 200 dash run..

Proper warm-up - for a runner - we do need to warm up -- but can you imagine the look of the runners if you give them an "easy 4k" warm up run ? Then have them do the preset of another 3-5k running -- or 10 sets of 50 jumps compare to kicking. Then the main "speed" set is 200 max speed run with 800 easy run in between - do that 8 times. And then the warm down is another easy 4k jog ... 

So what would I consider a real sprint workout ? Here are my rules: 

Rule 1 - Fast twitch VS Slow Twitch. Your body and muscles - fast twitch and slow twitch are different !!  We all have both and many muscle fibers that can be recruited or are in between - often people have different levels - but all training will influence both groups and they don't "like" each other.

Rule 2 - never ever count total workout yardage if you want to get FAST !!!  BUT do count how much yardage of max speed you do. 

Rule 3 - Max speed ain't easy and you can only keep it for 6-8 seconds everything else is less than max !!

Rule 4 - It takes real rest to be ready for maximum speed. Swimming or running or cycling for 1, 2, or 5 or 10 minutes at an easy pace does not give you rest. 

Rule 5 - "toys" only when you are ready for them ... paddles, pull cords, parachutes, fins ... 

Rule 6 - SPEED yes but slow increase in intensity and volume is better... this is where endurance experience does work.

So - how why am I thinking this - and maybe challenging the current system ? We don't use things... we lose them and I don't think its a good idea to lose strength, power and ability to have max performance. Sure - be cautious and all but have a reason to be cautious which means do challenge your body.  I can't reach much above 150 max Heart rate right now - why ? Because I didn't use it for 14 years - and just plain health and longevity - we need to give our body challenges - you don't use it you lose it.

Besides posting this - I am also doing this in the pool - will it work ? Too early to tell ... I am using Rule 6 -- since I have never trained like this - how fast can I get ?

Life time best in 50y Free - funny thing and part of my new belief - I was a 200 swimmer and I never did a 50 Free for "real" ... I think about 21.0 in college ... early 40s - my second round of swimming -- had some assistance from the full body suits for sure 50 Free 21.0 ... interesting - able to match my college time in 50 Free when I was 40 years old ....hmm - so how close can I get to that now ? I give myself one more year to get to full ability and hopefully my body will keep up but part of my approach is also that there isn't a rush to get there...  One year to what ? My goal is to reach the leveling field - where I workout for 3 months and my speed stays about the same ...

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  • I graduated from college in 1971. I was not satisfied with my swimming performance my senior year. I knew I had more to gain in swimming. I started medical school and didn’t really have much time to swim, but I knew I had to swim to keep my sanity. I hated doing distances in work out so I was basically doing 25 as fast as I could in the time that I had, not caring how far I swam. In 1974 I turned 25 which at the time was the minimum age to swim masters and started swimming masters. I discovered my hundreds were faster than they were in college  And not being a freestyler I had never done 50s for time before. With some variations and adding some longer swims I’ve basically been doing that kind of workout ever since and love it and it worked out pretty well for me. 

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  • I graduated from college in 1971. I was not satisfied with my swimming performance my senior year. I knew I had more to gain in swimming. I started medical school and didn’t really have much time to swim, but I knew I had to swim to keep my sanity. I hated doing distances in work out so I was basically doing 25 as fast as I could in the time that I had, not caring how far I swam. In 1974 I turned 25 which at the time was the minimum age to swim masters and started swimming masters. I discovered my hundreds were faster than they were in college  And not being a freestyler I had never done 50s for time before. With some variations and adding some longer swims I’ve basically been doing that kind of workout ever since and love it and it worked out pretty well for me. 

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