I have been endeavouring to improve my freestyle stroke for some time and am now confused. I am hoping someone may have some advice.
For years I just swam thinking all I had to do was rotate my arms and kick to get to the other end. Once I could get to the other end I began to focus on technique.
I read Terry Laughlin's total immersion aiming to increase stroke length by fully extending the leading arm and practising front quandrant swimming by only commencing the catch and pull when the other arm "caught up" to the leading arm.
I have also been in a technique class however they suggest the leading arm should not be extended but should remain curved as the leading hand enters the water. They suggest the catch and pull should commence as soon as the leading hand enters the water. This is a completely different technique to that explained in Total Immersion.
I understand there are different techniques and suspect it is a matter of identifying what works best for the individual. I would be interested in other swimmers views and which technique they prefer.
Regards - John
Parents
Former Member
Originally posted by Johnathon
I read Terry Laughlin's total immersion aiming to increase stroke length by fully extending the leading arm and practising front quandrant swimming by only commencing the catch and pull when the other arm "caught up" to the leading arm.
Total Immersion teaches that your leading arm should begin to drop when your recovering hand reaches your ear.
"Front Quadrant Swimming" simply means that you should always have one arm in the quadrant bounded by a vertical plane going through your shoulders and the surface of the water. What you are describing sounds like what is called a "catch up" stroke.
Bob
Originally posted by Johnathon
I read Terry Laughlin's total immersion aiming to increase stroke length by fully extending the leading arm and practising front quandrant swimming by only commencing the catch and pull when the other arm "caught up" to the leading arm.
Total Immersion teaches that your leading arm should begin to drop when your recovering hand reaches your ear.
"Front Quadrant Swimming" simply means that you should always have one arm in the quadrant bounded by a vertical plane going through your shoulders and the surface of the water. What you are describing sounds like what is called a "catch up" stroke.
Bob