Front crawl: Hips sink when I breathe, causing bad things

Former Member
Former Member
My front crawl (according to my instructor) is GREAT. My feet stay at the surface. My hands barely splash. I do an "S" pull. I roll. But when I go to breathe, the following happens: 1. my hips start to sink 2. ... causing me to slow down 3. ... causing my head to sink 4. ... causing me to crane my neck 5. ... causing me to try to "grab" the water in front of me 6. ... causing me to nearly drown. Now we've tried a number of different drills and I've come to realize that my hips sink on almost ANY kind of rotation from front to back. If I do the TI skating drill, or even just a simple switch from front crawl to back crawl, or vice versa, my hips sink. Should I just keep plugging away at it, or is there some particular thing I should do? Kick harder when I rotate to breathe?
Parents
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    ...But when I go to breathe, the following happens: 1. my hips start to sink ... My first guess is head position. The kick does not give all the much propulsion, especially relative to muscle size. The kick does do a lot for helping maintain proper body position however. Ideally you don’t want to lift your head at all to breathe, but it is bound to lift some, especially until you really get motoring. But when you do lift your head, is it more from the top, or from the chin? As a drill, occasionally try tucking you chin into you chest/shoulder as you breathe. It will likely bring a sensation that you are trying to point the top of your head at the bottom of the pool. Try that and see how it feels. Feel free to experiment with other things. Lots of people will give lots of advice, and while much of it is similar, I believe you need to find your own stroke.
Reply
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    ...But when I go to breathe, the following happens: 1. my hips start to sink ... My first guess is head position. The kick does not give all the much propulsion, especially relative to muscle size. The kick does do a lot for helping maintain proper body position however. Ideally you don’t want to lift your head at all to breathe, but it is bound to lift some, especially until you really get motoring. But when you do lift your head, is it more from the top, or from the chin? As a drill, occasionally try tucking you chin into you chest/shoulder as you breathe. It will likely bring a sensation that you are trying to point the top of your head at the bottom of the pool. Try that and see how it feels. Feel free to experiment with other things. Lots of people will give lots of advice, and while much of it is similar, I believe you need to find your own stroke.
Children
No Data