Turetski on swimming

Former Member
Former Member
Gennadi Turetski, whose two most successful swimmers are Popov and Klim, made recently a presentation for Russian swimming coaches with a video demonstration. Below are a few points from the freestyle part of this presentation that I found insightful but practical in the same time. Swimming movements originates from the mass center – the lower back. Having entered the water from a dive you must transfer the motion into a horizontal vector as soon as possible. Popov’s first movement underwater is his legs’ moving up to throw away the water that is trailing his body A javelin thrown from the deck enters the water through a hole and glides in a horizontal direction without any unnecessary force it is rigid. In the pool Gennadi showed a start drill that I found very good for the development body as a rigid part and learning to forward your energy to the other end of the pool. You put one foot on the edge of the pool and the other leg kneels on the deck and push off. You should be able to do a long horizontal glide. During your swim you focus on forward movement, not on forward force. During pull you position your thumb outward for a more efficient catch. One hand’s catch and the other’s exit occur simultaneously In freestyle you don’t pull. Instead you move yourself forward over the pulling hand. While finishing you don’t shorten you stroke to increase the rate. Instead you lengthen the stroke and turn on an intense kick In a 50m sprint the most important indicator is the swimmer’s speed at the 15m mark Rhythm is very important during a turn because the right rhythm helps you to push off the wall with the rebound wave thus gaining a 0.5m advantage. You count like: One (first hand entry), Two (second hand entry) and Three (rebound. Not push off, but rebound). Popov seems to do that amazingly well at both low and high speed. Gennadi believes that fast kick has low amplitude and high rate. And I like this statement of his: “In the race you don’t go to the wall, you go through the wall” Probably like in life. Dmitri
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    The one statement he made that I don't agree with was "One hand’s catch and the other’s exit occur simultaneously." I agree...That depends on the individual. Its not how I swim and I watched Popov on one of the links. It looks like he doesn't do it either so...I feel better!:) Which of the videos were you watching? I looked at a couple and the timing seemed to be as described. The definition of "catch" is open to interpretation as it is not an instantaneous event. I would say that with Popov the start of the catch, or the start of the hand movement toward the catch starts as the opposite hand exits. I would agree that timing varies with sprint versus distance, and of course individually. How does your timing differ? I am trying to ingrain the start the catch as you exit/close to continuous propulsion timing so I am curious on this issue.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    The one statement he made that I don't agree with was "One hand’s catch and the other’s exit occur simultaneously." I agree...That depends on the individual. Its not how I swim and I watched Popov on one of the links. It looks like he doesn't do it either so...I feel better!:) Which of the videos were you watching? I looked at a couple and the timing seemed to be as described. The definition of "catch" is open to interpretation as it is not an instantaneous event. I would say that with Popov the start of the catch, or the start of the hand movement toward the catch starts as the opposite hand exits. I would agree that timing varies with sprint versus distance, and of course individually. How does your timing differ? I am trying to ingrain the start the catch as you exit/close to continuous propulsion timing so I am curious on this issue.
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