This new thread occurred to me while reading posts comparing Spitz to Phelps, as well as reflecting upon mortality considering heart attacks etc. In swimming we immortalize individuals or teams for various feats or contributions, but do little to preserve a feeling for subsequent generations of enthusiasts about what it was like to train and compete 'back in the day'. Just what day am I talking about? Exactly: there have been many 'days' or more properly 'eras' that can be narrowly characterized by differences in equipment, distances swum and trained, coaching methods or more widely by larger factors: world war, global depression, racial segregation, inequality of the sexes. All of these can contribute to very different experiences than what are common today to the younger swimmer; hence, 'what was it like'. I visualize a thread that continues to be added to as new people read it and remember their own experiences. As well, experience can vary with national origin, not just era. There have already been posts on this topic scattered in various threads, please feel free to copy or quote material from them to here.
Please remember that this is not about how fast a particular swimmer was, but about the conditions that defined competitive swimming of that day.
We also have a priceless resource out there: aging swimmers in their 80's or 90's who may be less likely to read or hear of this thread; why not ask them for some of their memories or impressions and pass them on to us, while we still can?
I swam in high school in the fall of 1988 (and part of the season my first year of college).
It's not so much the things I remember, but the things that have surprised me now that I've started swimming again.
...
4) They moved the starting blocks.
My 10-year-old daughter had a meet at my old h.s. The blocks are now at the same end as the diving boards. I swear they used to be at the 3.5" end by the locker rooms.
This one was a big surprise to me as well.... and what a great idea! We used to start in some ridiculously shallow pools. I remember one in Sterling, IL that was so shallow it was seemingly impossibly to avoid knocking ones knees on the bottom. Now I wonder why they didn't always put the starting blocks in the deep end in the first place!
I swam in high school in the fall of 1988 (and part of the season my first year of college).
It's not so much the things I remember, but the things that have surprised me now that I've started swimming again.
...
4) They moved the starting blocks.
My 10-year-old daughter had a meet at my old h.s. The blocks are now at the same end as the diving boards. I swear they used to be at the 3.5" end by the locker rooms.
This one was a big surprise to me as well.... and what a great idea! We used to start in some ridiculously shallow pools. I remember one in Sterling, IL that was so shallow it was seemingly impossibly to avoid knocking ones knees on the bottom. Now I wonder why they didn't always put the starting blocks in the deep end in the first place!