Front Crawl breathing prob

Former Member
Former Member
On my right side, which is how I learnt as a kid, I tend to find that I don't balance in the water as well as when I breathe on the left (the side I forced to learn bilaterally in recent months). Feels like my lead arm (left) goes down (I think that's a reflex in trying to push my head up), and I've worked on holding the stretch. That didn't fix it. Still feels like I begind to sag in the water. I have now been tinkering with pulling back further on with the right arm (because I started to cross compare) to getting a better roll and glide; this seems to be working a bit. Does that make sense? Is cutting the pull short (in slower paced swims) likely to cause a sagging feeling? Undoubtedly I have a bad habit well ingrained...and without a coach to look at my stroke it's a bit of "cat and mouse" for me to analyse. I have books with drills etc but I want to try and ID the issue if I can. Sprints are not such an issue...but there are less breaths and faster turnovers. Any thoughts? Thanks Rich
Parents
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    ..ok then, I'm a pefectionist that wants the ability to do everything as symetrically as possible... Have you considered that your neck muscles might be more flexible on one side compared to the other? When turning to breathe on the less flexible side, you have to roll more and the stroke goes out of whack.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    ..ok then, I'm a pefectionist that wants the ability to do everything as symetrically as possible... Have you considered that your neck muscles might be more flexible on one side compared to the other? When turning to breathe on the less flexible side, you have to roll more and the stroke goes out of whack.
Children
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