Weight lifting and swimming

Former Member
Former Member
Hi all! In this thread: forums.usms.org/showthread.php ...there are a lot of different opinions on how to lift weights in combination with swimming. The opinions are all spread out in between other comments and quotes so I thought I would start a separate thread about this topic as I think it might be of value for everyone to get it sorted out how and why you should lift weights in combination with swimming. If you know of another thread with exactly this topic pls let me know and i will add this comment in that thread instead. My strong belief so far is the following (not at all stating that this is the truth, but it is the best theory I have heard so far): You lift weights to become stronger If you are stronger you need less % of your total capability to travel at the same speed you did before you bacame stronger. This will lead to that you can swim at the same speed for a longer period of time OR simply do the same distance as before, but faster This means that both sprinters and distance swimmers benefit from becoming stronger. You don't want to build muscle mass, since that creates drag. However, for most of us this is not a problem because if you train on a regular basis in the gym, 3-4 times a week in a very focused way you might add on 0,5-1,0 kg/year....if you are under the age of 30. Above this age you tend to add on much less if anything at all.:cane: You become stronger by lifting heavy weights. High reps does not make you stronger, it increases your endurance capabilies. Endurance you typically practice in the pool. I therefore focus on sets of 3-6 reps with heavy weights. The next week I focus on fast movements (beacasue heavy lifting is often a rather slow movement), reducing the weights to 60-70% of max to practice fast movements under pressure (like swimming, but to the extreme). The week after that is for high reps letting the muscles rest a bit but dont let them rest completely....then I start all over again. I typically focus on basic exercises like: squats, dead lifts, bench presses, chins and a variety of stomach and lower back exercisesVery interested to hear your opinions of the above and also your own experiences. /Per
Parents
  • And you'd be absolutely wrong. Thirty additional pounds of muscle on the average male masters swimmer would not be an excessive amount of bulk at all, especially because muscle gain is usually associated with fat loss. I was on a USS team that did tons of light-weight resistance training and "stability" exercises. It didn't make me faster. Muscle made me faster, which makes sense if you actually think about what muscle does. How can you have increased strength without it? How can you be significantly more stable and more powerful without improving the component of the body that provides stability and power? Your statement here shows a complete lack of understanding of where the real "power" in swimming comes from which is our core (it also happens to be what provides the stabitlity you referaance)...not having big "guns". So explain to us how Michael Phelps who didn't do any real lifting until recently got to where he was in recent years? Yes in the past 8 months he introduced weight training but not until he had achieved significant milestones in swimming through things like yoga and pilates supplementing his pool time...oh and he just so happened to also make a major adjustment by building his kicking to a level that propelled him to a 1:43+ LCM 200 free taking 9 SDK's off start and turns....kick more, train your core more!
Reply
  • And you'd be absolutely wrong. Thirty additional pounds of muscle on the average male masters swimmer would not be an excessive amount of bulk at all, especially because muscle gain is usually associated with fat loss. I was on a USS team that did tons of light-weight resistance training and "stability" exercises. It didn't make me faster. Muscle made me faster, which makes sense if you actually think about what muscle does. How can you have increased strength without it? How can you be significantly more stable and more powerful without improving the component of the body that provides stability and power? Your statement here shows a complete lack of understanding of where the real "power" in swimming comes from which is our core (it also happens to be what provides the stabitlity you referaance)...not having big "guns". So explain to us how Michael Phelps who didn't do any real lifting until recently got to where he was in recent years? Yes in the past 8 months he introduced weight training but not until he had achieved significant milestones in swimming through things like yoga and pilates supplementing his pool time...oh and he just so happened to also make a major adjustment by building his kicking to a level that propelled him to a 1:43+ LCM 200 free taking 9 SDK's off start and turns....kick more, train your core more!
Children
No Data