I was swimming at a meet today, and I noticed that most/many swimmers get out of the pool (or at least in my heats when I was noticing it) more or less right after they're done with their race.
Back when I was about 9 (1993ish), I remember my coach told us before the local summer swim league championship meet (it was my first) at UNC's Koury Natatorium using electronic timing, etc., that it was good sportsmanship to wait until the entire heat is finished with their swim, and then get out of the pool. The reasoning was never explained to me at the time, but I can infer a good reason: no one has to finish the race alone (there are probably other good reasons).
I've generally adopted this practice for the most part when I swim in meets, even though this can impact the operation of the meet (namely, if it takes longer to exit the pool, the meet takes longer, unless you use dive-overs). And this practice can be problematic if you win the heat, and it takes a long period of time for the heat to finish (say 5 minutes). I should also note that I haven't paid a great amount of attention to this, and that the heats that I generally swim in are early heats, which tend to have larger time spreads (which would skew my perception). Furthermore many people who didn't have the lengthy experience with competitive swimming that someone like I would might not know about this idea. And in the grand scheme of things, waiting doesn't make you a better person or a worse person than anyone else--it's just a custom.
So what does everyone think about this kind of thing? Is it something that matters or is it largely irrelevant? And is the practice of waiting commonplace or haphazard?
Patrick King
Here's my perspective... if you finished so far ahead of everyone that you had time to catch your breath, and then jump out of the pool before everyone else finished, then you sandbagged. If you finished so far behind everyone that people had time to get out before you finished, then you anti-sandbagged. Either way, you should work on your seed times. :) If everyone seeded themselves well, then we wouldn't even have to debate this issue. :)
(Admittedly, in events that are 400 and longer, there can be a significant gap between finishers, even in the most perfectly seeded heat.)
But on the whole, I don't have a problem with people getting out. I think you wait a bit for people to finish in a competitive heat. If you "pop" out, that's a bit rude. If your heat is competitive, in a fly-over-start meet, then you should stay in the water until the next heat finishes anyways. But if someone still has 50 yards to swim, and you're done, I think you have the right to get out so you can go warm down and not get cold. (As a meet director, in that situation, I'd rather you not warm down in your lane while the other person finishes, because odds are, you'll not time it correctly, and end up holding things up even longer while we wait for you to finish your warmdown lap.)
-Rick
Here's my perspective... if you finished so far ahead of everyone that you had time to catch your breath, and then jump out of the pool before everyone else finished, then you sandbagged. If you finished so far behind everyone that people had time to get out before you finished, then you anti-sandbagged. Either way, you should work on your seed times. :) If everyone seeded themselves well, then we wouldn't even have to debate this issue. :)
(Admittedly, in events that are 400 and longer, there can be a significant gap between finishers, even in the most perfectly seeded heat.)
But on the whole, I don't have a problem with people getting out. I think you wait a bit for people to finish in a competitive heat. If you "pop" out, that's a bit rude. If your heat is competitive, in a fly-over-start meet, then you should stay in the water until the next heat finishes anyways. But if someone still has 50 yards to swim, and you're done, I think you have the right to get out so you can go warm down and not get cold. (As a meet director, in that situation, I'd rather you not warm down in your lane while the other person finishes, because odds are, you'll not time it correctly, and end up holding things up even longer while we wait for you to finish your warmdown lap.)
-Rick