The theory of relative warm-up

Former Member
Former Member
You know, the range of plausible warm-up routines that might work for each person is immense! The reality isn't about how you warmed up on race day, it's about how you trained. If your body is prepared and ready to do a race, you'll swim fast. Warming up may help you get into that zone, but if you didn't train properly you won't swim your best. Everyone has a routine they like to do, and that is unique to each person, but there isn't one absolute "right" answer for every racing scenario. The best pre- race plan should stay relative, directly reflecting how you're feeling that day. Focus on the circumstances you're attempting to mitigate during those precious moments before the race, and then you'll have your answer. For example, did your goggles just break, does that $500 swim suit seem smaller, did you just realize someone else might win the race? Deal with it, swim easy, don't stress. Or, do some crazy all-out warm-up, whatever you need to feel at peace with those things you can't change. The training is over, the work has been done, now is the time to let go of the past and put all of your energy into the pool. To swim your best, is to feel the joy of success, that is entirely personal. The final result is directly related to the effort you've put into the preparation, not the warm-up, and yes, relatively speaking, everyone can win.
Parents
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    I edited that phrase... Although that does change the artistic intention... "muscle memory" is one of the silliest things said about athletic skill. Muscles have no memory whatsoever. They have fibers that contract on command from the brain. Muscles don't remember how to swim correctly. Swimming technique is a learned response like brushing your teeth. The brain adapts to repetition and the skill becomes automatic over time.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    I edited that phrase... Although that does change the artistic intention... "muscle memory" is one of the silliest things said about athletic skill. Muscles have no memory whatsoever. They have fibers that contract on command from the brain. Muscles don't remember how to swim correctly. Swimming technique is a learned response like brushing your teeth. The brain adapts to repetition and the skill becomes automatic over time.
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