Help me train for the 200 free

Former Member
Former Member
The 200 free is a new event to me. I never raced it before last year, but I have to say I am hooked on the distance. There is something immensely satisfying about completing a good 200. Perhaps it is because I have always only raced 50's and 100's that I feel this way. It is one of those races that is difficult to classify. Too long to be a flat-out sprint and too short to be be considered a distance event, it seems to fall rather awkwardly somewhere between middle distance and sprint. Last year I did a 2:16.34 LCM 200 free (out in 1:05.07 and back in 1:11.27). Those are awful splits I know, but in my defense I only intended for the 200 to be a warm up for my other events and when I saw I was out in front after the first 100 I held back. I haven't swum it again in competition since then but will have another go at it in October this year. I have been spending a lot of time, recently, on the 200 in training, but I'm not sure that I am going about it in the right fashion and wanted to ask for advice. How have I been training? Well, mostly doing lots of 200's trying to see how close I can get my splits to one another. At least twice a week I do one at race pace to gauge my progress and get race pace practice. Today I went a 2:08.08 SCM from a push off the wall (out in 1:01 high and back in 1:06 something). Still not ideal splits but an improvement. I felt I still had gas left in the tank, even though I was breathing hard at the end and my pulse was 168. Apart from that I also do some broken 200's (4 x 50 with 10 seconds rest between each). I also do a lot of 100's at 1:20 but I am not sure if these help much at all. Most times I am crusing in somewhere between 1:12 and 1:15 getting 5 seconds rest and going off again. I mean they are a good aerobic workout but I don't know if they help me much for the 200. My goal this year. I would love to go under 2:05 LCM but maybe a more realistic goal would be 2:06. Out in a 1:01 and back in a 1:04 or 1:05. The best advice I have heard on the 200 was from Paul Smith who said that you should work the third 50 just a little bit harder than you think you should be working it. This advice has helped me narrow down the difference between those split times. I still feel the difference between my splits is too big. I am not a back halfer and always have to go out hard to do a good time. In fact my best 200's are when I take the first half out so hard that, at the 100m mark, I start trying to convince myself I should stop there and make it a 100 for time. Then I know I have expended the right amount of energy. So my question: apart from doing race pace 200's and broken 200's, how should I be training? What sort of distance should I be doing in a week? Are there any strategies I should be considering? Would really appreciate any advice. Thanks, Syd
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Pace the first hundred, save you legs, and come back in an even split. Your first 100 will be fast no matter how you try to contain yourself. (Mentally you'll start the race on your 3rd 50.) That's a good mindset. The 200 requires a strategy based on your ability to sprint versus being hold a steady pace. A sprinter usually takes it out too hard and then suffers the consequences. Aside from swimming sets of 200's or 250's...Try swimming a 200 for time at least once or twice a week (as you already said) Get used to the point where you start falling apart and learn to swim through the discomfort. If you're in really good shape, and you've done your homework... Go out hard and die like a man.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Pace the first hundred, save you legs, and come back in an even split. Your first 100 will be fast no matter how you try to contain yourself. (Mentally you'll start the race on your 3rd 50.) That's a good mindset. The 200 requires a strategy based on your ability to sprint versus being hold a steady pace. A sprinter usually takes it out too hard and then suffers the consequences. Aside from swimming sets of 200's or 250's...Try swimming a 200 for time at least once or twice a week (as you already said) Get used to the point where you start falling apart and learn to swim through the discomfort. If you're in really good shape, and you've done your homework... Go out hard and die like a man.
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