Is it the kick? I know that some say it is the most important.
Is it the above water high elbow?
Is it the entry of the hand ?
Is it breathing on the left, breathing on the right, or bilateral breathing?
Is it the catch phase?
Is it where you finish?
Is it how we streamline?
Or is it a combinatiom of many things that we have to put in proper sequence.
Please add anything you think can help somone swim better.
Parents
Former Member
Is it the kick? I know that some say it is the most important.
Is it the above water high elbow?
Is it the entry of the hand ?
Is it breathing on the left, breathing on the right, or bilateral breathing?
Is it the catch phase?
Is it where you finish?
Is it how we streamline?
Or is it a combinatiom of many things that we have to put in proper sequence.
Please add anything you think can help somone swim better.
To me it is a swim(mer) which/whom I will watch over and over even though I know the result of the race (if it's a race). It's style; it's the swim that looks almost effortless.
I try to put swims that are aired on Videotape and there are many a race that I will watch at least nine times: The first, it's the whole race, then I might replay it eight times, each time concentrating on one lane, one swimmer. I'd rather watch Ian Thorpe lose a race than Eamon Sullivan or Stefan Nystrand win one, even breaking a World Record. And you can't teach that.
Is it the kick? I know that some say it is the most important.
Is it the above water high elbow?
Is it the entry of the hand ?
Is it breathing on the left, breathing on the right, or bilateral breathing?
Is it the catch phase?
Is it where you finish?
Is it how we streamline?
Or is it a combinatiom of many things that we have to put in proper sequence.
Please add anything you think can help somone swim better.
To me it is a swim(mer) which/whom I will watch over and over even though I know the result of the race (if it's a race). It's style; it's the swim that looks almost effortless.
I try to put swims that are aired on Videotape and there are many a race that I will watch at least nine times: The first, it's the whole race, then I might replay it eight times, each time concentrating on one lane, one swimmer. I'd rather watch Ian Thorpe lose a race than Eamon Sullivan or Stefan Nystrand win one, even breaking a World Record. And you can't teach that.