Training for the 100 fly?

I'm seeking advice on training for the 100 fly. Decided to start swimming it last year. Swam it 7x on the three courses. I can only remember 3x times where I didn't suffer from complete paralysis the last 15 meters or so and worry about a DQ. Gah. So how can I fix this? I've read that you don't need to train fly in practice. I'm not sure I buy this. The muscular fatigue from fly seems unique. And I don't want to substitute freestyle training for it. What are some good sets? How many SDKs per length should I take to prevent oxygen debt? If too much fly hurts the shoulders, is kicking a decent training substitute? I also seem to swim better 100 flys on a week rest. The paralysis seems to be associated with a 2 week taper. Does aerobic fitness drop off that quickly? Is this an age thing? Or is it that I just don't train enough yards for a 2 week taper?
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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 16 years ago
    The difference here is "all out" compared to "best average". If you do 3x50 on 1:00 "all out", there is insufficient recovery time, so your times might be.... 26, 29, 30. If you do 3x50 on 1:00 "best average", you don't completely fail, so your times might be.... 28, 28, 29. The idea behind "best average" is to maintain your effort on the entire set and determine your base for the 2nd 50 of a 100. I always wonder which one might be the best way to improve let's say 10x100 best average maybe 10-15" rest OR 5x100 all out maybe 45-1:00 rest If someone ask me which one would require more effort, I'd say that both sets means very much the same effort, but what I dont know is which one would improve you the most, the first set may be better for the 400 free, and the 2nd one for the 100 free I mean, what are you really working for when you choose one of them instead of the other
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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 16 years ago
    The difference here is "all out" compared to "best average". If you do 3x50 on 1:00 "all out", there is insufficient recovery time, so your times might be.... 26, 29, 30. If you do 3x50 on 1:00 "best average", you don't completely fail, so your times might be.... 28, 28, 29. The idea behind "best average" is to maintain your effort on the entire set and determine your base for the 2nd 50 of a 100. I always wonder which one might be the best way to improve let's say 10x100 best average maybe 10-15" rest OR 5x100 all out maybe 45-1:00 rest If someone ask me which one would require more effort, I'd say that both sets means very much the same effort, but what I dont know is which one would improve you the most, the first set may be better for the 400 free, and the 2nd one for the 100 free I mean, what are you really working for when you choose one of them instead of the other
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