Learning How To Race

Former Member
Former Member
Hello Everyone, I have been back in the pool for about a year now and am enjoying myself. With a busy schedule and two young swimmers, I rarely have time to swim Masters meets. But when the opportunity presents itself, I dodge the meet quite effectively. Here is the reason. I have absolutely no confidence in my racing ability. In my workouts, I can lead the lane for the intermediate swiimmers and easily make 100 frees LCM on the 1:35 but many of those behind me can blow me away on sprint day when we do 50s and 100s. I had my strokes taped and have been able to make a few nice adjustments to my freestyle that allows me to swim with much less tension in my arms and provides a greater catch with a higher elbow. I notice that I am able to go faster with much less effort now. Thus, when we do 200s and longer, I can hang with the faster swimmers. It seems the longer we go, the better I do. I am 5' 7" and about 160 pounds so I am not tall but have a pretty solid chest and shoulders. I find that if I tell myself to go 80% during a sprint, my time is perhaps only a few seconds slower than if I tell myself to go 100%. My stroke is much stronger if I go slower and thus more efficient. But I am still stuck in the mindset that unless I go all out, I will not achieve max speed. I realize that I am talking about pacing and my own mental block but I was wondering if anyone has had the same problem with acheiving their potential when there is a disparity between workout speed and race results. My coach keeps prodding me to enter meets but I resist. But I am tired of being a "workout warrior". Any input would be appreciated. Rob
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    The simple solution would be to just race middle distance and distance events if you believe that's where you're better suited. You're also looking at it from a pesssimist's perspective. You are slower at racing simply because you don't practice racing. The more you do it, the faster you will get. You have the potential for a huge upside in improvement. Sure, you'll be slower than the rest at first, but that doesn't mean you won't get faster--just as you've improved in workout. Don't worry about it. Racing in masters is about as laid back as competition gets. Just start racing more in workouts and enter some meets.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    The simple solution would be to just race middle distance and distance events if you believe that's where you're better suited. You're also looking at it from a pesssimist's perspective. You are slower at racing simply because you don't practice racing. The more you do it, the faster you will get. You have the potential for a huge upside in improvement. Sure, you'll be slower than the rest at first, but that doesn't mean you won't get faster--just as you've improved in workout. Don't worry about it. Racing in masters is about as laid back as competition gets. Just start racing more in workouts and enter some meets.
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