I swam in a meet last weekend. For some time I have been working on my freestyle timing and technique, and I think I've made progress. During warm-ups for the 50 free I felt really great--powerful, good acceleration, lots of potential energy. This swimming at maybe 90%. Then, in the race, I found myself hacking at the water--none of the same sense I'd had in warm-ups.
Today, in a workout, I was able to replicate my meet time in the 50 at that same 90% pace I'd used in warmups.
Pause for metaphor introduction: as a kid (and now, for that matter) I was a Cleveland Indians fan. They were uniformly terrible during the 60s, 70s, and 80s. But in the 70s they had an outfielder named George Hendrick, who was a gifted player. Hendrick had an ability to run while looking like he was jogging. He covered a lot of ground, and was quite fast, but he appeared to be dogging it. No strain was ever visible. He got a lot of grief in the press for being lazy, even though it was an optical illusion. He ran really fast but looked slow.
So here's my question: is it possible that I should sprint at less than what feels like 100%, in order to get better efficiency and thus more speed? Or am I kidding myself, and I need to just learn to use a really fast tempo without overswimming?
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News to me on the yardage/tapering front. Encouraging. Maybe I can sneak in a teeny taper before Chicago.
Everyone's thoughts are quite helpful, and even more interesting. An intriguing subject, and one worth exploring systematically. I will try.
Any thoughts on how these ideas might apply to butterfly sprints? There my experience is maybe opposite. I get lots of compliments on how the stroke looks, but seem plateaued on my stroke rate, and ditto on my time.
News to me on the yardage/tapering front. Encouraging. Maybe I can sneak in a teeny taper before Chicago.
Everyone's thoughts are quite helpful, and even more interesting. An intriguing subject, and one worth exploring systematically. I will try.
Any thoughts on how these ideas might apply to butterfly sprints? There my experience is maybe opposite. I get lots of compliments on how the stroke looks, but seem plateaued on my stroke rate, and ditto on my time.