Advice on strength in the water

Swam in college and currently swim masters. I prefer the sprints. I have a very strong kick but don't feel I have the upper body strength of a female swimmer. I hit the weight room and as long as I am consistent, can get very strong out of the water. The only problem is that the out-of-water strength does not necessarily translate into power/strength in the water. Would a pull buoy help me to have more power in the water? I am concerned that I am too dependent on my kick for my speed. My only concerns are that I don't want the pull buoy to mess up my rotation on freestyle. Also, I have never had any shoulder issues and am hoping to keep it that way. Any suggestions on how I can improve my upper body strength in the pool?
Parents
  • Upper body strength helps but does not directly translate into efficient propulsion. I'm sure that you can outswim most of NFL football players. I believe you swim faster by improving your technique and feel for the water. Feel for the water can be roughly translated as "being sensitive to feeling and generating water pressure". I eschew paddles for that reason. Minimizing resistance - frontal, eddy and laminar are more important than muscular strength. Generally, required power (strength) cubes as a function of velocity. Having said that, let me confuse the issue by saying that I believe it is very important to lift weights - but with the goal of strengthing all or as many as of muscles possible - to protect one's joints, build bone mass, exercise important muscle groups that swimming alone can not condition, etc.
Reply
  • Upper body strength helps but does not directly translate into efficient propulsion. I'm sure that you can outswim most of NFL football players. I believe you swim faster by improving your technique and feel for the water. Feel for the water can be roughly translated as "being sensitive to feeling and generating water pressure". I eschew paddles for that reason. Minimizing resistance - frontal, eddy and laminar are more important than muscular strength. Generally, required power (strength) cubes as a function of velocity. Having said that, let me confuse the issue by saying that I believe it is very important to lift weights - but with the goal of strengthing all or as many as of muscles possible - to protect one's joints, build bone mass, exercise important muscle groups that swimming alone can not condition, etc.
Children
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