Yardage

I would love to see what kind of yardage some of you are doing out there. Just ball park numbers. I realize there is much more to swimming than how many yards one does, and training for different events entails differences in yardages, but I would still like to see what everyone is doing so I can know where I fall within the "norm". Also, if anyone knows, I would like to know what some of the masters All American's do as far as yardage. I see times for Jeff Commins in the *** and IM events and wonder how much he must train.
Parents
  • That's...sick. If you use the standard 4x multiplier effect for converting swimming to running, that's close to 22 miles running per day, or nearly a marathon, every day of the year. I think that many of us swimmers have obsessive tendencies, but this seems to me to be bordering on the faint cusp of pathology. Assuming he/she can hold a 25 minute pace per mile, and swims the workouts straight through without intervals, that's 2 hours and 17.5 minutes per day, seven days a week, in the pool. Perhaps a little Prozac added into the filter system could be beneficial. For what it's worth, I swam 406.7 miles last year. By defnition, this is the optimal distance. Anything over this is obsessional. Anything less than this is laziness. Note: for those who want to use my swimming as a way of planning a neither-pathological-nor-lazy regimen for themselves, please understand that optimum distance is subject to change this year depending on what I do or fail to do! Jim, Training can get really obsessive. I will agree on anything less than 400 miles as being lazy. I think that the 2000 mile individual needs to go to chlorine rehab or something because he/she might get convulsions if he/she is out of the pool for more than 6 to 8 hours. Can you imagine how chlorinated that person's car smells. My friend's kids complain how his car smells of chlorine.
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  • That's...sick. If you use the standard 4x multiplier effect for converting swimming to running, that's close to 22 miles running per day, or nearly a marathon, every day of the year. I think that many of us swimmers have obsessive tendencies, but this seems to me to be bordering on the faint cusp of pathology. Assuming he/she can hold a 25 minute pace per mile, and swims the workouts straight through without intervals, that's 2 hours and 17.5 minutes per day, seven days a week, in the pool. Perhaps a little Prozac added into the filter system could be beneficial. For what it's worth, I swam 406.7 miles last year. By defnition, this is the optimal distance. Anything over this is obsessional. Anything less than this is laziness. Note: for those who want to use my swimming as a way of planning a neither-pathological-nor-lazy regimen for themselves, please understand that optimum distance is subject to change this year depending on what I do or fail to do! Jim, Training can get really obsessive. I will agree on anything less than 400 miles as being lazy. I think that the 2000 mile individual needs to go to chlorine rehab or something because he/she might get convulsions if he/she is out of the pool for more than 6 to 8 hours. Can you imagine how chlorinated that person's car smells. My friend's kids complain how his car smells of chlorine.
Children
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