I am working on a masters swimming story for Men's Health, and my editor wants a basic introductory workout that guys who basically know how to swim but aren't swimmers to give the sport a try on their own.
Since there is such a huge variance in skill levels, etc., I didn't want to give times for sets, etc. but maybe come up with some basic rest intervals.
Anyhow, I am desperate for ideas here. If you have coached neophyte masters, or have been a neophyte master yourself and can recall an early practice that inspired you, please let me know as soon as possible what this is.
I was thinking of the following basic approach:
warm up
possible drill set
main set (probably 50s with 10-15 seconds rest)
kick set
cool down
The whole thing designed to last maybe a half hour or so. The idea is to let these guys try it on their own, in a way that they might actually like, then urge them to look into finding a team.
Thanks for your help!
I see more folks with heart rate monitors which they apply around chest immediately after climbing out. I think that's a safe gadget to mention.
"Men's Health or not": Well, it IS Men's Health, the mag is paying for a certain kind of article, and entire point of Men's Health, as far as I can see, is to score (possibly only in the imagination). This is not a textbook of swimming but a consumer article.
I have large faith that the author of the article will be able to mention toys, caution mildly against inappropriate use, and gently guide the reader into a nice, healthy, not too taxing lap swim, after which swimmer will be greeted by Geochuck's Yingfa models while looking rugged in his heart rate monitor.
:)
I see more folks with heart rate monitors which they apply around chest immediately after climbing out. I think that's a safe gadget to mention.
"Men's Health or not": Well, it IS Men's Health, the mag is paying for a certain kind of article, and entire point of Men's Health, as far as I can see, is to score (possibly only in the imagination). This is not a textbook of swimming but a consumer article.
I have large faith that the author of the article will be able to mention toys, caution mildly against inappropriate use, and gently guide the reader into a nice, healthy, not too taxing lap swim, after which swimmer will be greeted by Geochuck's Yingfa models while looking rugged in his heart rate monitor.
:)