Backstrokers unite.
We know every detail of the ceilings where we train unless it's the sky which is ever changing.
We SDK every day. It's breath taking.
We go forwards in reverse.
We get to flip over on turns. We gotta stay on our back.
We swim back. We kick back.
Aaron's the man
YouTube- Aaron Peirsol gets title and new record, from Universal Sports
YouTube- Aaron Peirsol Late Night Appearance/Interview (8.28.08)
What did you do in practice today?
the breastroke lane
The Middle Distance Lane
The Backstroke Lane
The Butterfly Lane
The SDK Lane
The Taper Lane
The Distance Lane
The IM Lane
The Sprint Free Lane
The Pool Deck
my SDK is slower than my swimming. I haven't timed it; I just know it is from the feel. I'm sure I would be better off getting up to the surface ASAP. But, I will have Bruce time it.
The scientist in me pooh-poohs anything so subjective as "feel," do get it timed.
But I can guarantee that you are faster underwater -- in any race, not just backstroke -- at one point: just after the start/push-off.
You should work on your streamline. It doesn't look very tight and your head is sticking out well below your arms, which slows you down. Your head should be between your arms (shoulders on your ears) and you should squeeze those arms very tightly to present as narrow a profile as possible. Try to stretch and become "taller" in your streamline. Think about those little underwater "torpedo" toys that kids use, the ones that you fling underwater and they just keep going and going -- try to go for that shape.
One person I swim with has excellent underwaters and she isn't even a very good kicker. Her secret is that she has an amazing streamline position (and it doesn't hurt that she is quite tall and skinny).
One way to work on streamline: put on some fins and do some sprints (with plenty of recovery time) while trying different positions, especially for your head. Since you go so much faster with fins on you might well be able to feel hydrodynamic inefficiencies directly (eg water hitting your cap), but of course you should also look at the clock. The hope is that the fins magnify streamline inefficiencies.
It isn't just for backstroke, do it on your front too. The "muscle memory" for streamlining is a little different front vs back, I think.
my SDK is slower than my swimming. I haven't timed it; I just know it is from the feel. I'm sure I would be better off getting up to the surface ASAP. But, I will have Bruce time it.
The scientist in me pooh-poohs anything so subjective as "feel," do get it timed.
But I can guarantee that you are faster underwater -- in any race, not just backstroke -- at one point: just after the start/push-off.
You should work on your streamline. It doesn't look very tight and your head is sticking out well below your arms, which slows you down. Your head should be between your arms (shoulders on your ears) and you should squeeze those arms very tightly to present as narrow a profile as possible. Try to stretch and become "taller" in your streamline. Think about those little underwater "torpedo" toys that kids use, the ones that you fling underwater and they just keep going and going -- try to go for that shape.
One person I swim with has excellent underwaters and she isn't even a very good kicker. Her secret is that she has an amazing streamline position (and it doesn't hurt that she is quite tall and skinny).
One way to work on streamline: put on some fins and do some sprints (with plenty of recovery time) while trying different positions, especially for your head. Since you go so much faster with fins on you might well be able to feel hydrodynamic inefficiencies directly (eg water hitting your cap), but of course you should also look at the clock. The hope is that the fins magnify streamline inefficiencies.
It isn't just for backstroke, do it on your front too. The "muscle memory" for streamlining is a little different front vs back, I think.