Myth #8: All swimming drills are good for you.
I am a great believer in doing drills. In fact, if most swimmers would spend a little more time doing drills and not worry so much about getting their hour or so of aerobic fitness in, they might come out ahead. The biggest problem with drills is that too often, they are being done without any real understanding of what they are supposedly teaching you. Unless you are planning to enter a drill race, there is not much point in doing a drill unless you understand what it is for. Coaches often go to great lengths to explain how to do a drill properly, but then forget to mention what the drill is for.
And sometimes the drills that are being recommended actually teach you the wrong thing. For example, if you have no kick and you are trying to get faster by learning how to increase your stroke rate, then a catch-up drill may be doing you a big disservice. Or if I ever see anyone who has been told to flick water with their hand/wrist out the back end of their stroke, I kindly ask them to hit the delete button. Or what does sliding your finger tips across the surface of the water (finger tip drill) teach you that helps you swim faster?
So all I ask is that you do drills nearly every time you jump in the water, even if for warmup. But that you understand what the drill is trying to teach you AND that the drill is designed for the technique you are trying to learn.
Gary Sr.
The Race Club
Parents
Former Member
High elbows on recovery? I tend to agree here. I would add though that finger trailing will help you shaping your high elbow recovery whilst helping you to achieve the right angles of body rotation during the process.
Suggestions? Continue a habit I've had for years or a different drill? That really depends on your body type, size of your arms etc... Some swimmers perform exceptionally well with a straight arms/swinging sort of stroke.
www.swimtypes.com/swinger.html
A fair example here
YouTube- Richard Quick introduces Freestyle
Nowadays, more and more swim specialists recognize that different body types call for entirely different stroke techniques. Trying to go against your nature might end up making you loose a lot of time.
High elbows on recovery? I tend to agree here. I would add though that finger trailing will help you shaping your high elbow recovery whilst helping you to achieve the right angles of body rotation during the process.
Suggestions? Continue a habit I've had for years or a different drill? That really depends on your body type, size of your arms etc... Some swimmers perform exceptionally well with a straight arms/swinging sort of stroke.
www.swimtypes.com/swinger.html
A fair example here
YouTube- Richard Quick introduces Freestyle
Nowadays, more and more swim specialists recognize that different body types call for entirely different stroke techniques. Trying to go against your nature might end up making you loose a lot of time.