Fortress' impressive three world record performance over the weekend made me think of this topic. Obviously the things she's doing are working well for the events she likes to swim. She concentrates on SDKs, fast swimming with lots of rest and drylands to aid in explosiveness. Long aerobic sets just aren't a part of her training regime, from what I've seen.
Almost every organized training group I've swum with, on the other hand, focuses on long aerobic sets, short rest, not a whole lot of fast stuff, etc. Basically the polar opposite of how Fortress trains. In my opinion this probably works pretty well for those who swim longer events, but really does very little for sprinters. The sprint events are almost always the most popular events at meets, so why do people choose to train aerobically? I think there are a number of factors at play. There's the much maligned triathletes. There's those who don't compete and "just want to get their yardage in." There's a historical precedent of lots of yardage being the way to go.
So what do you all think? How does you or your team train? I know lots of regular bloggers here DO train differently than my perception of the norm. Examples include Ande, Chris S. and Speedo. Are too many masters teams stuck in a training regime that is not at all what many of their swimmers need to get faster?
I consider training to be the preparation for an event. If you don't compete you really aren't training. You are just swimming, which is fine. I know some super fast people who don't compete so I'm not disparaging swimming.
Anyway, my opinion is that with whatever program you have chosen for training, you have to be both fully committed to it and willing to give it up on a moment's notice if it isn't working or you can't handle it. A lot of folks get wrapped up in validating their training program based solely on best times, which I disagree with.
And, if you train with toys and don't use them with a purpose you are wasting time and money.
I agree with swimshark and fort, you have to constantly swim outside your comfort zone.
I consider training to be the preparation for an event. If you don't compete you really aren't training. You are just swimming, which is fine. I know some super fast people who don't compete so I'm not disparaging swimming.
Anyway, my opinion is that with whatever program you have chosen for training, you have to be both fully committed to it and willing to give it up on a moment's notice if it isn't working or you can't handle it. A lot of folks get wrapped up in validating their training program based solely on best times, which I disagree with.
And, if you train with toys and don't use them with a purpose you are wasting time and money.
I agree with swimshark and fort, you have to constantly swim outside your comfort zone.