distance per stroke: measurable progress

Former Member
Former Member
Dear open water swimmers, In 2004 I went through a paradigm shift from swimming against the clock to counting strokes per lap. In 1991, at age 35, my best times in the pool were: 1000 meters in 16:40 (1000 yds in 15:00) 2000 meters in 33:40 (2000 yds in 30:00) 4000 meters in 1:10:00 (4000 yds in 1:03:00) 5000 meters in 1:30:00 (5000 yds in 1:21:00) Then, guess what, I got sore shoulders. Had to stop and started every two years all over again until either my shoulder started hurting again or I got bored and tired. Ever since I changed my approach to swimming in 2004, it has become sooo much more exciting and I am no longer tempted to quit. I started out in my favorite pool (33.3m /36.5 yds) with 36 strokes per lap. That translates to approx. 24 strokes to the 25 yard-line including the initial pushoff from the wall. Now I am down to 27 strokes per lap, which translates to approx. 18 strokes for the first 25 yds. In the very same year (2004) that I changed my habits, I did a 12km non-stop swim in open water. Very slow (4:30 for 12 km/7.5 miles), but without shoulder injuries! That was the longest distance I have ever done so far. Recently, I swam against the clock in the pool for the first time(!) after my transition, aiming for 2000 m. Surprisingly, I finished in less than 37 minutes, even though now I am averaging only 2km/week compared to 5 km/week in 1991! I was only 3 minutes slower than in 1991 in spite of the fact that I am 15 years older now and have decreased my training intensity from 5 km to 2 km per week. I think this is a measurable result even though I still have a long way to go. If anybody who reads this wouldn't mind correcting my style, then please have a look at me swimming in an olympic size pool in downtown Vienna Thanks again for the wealth of information that is available on this forum! Gerald from Austria
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Hi Gerald, I just loved your post and the video. It is so obvious you are working so much to swim better. I congratulate for so much improvement. I looked at your video and I do like what Lindsay commented on. You seem to have a lot of body movement and maybe not enough hip rotation. I viewed it as twisting your body. Your legs seem to sink and I noticed you are not truly kicking, your legs more dangle. I would kick enough to keep the body on top of the water and in a streamlined position. It doesn't take much kicking to accomplish this. Other than this, I endorse Lindsay's comments. Donna
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Hi Gerald, I just loved your post and the video. It is so obvious you are working so much to swim better. I congratulate for so much improvement. I looked at your video and I do like what Lindsay commented on. You seem to have a lot of body movement and maybe not enough hip rotation. I viewed it as twisting your body. Your legs seem to sink and I noticed you are not truly kicking, your legs more dangle. I would kick enough to keep the body on top of the water and in a streamlined position. It doesn't take much kicking to accomplish this. Other than this, I endorse Lindsay's comments. Donna
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