Drafting Schmafting

What to do. I've heard about this technique of saving energy often, but not sure it's worth the effort. I'm not a lead pack swimmer in the open water swims I do (anywhere from 1K to 5K) and there never seems to be someone of comparable speed. This past weekend in Columbus, I swam the whole cycle (the 1.5K followed by the .75K followed by the 3K). In the second race I thought I'd try drafting as I hit about the 150 meter mark and realized I was right behind someone who was actually a little faster than I. I dropped in on his feet and started following. Felt OK, but then I made one miss stroke to the left, and he was gone. Couldn't catch back up. Then in the 3K, I fell behind someone a little faster and managed to draft for about 600 meters. The problem was that it took so much effort to keep up with this fella that he left me in his wake, and I finished over 3 and a half minutes behind my usual time (maybe partially due to doing 3 races in 2 hours for the first time). However, if I ever look over my shoulder in these races, I'm usually putting quite a bit of distance between me and anyone following me. In this 3K I still finished over 2 minutes ahead of the person behind me. Some of this may be due to these races having only 40-60 entrants, but even when I swam the Big Shoulders last year which has hundreds, I never seemed to encounter anyone going roughly my speed. Is drafting really only a strategy for the lead pack? What gives?
Parents
  • its not easy to stay on someone's feet (the ideal place to catch the best draft) but you can catch some of a draft swimming alongside another swimmer as well... at their hip... at their ankle etc, and its much easier to keep in place. for me, the events i enjoy most are the ones where i manage to "find" a swimmer of similar speed and get right up in their face next to them. not so much of a draft, but you can challenge each other on every stroke and it makes the race, or practice swim fly by. Thanks. I'll try the hip or ankle thing since I can't seem to stick to the feet. While I agree about the side by side, most of the races I've been in find me in a unique speed category and race profile. In my youth when I hated swimming anything longer than a 200, I couldn't negative split to save my life. Now I do so everytime, but I'm generally not as fast as the other negative splitters and generally faster than those that don't so I often end up finishing three whole minutes before and after the nearest swimmers.
Reply
  • its not easy to stay on someone's feet (the ideal place to catch the best draft) but you can catch some of a draft swimming alongside another swimmer as well... at their hip... at their ankle etc, and its much easier to keep in place. for me, the events i enjoy most are the ones where i manage to "find" a swimmer of similar speed and get right up in their face next to them. not so much of a draft, but you can challenge each other on every stroke and it makes the race, or practice swim fly by. Thanks. I'll try the hip or ankle thing since I can't seem to stick to the feet. While I agree about the side by side, most of the races I've been in find me in a unique speed category and race profile. In my youth when I hated swimming anything longer than a 200, I couldn't negative split to save my life. Now I do so everytime, but I'm generally not as fast as the other negative splitters and generally faster than those that don't so I often end up finishing three whole minutes before and after the nearest swimmers.
Children
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