How do you Pace yourself in Open Water?

Former Member
Former Member
As I've gotten more precise about measuring distances in open water, I've been shocked to find out how SLOW my open water practice pace is. The problem is that I don't have a visual cue in open water for how fast I'm going. I swim with other people, but I don't have a consistent OW swim buddy who is near my pace. A few data points: In the pool, my long-distance cruise speed is about 1:50/100 yards. I can hold that for at least an hour. My OW 1K race pace is in the 1:50s--high or low 1:50s depending on conditions and how the course is measured. My OW practice pace is 2:00-2:10 (Yikes!) Yesterday, I did an experiment: OW practice swim with a friend who is close to my pace. We stayed together the whole time and varied the intensity of our practice. Our average pace was 1:55/100 yards. After he left, I waited about 30 minutes for some other friends to arrive. I got back in the water with them. (We were all in the water together, but not swimming together.) I used the tempo trainer and set it at 1.1 sec/stroke (54 strokes/minute). In the pool, that setting would keep me in the low 1:50/100 range. The chop had died down, and I felt great. I was disappointed to find out that my average pace was 2:07/100 yards. When I'm pacing off of someone, I can visualize exactly what it will take to pass them. I'm sure I get a little adrenaline boost from the competition, but that's not the main thing. When I see someone ahead of me, my body just knows what to do to pass them. I don't necessarily give it a big physical effort, I just concentrate on letting my stroke close the gap. I wish I knew more people who swam at my pace and wanted to practice regularly in OW, but I have a hard time finding them. Most of the people who want to get out there regularly are slower triathletes. So how do you guys pace yourselves if you don't have a buddy to pace off of? I'd be grateful for any suggestions.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    I think the lack of a pace clock is largely why I feel like I can swim forever in open water(And the lack of flip-turns which keeps my oxygen). But that is when I am practicing. In the event I get caught up in the excitement and go out too fast. I've read about how a fast turnover is beneficial to OW. I don't measure my stroke rate or even my pace, but I feel like my turnover is markedly slower in OW. It feels natural for me to pause a bit more and make each stroke more sure as opposed to blasting through the waves. Que paso con eso?
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    I think the lack of a pace clock is largely why I feel like I can swim forever in open water(And the lack of flip-turns which keeps my oxygen). But that is when I am practicing. In the event I get caught up in the excitement and go out too fast. I've read about how a fast turnover is beneficial to OW. I don't measure my stroke rate or even my pace, but I feel like my turnover is markedly slower in OW. It feels natural for me to pause a bit more and make each stroke more sure as opposed to blasting through the waves. Que paso con eso?
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