The Butterfly Lane

Butterfly, beautiful to watch, difficult to train. We SDK off every wall. We're most likely to smack hands with each other and those beside us. Fly's fun to sprint but no fun when the piano comes down What did you do in practice today? the breastroke lane The Middle Distance Lane The Backstroke Lane The Butterfly Lane The SDK Lane The Taper Lane The Distance Lane The IM Lane The Sprint Free Lane The Pool Deck
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Elaine, Here is 100 meter race with Phelps in Bejing in 2008. Michael Phelps - 100m Butterfly final - Beijing 2008 - YouTube Perhaps it indicates a faster arm rotation that would help you, regardless of concerns about crashing your arms in. I can only offer that my 1,000 yard fly, like yours, includes a necessary glide for recovery. It might be as long as a full second. But the few times I sprint a 25, I kind of follow the windmill style of some butterfliers. That is, no more soft hands. No gliding. The faster hands at the entry can provide momentum to pull deep and hard. I have to use a lot of energy to double dolphin kick in a sprint of 25 or 50 for the amount of propulsion I get out of my kick. My kicks are shallower and therefore faster, but do not propel me as much as my single kick in the 1,000. The shorter the distance, the less I rely on my kick. I get a lot more bang out of my arm stroke in a sprint for the amount of energy used than I do out of my kick. If I sprint 100, the stroke is a lot less of a windmill. It seems to me that the style is extremely dependent on the distance. A 25 is different than a 50 and a 50 is different than a 100. I breathe every other stroke on a 25, but rarely can I continue this all the way to the end of 50. On a 100, I would more likely breathe a lot from the very beginning before it is too late. The main reason I say this is only from my experience the last few years in trying to find what works for me at different distances. I am no great swimmer. Isn't butterfly intriguing? An analogy is how a whip kick is better for sprinting *** stroke because it is a faster kick, but a frog kick might be more efficient for long distances. The faster whip kick allows for faster, harder arm strokes in a *** stroke sprint.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Elaine, Here is 100 meter race with Phelps in Bejing in 2008. Michael Phelps - 100m Butterfly final - Beijing 2008 - YouTube Perhaps it indicates a faster arm rotation that would help you, regardless of concerns about crashing your arms in. I can only offer that my 1,000 yard fly, like yours, includes a necessary glide for recovery. It might be as long as a full second. But the few times I sprint a 25, I kind of follow the windmill style of some butterfliers. That is, no more soft hands. No gliding. The faster hands at the entry can provide momentum to pull deep and hard. I have to use a lot of energy to double dolphin kick in a sprint of 25 or 50 for the amount of propulsion I get out of my kick. My kicks are shallower and therefore faster, but do not propel me as much as my single kick in the 1,000. The shorter the distance, the less I rely on my kick. I get a lot more bang out of my arm stroke in a sprint for the amount of energy used than I do out of my kick. If I sprint 100, the stroke is a lot less of a windmill. It seems to me that the style is extremely dependent on the distance. A 25 is different than a 50 and a 50 is different than a 100. I breathe every other stroke on a 25, but rarely can I continue this all the way to the end of 50. On a 100, I would more likely breathe a lot from the very beginning before it is too late. The main reason I say this is only from my experience the last few years in trying to find what works for me at different distances. I am no great swimmer. Isn't butterfly intriguing? An analogy is how a whip kick is better for sprinting *** stroke because it is a faster kick, but a frog kick might be more efficient for long distances. The faster whip kick allows for faster, harder arm strokes in a *** stroke sprint.
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