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
Parents
  • Hi Elaine, JP and Dan are pointing out common issues occurring as and right after the hands land on the water. I always try to think of my hands landing on the water rather than entering the water. This keeps them from going too deep and shortening my pull. The two things you can focus on are the "Press" and the "Catch". Here are some presentation materials that cover this in great detail with photos. The first are slides and the second is the actual presentation. This presentation were given by Russell Mark at the USOTC in Colorado Springs and was a live webinar. I live in Colorado Springs and could attend the talk. They usually invite local coaches and I coach a Masters swimming team in Colorado Springs. www.usaswimming.org/.../5-22-13-butterfly-technique---russel-mark.pdf usaswimming.adobeconnect.com/.../ In the "Press" photos you can see that at entry the elbows are not dropped but hands are higher than elbows. As the swimmers transition to the "Catch" you can see that all of the swimmers have their hands below their elbows (high elbows). I remember at a USA Swimming butterfly clinic I attended that the speaker mentioned that Michael Phelps felt like his hands were stuck in a bucket of sand in this position - he could get so much resistance in the water. One thing I learned from this talk was that during the catch you want to be looking forward, not down. Here is the USA Swimming web page with all of the training technique presentations given at the USOTC. I have shared these on the discussion forums before but I think that they are a great resource of technique tips so I'll post them again. All of the ones by Russell Mark are great. Hope all this is helpful! www.usaswimming.org/.../online-clinic-series---training-technique
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  • Hi Elaine, JP and Dan are pointing out common issues occurring as and right after the hands land on the water. I always try to think of my hands landing on the water rather than entering the water. This keeps them from going too deep and shortening my pull. The two things you can focus on are the "Press" and the "Catch". Here are some presentation materials that cover this in great detail with photos. The first are slides and the second is the actual presentation. This presentation were given by Russell Mark at the USOTC in Colorado Springs and was a live webinar. I live in Colorado Springs and could attend the talk. They usually invite local coaches and I coach a Masters swimming team in Colorado Springs. www.usaswimming.org/.../5-22-13-butterfly-technique---russel-mark.pdf usaswimming.adobeconnect.com/.../ In the "Press" photos you can see that at entry the elbows are not dropped but hands are higher than elbows. As the swimmers transition to the "Catch" you can see that all of the swimmers have their hands below their elbows (high elbows). I remember at a USA Swimming butterfly clinic I attended that the speaker mentioned that Michael Phelps felt like his hands were stuck in a bucket of sand in this position - he could get so much resistance in the water. One thing I learned from this talk was that during the catch you want to be looking forward, not down. Here is the USA Swimming web page with all of the training technique presentations given at the USOTC. I have shared these on the discussion forums before but I think that they are a great resource of technique tips so I'll post them again. All of the ones by Russell Mark are great. Hope all this is helpful! www.usaswimming.org/.../online-clinic-series---training-technique
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