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
Here's my 200 fly from spring nats this year (I'm the bald guy with tats in the red suit):
www.youtube.com/watch
Notably, for the 18-19 season, I didn't train for the 200 fly--I trained for 200s in general (I swam all five 200s and the 100 free at nats), but not the 200 fly specifically, so I more or less swam this race for the heck of it to see what I could do without having done specific 200 fly training. I was pretty happy with this race, all things considered. I'd been outside all day in the 95+ degree heat and this was the 3rd event of the day for me, and I flat out ran out of gas around the 165 mark--it wasn't that I locked up and crashed and burned, I just ran out of energy. Minor differentiation, but it was a big change for me, since I'm generally a king of the piano and locking up on the last 50. Besides that, this was a surprisingly good race and was just .5 seconds off my masters PR from several years ago, when I was training pretty much solely for the 200 fly.
Here's my masters PR 200 fly from 2017 (I'm in the middle lane):
www.youtube.com/watch
Here's my 200 fly from the first time I did it at spring nats back in 2015:
www.youtube.com/watch
I've made a lot of progress since the 13-14 season when I started training for the 200 fly, but my key technique focus areas moving forward will be the breathing pattern as I mentioned in my earlier post, keeping a steady kick, and as a backup plan, figuring out how to seamlessly switch to survival fly while maintaining decent speed if all turns to crap and I turn into Mr. Steinway on the last 50.
Any feedback is welcome!
Here's my 200 fly from spring nats this year (I'm the bald guy with tats in the red suit):
www.youtube.com/watch
Notably, for the 18-19 season, I didn't train for the 200 fly--I trained for 200s in general (I swam all five 200s and the 100 free at nats), but not the 200 fly specifically, so I more or less swam this race for the heck of it to see what I could do without having done specific 200 fly training. I was pretty happy with this race, all things considered. I'd been outside all day in the 95+ degree heat and this was the 3rd event of the day for me, and I flat out ran out of gas around the 165 mark--it wasn't that I locked up and crashed and burned, I just ran out of energy. Minor differentiation, but it was a big change for me, since I'm generally a king of the piano and locking up on the last 50. Besides that, this was a surprisingly good race and was just .5 seconds off my masters PR from several years ago, when I was training pretty much solely for the 200 fly.
Here's my masters PR 200 fly from 2017 (I'm in the middle lane):
www.youtube.com/watch
Here's my 200 fly from the first time I did it at spring nats back in 2015:
www.youtube.com/watch
I've made a lot of progress since the 13-14 season when I started training for the 200 fly, but my key technique focus areas moving forward will be the breathing pattern as I mentioned in my earlier post, keeping a steady kick, and as a backup plan, figuring out how to seamlessly switch to survival fly while maintaining decent speed if all turns to crap and I turn into Mr. Steinway on the last 50.
Any feedback is welcome!