What do YOU need to do to have a major swimming breakthrough?"

One topic of great interest to us all is "What do you need to do to have a major swimming breakthrough?" "What do you need to do to significantly improve your swimming times over one season?" Do you have any specific, nitty gritty type suggestions. I think it's really easy to fall into ruts, to just show up and go through the motions rather than seizing the moment while we train. Any one have any thoughts on what we need to do to significantly improve? forums.usms.org/showthread.php
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  • congratulations you were 22 point what? you went 21 point what? How old are you? did you do any warm up or warm down? You don't have to do much yardage to swim a fast 50 Stronger muscles and great body shape lead to faster swimming though there comes a point of diminishing returns in the swimming speed vs strength vs muscle mass formula otherwise taken to the extreme, body builders would be the fastest swimmers and they are not that type of training defies conventional thinking. did you do any other events? Sort of. Getting to 22 seconds took years of high yardage training. And I think that my weight workouts were just as important as what I did in the pool, although those were also very low volume. It's astounding by the standards of traditional swimming training, but I was thinking logically and using my knowledge about physiology, psychology, and adaptation. I know that muscles are what moves us through the water, so bigger muscles should mean faster swimming. I also know that to improve at a skill, you only have to practice that specific skill. I wanted to improve my 50 free, so I practiced swimming the 50 free. P.S. Are you from Husky Masters? I'm from WWU, and I swam with a couple Huskies on relays this weekend.
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  • congratulations you were 22 point what? you went 21 point what? How old are you? did you do any warm up or warm down? You don't have to do much yardage to swim a fast 50 Stronger muscles and great body shape lead to faster swimming though there comes a point of diminishing returns in the swimming speed vs strength vs muscle mass formula otherwise taken to the extreme, body builders would be the fastest swimmers and they are not that type of training defies conventional thinking. did you do any other events? Sort of. Getting to 22 seconds took years of high yardage training. And I think that my weight workouts were just as important as what I did in the pool, although those were also very low volume. It's astounding by the standards of traditional swimming training, but I was thinking logically and using my knowledge about physiology, psychology, and adaptation. I know that muscles are what moves us through the water, so bigger muscles should mean faster swimming. I also know that to improve at a skill, you only have to practice that specific skill. I wanted to improve my 50 free, so I practiced swimming the 50 free. P.S. Are you from Husky Masters? I'm from WWU, and I swam with a couple Huskies on relays this weekend.
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