I want to add Dry Land resistance training to my workouts. I started Masters last fall and competed in both SCM and SCY seasons. I was swimming 6 days a week and lifting wieghts 3 days a week. I had a small shoulder scare last month and my Dr (ex-swimmer) recommended adding resistance training to my workouts.
So when should I add them? Should I add them to the days that I don't lift wieghts, the days that I do lift, or it doesn't matter?
I swim with the team M-F, double on my own on Saturday, Sunday is my day of rest (and to watch football). I usually lift M, W, F and I was thinking of adding Resistance and Core training on those same days. Is this too much?
My dryland workouts consist of random adventures with the P90X workout DVDs, and medicine ball workouts. P90X does give a lot of new ideas for training that the average person doesn't even think of, and a lot of it can be done with your own body weight. My medicine ball workouts are from the Mike Barrowman workout that many were doing back in the early 90s. All these are done right here at home.
In college over 12 years ago, I was in the weight room 3-4x a week, doing pretty intense muscle building workouts, and training in the pool 10x a week, doing and avg. of 8000 yards per practice. Most on my team didn't do any weight training, and it showed in their physique. I definitely could feel the strength benefits of the weight training, or any dryland training vs. swimming alone.
I am a middle distance/flyer type, and don't need to get Arnold-like :roids::weightlifter: if you know what I mean, though I do see an added benefit of some type of dryland/weight program in addition to whatever XYZ sport a person chooses to do.
My dryland workouts consist of random adventures with the P90X workout DVDs, and medicine ball workouts. P90X does give a lot of new ideas for training that the average person doesn't even think of, and a lot of it can be done with your own body weight. My medicine ball workouts are from the Mike Barrowman workout that many were doing back in the early 90s. All these are done right here at home.
In college over 12 years ago, I was in the weight room 3-4x a week, doing pretty intense muscle building workouts, and training in the pool 10x a week, doing and avg. of 8000 yards per practice. Most on my team didn't do any weight training, and it showed in their physique. I definitely could feel the strength benefits of the weight training, or any dryland training vs. swimming alone.
I am a middle distance/flyer type, and don't need to get Arnold-like :roids::weightlifter: if you know what I mean, though I do see an added benefit of some type of dryland/weight program in addition to whatever XYZ sport a person chooses to do.