font size A A A

Taper Vision

Posted by Barbara Hummel on Mar 03, 2006 07:30AM (3,564 views)

One effect of taper time on coaches is that it suddenly improves your eyesight. During taper, you expect to see your swimmers going faster. You look for this -- and it generally happens. But as you're looking for speed, what you ALSO see are the little things that take away from speed. Often, these are the little things that you remind your swimmers about every day. Sometimes they are the little things that you have GIVEN UP talking about because nobody seemed to pay attention. And sometimes, they are the little things that seem so obvious that you NEVER talked about them.

DESCRIBE THE IMAGE Whatever the case, nothing improves your "eye" for these little things better than taper. You can be watching a swimmer CRANKING it out and then -- BAM -- they mess up on one of the small things and they lose a second or more on the clock. It;s during taper that you really notice these things. And you become acutely aware that NOW is not the time the swimmers will learn them. And by "learn" I mean making them second nature -- making them automatic to the point that you don't have to think about them. During taper, swimmers should be thinking about pace and speed and "feel." The other stuff should be a no-brainer.

Here are some of the little things that I'm seeing during taper -- and that I've vowed to work on from the BEGINNING of next season:

Partial Streamline
It's so obvious when you're on deck: A swimmer in partial streamline is just not as fast as a swimmer in STREAMLINE.

DESCRIBE THE IMAGETop-of-the-Wall Finish
Very often, the difference between achieving a personal-best time and completing just another swim is how you touch the wall. Most swimmers are in the habit of drifting into the finish of their intervals. They let their hand drift up and over the edge of the pool, and the head and chest rise up with the hand. From on deck, it's easy to see how this slows you down. It's not so obvious from the water.

If you want your best chance to win a race or make a personal best time, the touch should be UNDER the water, with FINGERTIPS hitting first. The body should drive straight into the wall. The second photo here shows what happens just after an underwater, fingertip touch. The palm continues into the wall and the body drives straight into the wall. This is something that needs to be taught from Day 1 of the season.

DESCRIBE THE IMAGENot Finishing at the Wall
Does this look familiar?

The solution requires the coach to stay on top of things and the swimmers to develop a team attitude for success.

DESCRIBE THE IMAGE]Breathing Near the Finish
No Breathing = No Brainer.




Responses

Responded Mar 03, 2006 11:55AM

Very good points Barbara! We see all three flaws during the year. The finish and partial streamline is so easy for the swimmers to correct. For the Not finishing at the wall that is a habit that we really need to work on. Our swimmers have even got in the habit of pulling on the ladder or lane line to 'assist' themselves getting to the wall. At times I to resort to negative re-enforements, like they will repeat the set if anyone pull on the ladder or lane line. I do not like doing that but it is effective.

Responded Mar 06, 2006 10:24AM

The picture of the 3 swimmers in the way of the 4th swimming in with no way of being able to finish at the wall. We have this discussion EVERY practice and EVERY time I get the same headache. They try for awhile and then give up. In my swimmers defense when you have 8 people in a lane then the other swimmers really need to scramble out of the way to allow for the others to finish to the wall.

Responded Mar 07, 2006 04:50PM

HAHAHAAHAHAHAHA THATS ME!!!!!!!!! AHHHHH chris is a really bad actor... he is looking atraight at the camera! hahahahah! i look SO GOOD! haha


User_go Please login or signup to leave a comment.


Underwater Tag Cloud

1650 Aaron Peirsol active drag active recoveryswimming aerobic endurance age-group Amanda Beard anchoring android Android app ascending sendoffs backstroke balance beach reading bilateral breathing birthday swim blueseventy Body Shape bodyline brain training breakout breaststroke breath control breathing Brendan Hansen broken swims butterfly catch challenge set coaches coaching combat side stroke competition crossover turn Cullen Jones Cullen JonesKarlyn Pipes-Neilsen cycle rate Dave Denniston descend set distance per cycle distance training dive dolphin dolphin kick Dominik Meichtry DragSox Drills dryland DVD efficiency eggbeater kick Endless Pools Eric Shanteau Eric Vendt etiquette EVF fatigue feel Finis finish fins fist drill flip turn flip turns flutter kick Fran Crippen freestyle gallop stroke goals goswimtv.com hand entry hand exit head position heart rate hybrid IM inner strength iPhone app Jason Lezak Jeff Rouse Jessica Hardy Kaitlin Sandeno Kara Lynn Joyce Karlyn Pipes-Neilsen Kevin Clements kick kids learn-to-swim long axis strokes loping Margaret Hoelzer masters medball Michael Phelps middle distance Misty Hyman mobile video monofin neural Olympics one-hour swim open turns open water Over training pace pace clock paddles paralympics parents passive drag propulsion pull pulling pulse rates pushoffs pyramid questiontaper race specific training racing recovery relay starts resisted swimming rhythm Robert Margalis Roland Schoeman Roque Santos rotation Sara McLarty science Scott Tucker sculling SEALs shoulders sighting snorkel speed work sprint Staciana Stitts Starts stations Steve Haufler straight arm recovery streaming streamline stretch cord stretching stroke count stroke rate subscription support swim across america swim camps swim fun swim technique swim training swim video swimming Swimming Golf swimming music Swimsense swimsuit taper teaching Tempo Trainer tether timing training Triathlon tuck turn Turns underwater dolpin underwater pull Vasa water poloswimming water temp weights work to rest ratio

Who is GoSwim?

We are a group of swimmers who swim really fast, and like to help others learn how to reach their competitive potential in the area of professional swimming.

Want More GoSwim?

Subscribe to our RSS feed Subscribe to our RSS feed


 
built by devtwo