Posts Tagged ‘Swimming Technique’

Super Starts: How to get faster sooner and leave your competitors languishing in the slow lane.

Speed. Speed. Speed. And more speed.

It’s what swimming is all about.

There are no gold medals for the person who can swim the most number of 100s or the slowest 400 or even for the swimmer who has the highest heart rate.

Winning in swimming is about one thing and one thing alone….speed. You swim faster than your competitors…you win. Simple as that.

So if swimming is all about speed, what is speed all about? Read more

Five Breaststroke Essentials for all Swimmers and Coaches

1. If you want to swim breaststroke – you have to swim breaststroke

We have all been there – sitting behind a breaststroker, trying to overtake them, trying to get around their wide kicks and slow speed. Frustrating!!!

However, to get good at breaststroke – you have to swim breaststroke! That is to say, if you want to swim fast breaststroke in competition you have to train to swim fast breaststroke.

Many swimmers wonder why their breaststroke does not improve. Often the reason is simple…they don’t swim it enough in training. Read more

Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Twenty Things to do NOW if you want to Win Gold at the London 2012 Olympic Games.

1. Start training – today!

Every day – every session – every lap is an opportunity to improve something: your skills, your speed, your fitness, your technique, your pacing, your breathing control….get in there and start working towards London…. today.

2. Believe anything is possible.

Imagine Phelps on the blocks about to swim the first heat of his first event in Beijing. Can you imagine him thinking, “Wow – I don’t think I can do this. It’s going to be too hard. I will never beat the “Sptiz” record”. No way! Winning in London in 2012 means believing you can do it right now! Read more

Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Mental Skills Training in Swimming – a new approach.

What is your experience with sports psychology and mental skills training?

Is it meeting a psychologist or mental skills professional at an office and talking quietly about attitudes, anxieties and ambitions?

Or is it having a mental skills professional come to the training centre and do a “motivation” lecture or a mental skills training session on relaxation, focusing, visualisation / imagery and attitude?

Time to take mental skills training out of the office, away from the training room and into the pool.

How?  Read more

Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Physiology based Training Set Design in Swimming: There must be Another Way.

Walk on deck at any pool in the world on a typical Monday afternoon.

There it is – the old whiteboard over there at the end of the pool.

And what’s written up on the whiteboard?

Today’s training program!

  • “10 x 100 on 1:45 at 75%” or
  • “20 x 50 on 1:00 holding PB plus 5 seconds” or
  • “12 x 200 IM on 3:30 holding 2:50 or something similar.

You would think that swimming training, preparation and performance was all about the body wouldn’t you? Read more

Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Five New Ideas that will Change Swimming Forever.

They say that “success is a moving target”.

This is so true in swimming where new ideas, information and innovations are constantly being thrown up to challenge, inspire and stimulate the thinking of swimmers and coaches.

Recently a wave of exciting and challenging new scientific research has come forward which has sparked some new ideas and forced the swimming world to sit up and take notice.

Here are five new ideas that will change our swimming world…………..forever! Read more

Republished by Blog Post Promoter

The Ten Myths of Swimming.

The dictionary says:

myth (noun)

  1. a traditional story of unknown authorship, ostensibly with a historical basis, but serving usually to explain some phenomenon of nature, the origin of man, or the customs, institutions, religious rites, etc. of a people: myths usually involve the exploits of gods and heroes
  2. such stories collectively; mythology
  3. any fictitious story, or unscientific account, theory, belief, etc.
  4. any imaginary person or thing spoken of as though existing

There’s the Yeti.

There’s the Sasquatch.

There’s the shopping cart with four good wheels.

There’s the low fat, great tasting chocolate cake.

And there’s these….the ten myths of swimming. Read more

Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Swim Shop – Now Open

The Swim Coaching Brain has Opened a Swim Shop.

In response to the overwhelming demand for more information on swimming topics, we have put together a series of swimming books for you to download and enjoy.

The first book in the series: Longer and Stronger: Stretching and Strengthening for Young Swimmers is available now!

More books will be added regularly.

Make sure you bookmark the Shop page and visit it regularly to check out some of our great new swimming products.

 

Free Swimming Programs: Free Training Sets and Sessions

Free Swimming Programs: Free Training Sets and Sessions

Swim Coaching Brain is proud to announce a great new service: Free Swimming Programs: Free Training Sets and Sessions!

In response to the over-whelming demand, we are now providing free workouts for swimmers and coaches of all levels.

If you are someone who swims for health and fitness or just loves training in the water, check out the free swimming programs on our Swimming Programs for Every Swimmer page.

If you are a competitive swimmer or a swimming coach looking for a winning edge, check out the free swimming programs on our Swimming Programs for Competitive Swimmers page.

So check-out the work-outs and even download them to try next time you go swimming training.

New workouts will be added regularly.

Wayne Goldsmith

The P.A.C.E. System of Managing Swimming Training Intensity.

The challenge itself is relatively simple.

How to simply, practically, reliably and accurately manage training intensity in swimming.

Now add in these complications:

  • 67 kids aged 8 – 13 years all in the water at the same time;
  • Only one coach on deck;
  • No heart rate monitors (i.e. so any heart rate monitoring is done manually);
  • No sports science support.

The challenge just got a little more difficult…..or has it?

Introducing the PACE system – P.A.C.E. Read more

← Previous PageNext Page →

Content Protected Using Blog Protector By: PcDrome.