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Butterfly - Underwater Weapon

Posted by Glenn Mills on Feb 22, 2011 08:43AM (12,289 views)

Ultimately, the sport of competitive swimming is about racing.  Finding what skills, or weapons, work best for you in those races is key to winning.

Why do it:
When you discover a faster way to get through the water, basically... you should use it.  Many swimmers think swimming fast is about swimming, when sometimes it can be about NOT swimming.  This example will be how to use underwater dolphins off turns as your weapon of choice.

How to do it:
1)
 Find a teammate of about your speed to race (you can actually do this everyday in practice).
2)  Determine a distance you're going to race, and start to make up some rules.
3)  The first race will be with both swimmers starting to swim early (like many young swimmers will do on the last lap of a 100 or 200 fly).
4)  The second race, one of the swimmers will be allowed to use the underwater dolphin to see if they can gain an advantage.
5)  The third race, both swimmers will be allowed to use whatever they want to try to win the wall.

How to do it really well (the fine points):
Remember, winning the walls isn't just about going further than the other swimmer, it's about checking the momentum shifts.  If you're faster than the other swimmer underwater, use it.  If you're a faster swimmer... use that.  The most important thing is discovering which weapons work for you.




Responses

Responded Feb 23, 2011 06:55PM

COOL.....very mental exercise!!!!

Responded Feb 24, 2011 08:27AM

Nice thanks for this video

Responded Feb 28, 2011 03:41AM

The trick is to use every bit of 15 meters with the underwater dolphin ; )

Responded Feb 28, 2011 04:04AM

If you can maintain your velocity that long. I've found that very few swimmers can hold their speed enough to the full 15 meters... so you have to remember, it's not about distance, it's about velocity. Just my opinion.

Responded Mar 01, 2011 10:14PM

the more difficult thing is doing a correct body wave motion, specialy from chest to hip.

Responded Jan 05, 2012 06:12PM

Good point about velocity Glenn. By the time I get to 15 meters with an underwater dolphin kick, I'm almost stopped. I lose velocity after 3 or 4 dolphin kicks. #breaststrokerproblems


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