Wednesday, June 28, 2017

As You Change Speed What Happens To Your Stroke Rate And Stroke Length?

SS Clinics, Camps and 1to1s:



North America

Sterling VA 1-Day Clinic June 24th

The Woodlands TX, Swim Squad

Charleston SC 1-Day Clinic July 16th

Chicago Video Analysis

Chicago Squads

Montreal Squads

Montreal Video Analysis



Asia / Middle East / Australia

Perth Squads

Perth Video Analysis

Kuala Lumpur Swim Squad

Kuala Lumpur Video Analysis

Hong Kong Squads & Video Analysis



Europe

Prague Junior Swim Club

Prague Video Analysis

Nijmegen Video Analysis.  & Stroke Correction

City Of Elche Video Analysis / Squads

Nijmegen SS Squads

Zwevegem Video Analysis (English - Dutch)

Prague Junior Swim Club


SS Camp Lanzarote (English - Dutch)



United Kingdom

Guernsey Video Analysis

Yorkshire Squads (Pool & OW)

Yorkshire Video Analysis

West Lothian Video Analysis

Richmond London SS Squad

SW London Swim Workshops

Salisbury 1to1 Analysis

Twickenham Video Analysis

Lancaster SS Squad

Swindon/Cotswolds Video Analysis

Lancaster Video Analysis

Northampton Swim Squad

Open Water 1-2-1s

Swindon SS Squad (Try for free!)

Felixstowe Video Analysis

Stratford upon Avon & Birmingham/Coventry Squads

Felixstowe Squads

Acton London Video Analysis

Cardiff Video Analysis Clinic

Improvers Freestyle Course, Abingdon

Open Water Confidence Course, Dorchester
4 Places Left


Northampton Video Analysis Clinic

Hever Castle Open Water Clinic

Guernsey SS Squads
Here's a great question from Guru swimmer Andrew Boccio:

If I'm running, my cadence stays the same (about 180) regardless of how fast I go. The only difference would be how much I push off the ground, thereby lengthening my stride length. That extra effort of pushing off the ground harder to get a bigger stride, is ultimately what gains speed, not the cadence increase. As I'm sure you know this already, I only point it out because I'm confused as to how this is analogous in swimming.

It seems as though the way you describe stroke rate is that it should be the same for you as a swimmer once you find your optimal rate. And that rate matters so much in terms of the actual mechanics of your swimming (overgliding if it's too slow and chopping hard if it's too fast). But how is it possible to ever change speeds then?? If I slow my stroke rate, I mess up my form, and same if I increase it too much. So then do I have to shorten or lengthen my stroke length (which doesn't seem possible really). Or, the only thing I can come up with is pushing less water or using less effort on the catch so that your "push off the ground" (so to speak), does not require as much effort and you will therefore go slower. 


The short answer to Andrew's question is that as you change speed, both your stroke rate and stroke rate change. Swimming faster normally means both a slightly longer stroke and a slightly faster turnover. That's the short answer, on which we're going to expand below.

First a couple of quick definitions:

- Your stroke length is how far you travel on each stroke. One way of measuring this is to count your strokes over a given distance (e.g. a length of your pool).

- Your stroke rate is how fast you are turning your arms over - i.e. your cadence. We normally quote this is strokes per minute. You can measure this with a specialist stop watch and control it using a stroke rate beeper such as a Finis Tempo Trainer Pro.

Note that in the early 90s it became popular to count strokes per length driven by the belief that a longer stroke always meant a more efficient stroke. We now understand that this is not the case and there are distinct dangers with trying to reduce your stroke count too far. Instead you need to find a balance between the length and rate of your stroke for you as an individual.

But how do you find this sweet spot and swim "optimally" at different effort levels?


First Fine Tune Your Catch Technique

Right at the front of the stroke you extend forwards and get a hold of the water before pressing it backwards. This initial engagement with the water is called your catch technique and it can have a dramatic effect on your stroke rate.

Generally speaking, swimmers with a better catch can swim at a higher stroke rate without fighting the water. Which is one of the secrets to swimming fast and efficiently.

Pressing down on the water, pressing wide or even pressing forwards (Overgliding) can dramatically reduce your stroke rate. Trying to optimise your stroke rate with any of these flaws in place will prove a frustrating experience so before you run a ramp test, do some work on fine tuning your catch.

Our go-to product for improving your catch is the Swim Smooth Catch Masterclass - available in the Guru here: www.swimsmooth.guru/subsection/fw/catch-masterclass/

Or on DVD here: www.swimsmooth.com/catchmasterclass.html

You can also watch the trailer here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Q3Tsp_u02c


The Swim Smooth Stroke Rate Ramp Test

OK, so you're confident your catch is half-decent, what now? You need to conduct a "Ramp Test".

We've conducted ramp tests on thousands of swimmers over many years at Swim Smooth and use a standard test format you can find here:

www.swimsmooth.com/ramptest

The test involves you swimming a series of 50s (meters or yards depending on your pool) starting at a low stroke rate and progressively increasing it each 50. You control your stroke rate with a Tempo Trainer Pro beeping the rhythm to you and record your time per 50m, strokes per length and how it felt in terms of effort.

Ideally you run this blind without knowing the stroke rate you are at and have a friend time you, count your strokes and record everything on the stroke rate sheet.

As you increase stroke rate you'll go progressively quicker up to a certain point where you really start to fight things. But within the range of the test you might
When you look at the results you should find at least one "sweet spot" where your stroke "clicks" into place and works nicely. There might be a noticeable drop in effort at this point and/or an increase in speed too.

Better swimmers will often find more than one sweet spot over their speed range. One around steady effort level and another around CSS pace:



Of course once you have found these sweet spots you can target them in training over longer swims and key training sets. As you develop that sense of rhythm at which you best perform you can use it in races for best performance.


Developing More Versatility

But what if you want to swim at a pace faster or slower than your sweet spot. Perhaps you want to smoothly change your pace during a race for tactical reasons.

To develop this versatility in your stroke, try the following set where you are varying force application during the catch to change the length of your stroke. This will adjust your pace whilst still swimming at an "ideal" rhythm for you:

Swim 4x 200m/yds with Finis Tempo Trainer Pro set to a single stroke rate you might naturally use for steady paced swimming. If you don't have a Tempo Trainer, aim to maintain a similar stroke cadence throughout.

Progressively increase the firmness of the catch for each 200 to lengthen your stroke and increase the pace you are swimming. Don't add a glide, just increase the pressure during the catch and maintain the stroke rhythm:

First 200: Light catch - "Granny Gear"
Second 200: "Apply a sense of firmness"
Third 200: "Catch treacle"
Fourth 200: "Big gear"


Think of it like changing the gears on your bike but maintaining similar cadence through the range.

Try this set and let us know how you get on! You can see the Perth squad board here for the entire session:



Swim Smooth!

Thursday, June 15, 2017

The New Platysens Marlin Is Now In Stock!


SS Clinics, Camps and 1to1s:





North America

Sterling VA 1-Day Clinic June 24th

The Woodlands TX, Swim Squad

Charleston SC 1-Day Clinic July 16th

Chicago Video Analysis

Chicago Squads

Montreal Squads

Montreal Video Analysis





Asia / Middle East / Australia

Perth Squads

Perth Video Analysis

Kuala Lumpur Swim Squad

Kuala Lumpur Video Analysis

Hong Kong Squads & Video Analysis





Europe

Prague Junior Swim Club

Prague Video Analysis

Nijmegen Video Analysis.  & Stroke Correction

City Of Elche Video Analysis / Squads

Nijmegen SS Squads

Zwevegem Video Analysis (English - Dutch)

Prague Junior Swim Club


SS Camp Lanzarote (English - Dutch)




United Kingdom

Guernsey Video Analysis

Yorkshire Squads (Pool & OW)

Yorkshire Video Analysis

West Lothian Video Analysis

Richmond London SS Squad

SW London Swim Workshops

Salisbury 1to1 Analysis

Twickenham Video Analysis

Lancaster SS Squad

Swindon/Cotswolds Video Analysis

Lancaster Video Analysis

Northampton Swim Squad

Open Water 1-2-1s

Swindon SS Squad (Try for free!)

Felixstowe Video Analysis

Stratford upon Avon & Birmingham/Coventry Squads

Felixstowe Squads

Acton London Video Analysis

Cardiff Video Analysis Clinic

Improvers Freestyle Course, Abingdon

Open Water Confidence Course, Dorchester
4 Places Left


Northampton Video Analysis Clinic

Hever Castle Open Water Clinic

Guernsey SS Squads
We're very excited to announce that the brand new Platysens Marlin has just arrived in the UK and is now on sale in the Swim Smooth shop! :


The Marlin is a next-generation swimming tool worn on your goggles. It monitors everything you do as you swim and then speaks to you, giving your verbal feedback on your performance.

The Marlin informs you of the speed you are swimming, your stroke rate, strokes per length and distance swum. It can also talk you through training sessions step by step:




Once your session is complete you can of course analyse all your swim data on your smart-phone (iPhone or Android required).

Swim Smooth have been an integral part of the development team at Platysens, making sure the Marlin gives you the right feedback and prompts you in the right way to maximise your development as a swimmer.

The Marlin comes in two versions, the pool only Marlin-P (without GPS) and the pool and open water Marlin. It's a true next generation product and we're super excited about getting one strapped to your goggles! Buy yours today at:



Marlin Youtube Unboxing

Paul Newsome unboxed his production Marlin a few days ago in Perth, giving you some insight into how to use the Marlin along the way:





Marlin Product Overview
• As you swim, the Marlin provides you with spoken feedback on your speed, distance swum, stroke rate and strokes per length without you having to stop and look at a watch.

• The Marlin can be configured to control your stroke rate and set pace in a similar way to a Finis Tempo Trainer Pro.

• You can download training sessions to the Marlin and be led through them step by step as you swim - removing the need for a written plan.

• Analyse your swim pace and performance after your swim to optimise your speed and efficiency.

• With the Marlin model you can record, map and analyse your open water training. Note, as the Marlin has a clear GPS signal on the back of your head it can do this with far greater accuracy than a GPS watch which spends much of the time underwater during the freestyle stroke:



You can also program an open water swim course at your local venue on your smart phone and have the Marlin guide you round, speaking to you whenever you go off course with corrective instructions to bring you straight again. Amazing technology!

• At no additional charge, Swim Smooth Guru PRO subscribers will soon be able to connect their Guru account to their Marlin, sending Guru training sessions to the Marlin to follow at the pool. Sessions swum using the Marlin can also be automatically imported into the Guru for detailed Swim Smooth analysis. Guru integration is scheduled for completion in early July.

Swim Smooth!