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My Reasons for Winter Training

Posted on December 14, 2011 by swimmerjoe

Winter Training.

Different coaches may have their own reasons, but mine is quite simple and easy to understand. After a decent fall season with the age groupers, a week or so break, I normally like to jump back on it. This time, the timing was right-mid December. So we got back on the training, at least for the next 3 to 4 weeks or so. You can follow it in the workout section of swimmerjoe to see what’s going on.

My immediate reasons for it are getting the young athletes swimming harder than normal, building up some pain tolerance, and creating a very solid foundation. Most coaches do this, if athletes and dedicated, they normally have a love-hate relationship with this time of the year or training cycle. My main reason is this: to have the ability to swim higher quality sets in late January and February for the last of short course season. This will give us the ability to do this and create some real crazy speed! It really works, I have done it for years.

There are many different ways to do things in training and get ready to swim fast, and this is one of them. Let me know what you guys do. I am always curious. Have a great season!

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After this FAST Weekend at Junior Nationals!

Posted on December 11, 2011 by swimmerjoe

After this fast weekend at Junior Nationals our younger swimmmers realized several things: Yes it was a fast meet, yes they were older, yes the great coaches were there. But in addition to these, one very important event happened that needed to take place with all these younger athletes. They got to see how close they are to actually competing with these fast swimmers.

Young swimmers got to watch some of the nation’s best swimmers through the entire race process — what they do mentally and physically to get ready to race. They got to see what the A and B Final swimmers look like while swimming backstroke, head position and tempo, or the timing in breaststroke with the efficency and glide is absolutely invaluable!  So let’s talk about the Pre, Race and Post race pieces that we observed.

Watching Race Prep
Watching the A and B Final swimmers conduct their race prep is probably what gives them an edge from all the other less experienced swimmers. Beginning with a good warm up and then getting by themselves, mentally going through the race in their head, visualizing (see old post), and swinging and stretching their limbs for maximum speed. What that also does is prepares their muscles from a physiological standpoint. For more information, check this article out. This one is from 2002 and for cycling, but it has all the same principles that apply to swimming. Physiology and your muscles

Most young athletes really don’t know what to do and oftentimes they talk and run around right before events.  You know what? The more the young athletes practice their meet prep and spending the effort to do so, the more powerful the process and therefore the more focused, and obviously a better and more ready the athlete is! So get practicing with race prep. By the way, it works. I told one of my athletes just this month to start working on it and get your head in the game…What an absolute turn around!  It works.

The Race
The Junior National swimmers showed it this weekend. Plain and simple, training takes over. If you have been training to your expertise or your best efforts, the race will take care of itself. So, listen to your coach, focus on technique, and develop your strength and stamina during practice.

Post Swim Care
We coaches state that warming up and warming down are key to great swimming and the longevity of the body as well as onging performance. But how do we really know this? USA Swimming put out a great article about the art of recovery, check it out! Who knew sprinters needed more swim down than distance swimmers? Watching the Junior National swimmers go directly to the warm down even before speaking with their coach was a good lesson for our young athletes.

Swimming multiple events at multi-day meets are very taxing on the body and young athletes need to realize that.  The swimmer with most “in the tank” both physically and mentally on the last day will and should prevail everytime.

After this fast weekend at Junior Nationals our swimmers learned a great deal.  Hopefully you can also spread this knowledge throughout your team and develop your own “team Pre, race and post strategy” for greatness.

Let me know how your team or your athletic pre, race and post race has changed and how you have worked on it.  I’ll post it here on the blog!

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Need State High School Swimming Results?

Posted on November 10, 2011 by swimmerjoe

Go to Florida Swim Network at http://FloridaSwimNetwork.com, we’ll see you over there!

We now have 3A up under the Results Tab and the High School Tab.

Start Now! Visualize Yourself Being Great!

Posted on November 8, 2011 by swimmerjoe

For future reference – This blog has moved over to the Florida Swim Network site. Take a look - http://FloridaSwimNetwork.com

After focus, the world’s greatest athletes list visualization as the next most important aspect of their mental training. The importance of this is definitely a must! You have to see yourself being great. I can only speak from my experience, but visualization was huge for me in swimming and other sports that I participated in. (Yes, I was Middle School Champ in wrestling, too!)

In swimming, I would visualize over and over, and over and over again, just to do it absolutely perfect in my mind. I would know how I was going to start, how the stroke felt, how fast the turns were going be, when to breath, on and on until I touched the wall and saw the clock with my best time! Bedtime is the perfect time to practice this…What you can do is relax your body and start from the beginning of your race with how your body feels, the air, the sounds, what you hear and have the special event in your empty relaxed mind. You go through your pre-swim ritual in your head, the stretches, the breathing and the preparation of your event. You see yourself starting swimming and pulling through the water with 100% effort and efficiency….then you glance up at the wall and are extremely overjoyed by the numbers you see on the scoreboard. If you believe you can be the best you can be, if you can actually visualize yourself excelling at your sport and feel the power through your visualization techniques, your will be one mean, powerful and unstoppable athlete!

If you are just training hard that’s great, you will get benefit from that, but if we also add the focus component and visualization technique you will start becoming an even greater well-rounded and more complete athlete. The focus and the visualization probably are worth 50 – 60% of the entire picture, so don’t go on much longer without it. I don’t like giving people a 60% advantage over me doing something and I assume you don’t either! Practice this every night and you will start noticing a difference by mid November…..Let me know how it goes.

6 Days from FLAGs – Our Distance Workout

Posted on July 8, 2011 by swimmerjoe

Hello all.  The young athletes responded well to this one.  We are 6 days away from their big meet of the summer.  If you are masters swimmer or triathlete, this is a good one for you as well!   More to come. 

16 x 100     1:30, 1;20, 1:15, 1:10 (repeat)

4 x 200     KICK @ 3:30

4 x 25     No breath @ :40

16 x 50     2 @ :35, 2 @ :45 (all pace), 4 Fly @ :1:00 (all repeat)

4 x 25     No Breath @ :40

12 x 25     Long axis drills @ :40

8 x 125     IM Add-on each stroke on each one–twice

4 x 25     No breath @ :40

2 x 500     Hypoxic Pull, 3-5, every 4th lap 5 second delay @ 6:30

If breaststroke at FLAGs – 6 x 50 Breast kick @ :60

The athletes did react well to this.  We will do more pace oriented items tomorrow to zero in on what we are trying to do.  As we get closer, we really don’t rest much for the distance swimmers.  If you are a masters swimmer or a triathlete, I wouldn’t rest much either. You have to keep you pace and longer swimming up to maintain all you have worked for. Too many times triathletes rest too much for the swim.  As a triathlete, you have to remember, your swim portion is a distance event, not a sprint. 

Enjoy your weekend.

Going to Texas!

Posted on June 28, 2011 by swimmerjoe

Swim Meet, Vacation, Filming and Crazy Fun!

First, the Texas Open.  A swim meet for 6 Blue Dolfin swimmers, heading to one of the fastest pools in the country. I look forward to seeing how these young athletes react in a new atmosphere, new competition and swimming without most of their friends hanging around.  Should be interesting.  I know in years past the athletes really kicked some serious tail (That’s a swimming term, haha). To see their speed and others, it will be streaming LIVE on http://FloridaSwimNetwork.com beginning on Friday.   Check the website for times!  Join in the chat while you’re watching!

Vacation, Vacation!  If you have never been to Austin, it is a must!  The arts, the music, South Congress Ave, Cupcakes, Ladybird Lake path, RunTex, Mellow Johnny’s Bike Shop, hill country, Whole Foods Headquarters, on and on—it’s a blast!

Filming at Mellow Johnny’s Bike Shop and UT Swim Coach Eddie Reese.   I will be helping Florida Swim Network at Mellow Johnny’s Bike Shop and also filming the SwimmerJoe Show there with UT Head Men’s Coach Eddie Reese.  We will have many other great guests along the way, so stay tuned to the Network!

Crazy Fun!  I love hanging with my sis, her hubby and their 6 kids.  Yep, 6.  We are on the go from 7:00 – 11:00 everyday going antquing, shopping, swimming at UT, finding old cities in South Texas, etc.

So next year, join us!  We would love to have you, wherever you are in the country.  Also stay tuned on this blog to get updates along the way this week!

If you are able, tune in tomorrow, Wednesday night, at 8:00 pm EDT and all weekend for the swim meet.  See you there!

Up to the Scary Group!

Posted on June 16, 2011 by swimmerjoe

Hello, back again.  It surely has been a crazy month with tons going on, helping with Florida Swim Network, swimming meets and a 70.3 event that was quite fun!

I wanted to talk about this time a year that means only one big step in a swimmer’s progress.  This giant leap involves moving up into the scary Senior Group and/or doing two practices a day over the summer.  It is a time where the last of the training wheels are finally taken off.  For us, the time is after school ends for the summer and the athlete is going into 9th grade or high school.  Currently this season, I had roughly 12 kids or so and it surely was a sad transition for me. And now that most of the group has transferred to the Senior Group, I know that the moving up was a great idea.  Why?  They need the extra work and the extra discipline along with the internal pressure they put on themselves to see their potential through.  Not only was my son in the group, but a few kids that I’ve known for years and years.

What They Don’t Know Is

What they don’t know is that these extra practices along with extra yardage and dryland will make them more tired than they have ever been. Broken down beyond their own thoughts would ever take them. What won’t kill them will make them stronger, right?

Maturity Levels of the Senior Athletes

What also will happen is the newcomers will see that the athletes in this group most likely “want” to be there and are not pushed by their parents. They want to train hard and they want to be in the best shape of their life.  So what happens? Success breeds success in training and in the “will to succeed” area with what they are doing.  Also the newcomers to the group learn from the more experienced swimmers and hopefully it’s the correct things.

Meets

What some athletes don’t know about swimming in meets with all this extra training is that meets are sometimes painful both physically with all the hard training going on and mentally, because sometimes best times are extremely hard to come by, but not impossible. With me, when I used to swim years ago and swim in meets while training hard and doing doubles, I was down right awful.  Yeah, that’s right, even horrible.  BUT, I knew that I was training hard and as long as the athlete knows that, the taper and shave will be ballistic. Let up? Even if slow in practice, keep the hammer down!  The agony will pay off.

There is a time and place for every athlete to go to the next level. Some times are different than others, but mostly between 14-15 years old seems to work out best.  A general step in progress and training is the best way to grow mentally and physically in a young athlete. If you are an athlete, train hard, even if you are crazy tired, eat well and sleep as much as you can.

If you are a parent, feed them, support them, and realize what they are going through.  They are the hardest working athletes in the world.  If you are a coach, train them harder and understand that you have athletes that love to be the hardest working athlete on the planet.

Blueprint for Success After Meets!

Posted on May 2, 2011 by swimmerjoe

Blueprint for swimming success? Who knows, but this is what I do! Sometimes after a very long weekend, you need to swim long and easy, but still keep your eye on the goal.  You need to keep training while taking a little of the edge off. That’s what we did today.  The age-groupers had a very long meet in Orlando (on http://FloridaSwimNetwork.com by the way), and they needed to get in today, just not too intense or difficult. What we did was some long swimming, enough for a group of 10-14 years old pretty good athletes.

800 Free change every 100
600 Kick choice
400 IM drill under water last length of every stroke
200 Breast 3 kicks and a pull, getting out at every end
100 Back 8 Kicks off, right arm down, left arm back

Snorkel, Paddles, Pull Buoy
2 x 150  (set interval at 10 seconds rest)
300  (set at 15 seconds rest)
do both 3 x through

Fins
8 x 50 15 meter kickouts under water, then sprint to walls–NO BREATH entire 50 (set at 40 seconds rest)
300 Butterfly kick on back

12 x 25 Fly 1 breathers, 10 dips one end, 10 nose pushups other end

Have fun and enjoy. You know I will always throw a little dryland in there. Keeps your muscles thinking!! Let me know how you did on this one.

Now That Springtime is Here

Posted on April 17, 2011 by swimmerjoe

Get out of the comfort of your own favorite swimming hole (your regular pool, that is) and get out in the natural water…you know springs, ocean, lake, river, etc. These types of scenery changes and different surroundings often spur new vigor for your upcoming summer training.  And you know what? Visit them often! (Don’t let those “No Swimming” signs bother you…haha!)

After the first ever Swim Orlando Open Water Competition today in the Orlando area, I can’t tell you how many young athletes and parents enjoyed getting out there in the open water and trying something different.

Some of my age-group swimmers were hurting (lack of warm up and getting right into race speed didn’t help), but many of them said it was a great time and that we needed to do things like that more.  So if you guys are in a lull in training or you are trying to get back into shape and you are tired of the same old gym here, weight here, situp there, try something different! Swim open water and get energized again.  Socially it’s an outstanding way to meet new swimmers as well, get new ideas, and see different venues.

So far our team has been to Rock Springs a few times (highly recommend):

Lake Baldwin in Orlando, as well as Lucky’s Lake Swim (luckyslakeswim.com):

I am currently looking for some ocean stuff now!
Where in world have you guys been?  Please let us know in the comments!  I am sure readers would like to see!

Have you tried any of these?–> World’s 100 Top Open Water Swims!

Again, let me know your favorite places in this world to swim! I would love to hear it!  And I’d will see you next time in the open water!

I’m Finally Back… and this Weekend

Posted on March 23, 2011 by swimmerjoe

Hello, guys – I am back.  I had a computer screen crash and I kept thinking, “Oh, I’ll get it fixed.”  Well, I never did, and so I am on a “stand by” unit right now…

This weekend is the last weekend of this crazy-busy month. The Florida Swimming vs Florida Gold Coast Age Group Duel Meet is in Ft Pierce at Indian River State College.  This meet is always fun for the athletes and a great way to meet other swimmers in the state and create life-long friendships.  And, by the way, you can watch it LIVE on Florida Swim Network.  (Be sure to check it out!)

If you check back here, I will be listing the results on this site and maybe showing a couple videos from the Annual 11/12 Boys Bellyflop Competition we have after warmups.

So stay tuned and check back often for the All Star Weekend events.

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