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Set of the Week - January 19, 2007

Posted by Barbara Hummel on Jan 19, 2007 08:42AM (3,072 views)

 Our Set of the Week is a distance freestyle set. Go Swim!

Why Do It:
1. This set allows everyone on the team -- all lanes -- to go on the same sendoff. This is good for building team unity and awareness.
2. The set builds mental toughness as well as physical toughness.
3. The set builds in intensity and in what it asks of the swimmer.
4. The set builds confidence that you can hang in there and go the distance. It's a great prep set for the USMS One-Hour Swim, for distance freestyle events, and for triathlon training.
5. The set plays out a little differently for each ability level. For elite and advanced swimmers, it demands more speed even as distance increases and rest interval decreases. For intermediate-level swimmers (most triathletes will fall into this group), it demands that you hold an even pace, even as distance and fatigue increase. And for beginners, it is challenging but not crushing (especially if they wear fins, which is OK).
6. The set sneaks up on you. :)

Black & White:

Choose your level from the four choices below. The number on the left is the distance. The middle number is your sendoff. The number in parentheses is the pace you need to swim to JUST make the sendoff. (Credit goes to Glenn for the elite-level set, which we then modified for Masters and age-group swimmers.)

Elite Level: 2100
100 on 2:00 sendoff (2:00 pace)
200 on 3 (1:30)
300 on 4 (1:20)
400 on 5 (1:15)
500 on 6 (1:12)
600 on 7 (1:10)
700 on 8 (1:08.5)

Fast Level: 2150

50 on 2:00 sendoff (4:00 pace)
100 on 3 (3:00 pace)
200 on 4 (2:00 pace)
300 on 5 (1:40 pace)
400 on 6 (1:30 pace)
500 on 7 (1:23 pace)
600 on 8 (1:20 pace)

Intermediate Level: 1650
50 on 2:00 sendoff (4:00 pace)
100 on 3 (3:00 pace)
200 on 4 (2:00 pace)
250 on 5 (2:00 pace)
300 on 6 (2:00 pace)
350 on 7 (2:00 pace)
400 on 8 (2:00 pace)

Beginner Level: 1400
50 on 2:00 sendoff (4:00 pace)
100 on 3 (3:00 pace)
150 on 4 (2:40 pace)
200 on 5 (2:30 pace)
250 on 6 (2:25 pace)
300 on 7 (2:20 pace)
350 on 8 (2:17 pace)

Technicolor:
Swim as far up the ladder as you can go. Everything is your choice of stroke, so long as you can make the sendoff. When you can�t make the sendoff, stop and cheer on your lanemates. Make sure each lane starts at the same time. And don't lose count!

Bells & Whistles:
Try doing the set with a Tempo Trainer and/or a Center-Mount Snorkel.

How It Plays Out:

You will have so much rest on the first few swims that you won't know what to do. Age groupers will usually spend the extra time talking to each other. Masters will usually be a little more quiet, calculating how soon the hammer will drop and wondering how bad it will be.

One Masters swimmer summed it up when she finished: "That was so tough...and just what I needed. Thanks, coach."

Have fun!




Responses

Responded Jan 19, 2007 09:46AM

I did the Intermediate workout on wednesday, but wondered about the generous rest intervals. I hold about 1:40 or less for a 100, so I had a lot of rest. Is this about right? Or should i adjust the send off times accordingly?

Responded Jan 19, 2007 12:23PM

How do you keep track of all your swimmers while doing this? I really want to try it, but I'm afraid if I can't keep track it won't be as effective.

Responded Jan 19, 2007 01:08PM

Just to let you know, the elite level workout totals 2800 yards, not 2100. I'm sorry! I'm an editor by day, and I can't help myself! :-)

Responded Jan 19, 2007 01:33PM

Nice catch, Chlorini! Just don't tell them before they start the set.

I've given this practice to groups of 15 to 20 swimmers (no elites yet), including kids age 13 to 17. It's actually easier than you think to keep track of everyone because all groups are on the same sendoff. Just make sure that all groups start the set at exactly the same time.

I also remind them that it's critical to keep track of their lengths on each swim. If the lead swimmer miscounts, it really messes things up. Just in case they miscount, I use a sheet of paper or chalkboard and make hashmarks when the lead swimmer in each lane makes a turn at the 50.

This set will definitely keep you hopping, but everyone has seemed to like it. It's one of those sets where you feel like you've really accomplished something at the end.

Responded Jan 19, 2007 01:48PM

Hi, Trying2swim.

If you want to kick it up a notch for the Intermediate Level, you could try the following set. I didn't use this set for my intermediate swimmers because I wanted all the levels to be finishing their swims at the same end of the pool. In this intermediate set, some of the distances will end at the "odd" end of the pool. Have fun...this one's a lot tougher:)

50 on 2
100 on 3
200 on 4 (2:00 pace)
275 on 5 (1:50 pace)
350 on 6 (1:43 pace)
425 on 7 (1:40 pace)
500 on 8 (1:36 pace)


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