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All Strokes - Balanced Push-Off

Posted by Glenn Mills on Aug 31, 2007 06:04AM (10,207 views)

Solid foundations are what the best structures are built on, and we usually start EVERY teaching session, or clinic, watching to see what foundation our students have. We've used this drill for so long that we can't believe we've never used it as a Drill of the Week. Sometimes we tend to overlook the MOST obvious.

Balanced Push-Off incorporates some of the most basic, yet important aspects of your swimming: a great streamline from fingertips to toes, a solid body (as solid as you can get depending on your age), and the ability to control your "inner" body to maintain a steady and face-down position.

Why Do It:
The ability to push off in a streamlined, tight, and level position and to hold it until your entire body comes to the surface will allow you to start EVERY lap at top speed, with little or no wasted movement. It also gives you a greater chance of initiating your swim farther out, and faster.

How To Do It:
1.
 At the wall, drop down under water and get yourself into a streamline BEFORE you leave the wall. Too many people push off at the surface... GET UNDER!

2. 
Remember to lock your hands and POINT your toes. Stay as TIGHT as possible through this entire drill.

3. Push off as straight as possible. Think STRAIGHT...not down.

4. As William Wallace says in Braveheart: HOLD.... HOLD... HOLD. Don't be impatient.

5. The goal is to have your entire body -- hands, head, torso, legs, and feet -- break the surface ALL at the same time. Try not to spear up, but to rise as a unit, parallel to the surface.

6. DO NOT break that streamline until your body has come to a complete stop. The biggest challenges will come at the end, and this is where you can learn the most.

How To Do It Really Well (the Fine Points):
Be aware of the little things you do with your hands and feet to help you out. Try not to use them as guidance mechanisms, but keep them tight. These tiny movements could scrub off even the smallest amount of speed, and any scrub is a bad scrub.

Don't go too deep. Unless your body is like a CORK, you'll NOT pop up in a good position, but rather spear up. While you may feel you've gotten FARTHER by going deeper, remember: We're talking about learning SPEED here, and it's VERY difficult to go faster by going farther.

Mark the spot that you made it to, and try again. Set personal records for yourself, and INCH your way past them as often as you can. Sometimes the most important lessons come from the simplest drills.




Responses

Responded Aug 31, 2007 07:53AM

Great drill and one we do all the time but the issue I have is how to tell the swimmers, particularly the younger ones, at what point they should start to kick.
Any ideas?

Responded Aug 31, 2007 08:14AM

For this drill, there isn't a kick, but you can set markers, or watch the lines going widths, and do a progression. Start kicking at line 4... then line 3, then 2, then 1. Time them all, and help them to help themselves figure out which is the most effective point to initiate that kick. Just a quick idea.

Responded Aug 31, 2007 12:59PM

Glen,
Thanks for that. Very simple and a case of not seeing the wood for the trees myself!
Geoff

Responded Sep 01, 2007 01:43AM

Great drill
thanks

Responded Sep 02, 2007 01:36PM

As an older ( 68) independent swimmer, I recently aquired ( with your help) a reasonable flip turn. Enough to get me a silver ( 50 free)and bronze(100 Free) in the National Sr. olympics this summer. Now I look at the recent drill and see the swimmer is not on their back ! Ok !!! what am I missing

Responded Sep 02, 2007 01:49PM

Hi AZ. Cool on your swimming!!! This drill isn't about the flip, it's about balance and streamline. While you can use these techniques on the flip, because you have to hold a straight bodyline for so long on this drill, you simply can't do it on your back... well... you can, but it's NOT easy. You'll have to blow air out of your nose constantly to keep it from going up, and you'll more than likely run out before it's time to come up. The bodyline is also MUCH tougher to maintain for this long without doing anything, while on your back. This is actually just a simple pushoff drill... with a LOT of focus. Hope that helps.

Responded Sep 02, 2007 07:03PM

Wow I don't know if i ever mentioned this on the board or saw it there, but I have been working on this a large amount lately especially with dolphin kicking trying to kick up and down and not have my hips or torso or arms move much at all just a very slight tight undulation from the abdomen, but very little whole body movement...

Anyhow I love focusing on this as well as blowing out air slowly to get rid of bad air and level my body out so it isn't so buoyant and see how long i can stay moving forward without having to fight up or down because of my buoyancy!

Responded Sep 03, 2007 05:21PM

Wow tryed it today really thinking about it. I did great on my stomach, but on my back was VERY hard. I guess because I kept squigglin I would end up lungs/head spear action... Maybe I went too deep though... I should get a friend to check it out. Maybe I'll try again tonight. I was my best time ever for 15m underwater on my stomach though! Great focus point!

Responded Sep 09, 2007 07:11PM

OK Now I understand what the drill is for. I tried it yesterday in my long swim and it was interesting. Since I also do sprint tri's ( normally in a pool)I am going to attempt to build this in ( to conserve energy for Bike/run) Tks for input

Responded Sep 11, 2007 09:50AM

I did that one yesterdy. I managed only 6m *shock* :O(

Responded Sep 11, 2007 10:16AM

POINT those toes!!! Lock up everything as much as you can. Did your body twist and turn at all?

Responded Sep 12, 2007 09:47AM

my body turns to the right and I pop out on the surface.

Responded Sep 13, 2007 10:07AM

My favorite drill!!! I can't believe how many swimmers call themselves agonists but cannot hold the streamline!!!

Let me try to add 2 "Fine points":

1)Try hard to be parallel to the surface of the water - I always see people going forward in full extension, but with the head "lower" than the feet.
A good idea is to check your position against the bottom of the pool or against horizontal lines on the walls, if any.

2)A second step can be "try to emerge from the water EXACTLY when you are stopping" - it's very hard to understand how deep you really are in the water!!!! Maybe a friend can help you telling if, when you emerged, you were still moving forward or not.

Bye all
Paolo Depa


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