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Butterfly - Single Arm, Extended Arm

Posted by Glenn Mills on Oct 12, 2007 08:00AM (26,304 views)

Here's a different take on a drill we did about 3 years ago. This shows there are many ways to do the same drill. While many people think you should breathe to the front on single-arm fly, that's not going to get you the whole story.


Add to Cart View Cart - Learn more great fly from Kaitlin Sandeno & Erik Vendt



Why do it:
Single-arm fly is a great way to build a technically solid butterfly, because you don't get so fatigued that your stroke falls apart. Most of us can swim butterfly for only a short distance before everything goes wrong, so single-arm fly gives many opportunities to improve.

How to Do It:

1. Push off and initiate your normal dolphin kicks.

2. Choose either arm and initiate a single arm stroke.

3. Keep the lead arm out front and extended. While you can also keep the non-working arm at your side, that can cause you to dive too deep. For this drill, it's important that you stay shallow in the front of the stroke, so keep the non-working arm out front.

4. While you stay stable and shallow out front, think about your HIPS. Allow your hips to rise above the surface, and then allow the feet to follow. In order to allow the hips to make a larger up and down move, it'll be easier to breathe to the side.

5. Use one arm for a few strokes, then switch to the other arm.

6. Finally, after a few strokes with the other arm, swim a few strokes of whole-stroke butterfly without breathing. Get your air on the single arm, and then try to extend forward and stay shallow on the full stroke.

How to Do It Really Well (the Fine Points):


Draw your feet forward. Don't allow them to DROP, or PLOP, or SLAM into the water. Feel them slide forward, following your hips, thighs, knees, and shins forward into the flow of the body. This drill not only teaches you how to stay shallow in front while using your hips and body movement, but also encourages you to LENGTHEN your bodyline. Enjoy.




Responses

Responded Oct 15, 2007 11:11PM

this is great for those who want their butterfly strokes and klck corrected... i guess...

Responded Jan 30, 2011 01:54PM

Thank you, Glenn! "Draw your feet forward" and "don't allow them to drop, pop or slam"
This is very, very helpful for my whole stroke fly. I will keep this knowledge in my head next time swimming!! (to morrow) And I am learning so much from this website!!

Responded Nov 09, 2011 09:33PM

I noticed something very interesting in this video - the swimmer has tattoos on her left arm. I don't know if it was by design, however they allow me to focus on the motion of her arm as she goes through the stages of the pull down. Yes, it is like the markings on the crash dummies. I wonder what other people think. Glenn, perhaps you should consider shooting a couple of drills this way. I will try this drill with the kids this evening. Thanks.

Responded Nov 09, 2011 09:44PM

And they are GoSwim tattoos at that. In fact, great swimming ONLY occurs with GoSwim tats. ;) Wasn't by design, these girls were filmed at a camp where we reward great things with tattoos. Obviously, she was very good. Great idea though. Thanks.

Responded Nov 09, 2011 10:29PM

Ha Ha, OK I will bite. Where can I purchase a bunch of those GoSwim tats?

Responded Nov 09, 2011 10:39PM

Oh man. I actually don't know. Lol. Where's Barbara when I need her? She's our tattoo supplier!


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