font size A A A

Breaststroke - Pullout Fine Tuning

Posted by Barbara Hummel on Mar 21, 2008 09:05AM (14,869 views)

Breaststroke pullouts can be tough to work on because you do only one per length...and you are often running short on air when you do them.  Here's a way to practice your pulldown and recovery several times on every length...while getting all the air you need.


Why Do It:
You can have the best pulldown and dolphin kick in the world, but you can lose all your power and momentum IN AN INSTANT...if you LOOK UP on the breakout.   In this drill, the use of the FInis Swimmer's Snorkel takes away the temptation of lifting the head, and lets you isolate the pulldown and the recovery while focusing on a stable body position.

How to Do It:
1. Grab a pull buoy and your Finis Swimmer's Snorkel. 
2. Push off in streamline and let your body rise to the surface.  You want to be balanced front to back before you start your first pulldown.
3. Execute your normal pulldown, but skip the dolphin kick.  Remember, we're focusing on just the motion of the arms, not on the entire pullout.  
4. As you recover the hands, keep them close to your body, and stay COMPACT with your arms.
5. As the hands come under your chest and face, keep your eyes down and keep your head and shoulders stable and flat.  Don't hunch up with your shoulders.  And don't lift your head to look forward.
6. Return the hands to full extension, with thumbs touching.  Check your body position to make sure your hands are higher than your head and then...when your body is stable and aligned...start your next pulldown.
7. Do several 25s, focusing on staying compact and stable as you recover your hands and arms.  
8. Then take off your equipment and swim four 25s of breaststroke with your normal pulldown and breakout. Try to capture the same stable feeling as your hands pass under your face and into full extension for your first stroke.

How to Do It Really Well (the Fine Points):
This drill is all about staying stable and aligned as your hands pass under your body and back into streamline. Try to keep your head and torso right at the surface, with very little up-and-down-motion.

This drill will imprint the proper head and eye position for your breakout, so that your body can "remember" it when you go swim.




Responses

Responded Mar 22, 2008 07:40PM

Barbara...I am not a breaststroke swimmer, nonetheless from watching BR DVDs, it seems to me that the critical part of the pullout is the underwater recovery of the arm...do you know of any drill or drills for keeping them really narrow and near to the body?

Responded Mar 22, 2008 10:01PM

:) This one will work on that. Watching tiles also helps.

Responded Mar 23, 2008 04:51AM

I started doing this with my young guns a couple seasons ago. I also add in the dolphin kick in to help my swimmers find the right timing - being at the surface really highlights an early, late, or double kick.

Responded Oct 31, 2008 08:05PM

Glenn, in "How to do it #5" you mention NOT to hunch your shoulders during the recovery. Can you explain why you would not bring your shoulders up tight to your neck/ears? My thinking is that is makes you narrower in the water. I appreciate your thoughts.

Responded Oct 31, 2008 08:16PM

Glenn may have a different response, but I wanted to chime in. I should have made a distinction between shoulders and upper back. I think that bringing the shoulders up tight to your neck/ears is good if you can do that while staying narrow and without hunching the upper back. I see a lot of swimmers who hunch (or round) their back at this point and it actually sends them down rather than forward.


User_go Please login or signup to leave a comment.


Underwater Tag Cloud

1650 Aaron Peirsol active drag active recoveryswimming aerobic endurance age-group Amanda Beard anchoring android Android app ascending sendoffs backstroke balance beach reading bilateral breathing birthday swim blueseventy Body Shape bodyline brain training breakout breaststroke breath control breathing Brendan Hansen broken swims butterfly catch challenge set coaches coaching combat side stroke competition crossover turn Cullen Jones cycle rate Dave Denniston descend set distance per cycle distance training dive dolphin dolphin kick DragSox Drills dryland DVD efficiency eggbeater kick Endless Pools Eric Shanteau Eric Vendt etiquette EVF fatigue feel Finis finish fins fist drill flip turn flutter kick Fran Crippen freestyle gallop stroke goals hand entry hand exit head position heart rate hybrid IM inner strength iPhone app Jason Lezak Jeff Rouse Kaitlin Sandeno Kara Lynn Joyce Karlyn Pipes-Neilsen Kevin Clements kick kids learn-to-swim long axis strokes loping Margaret Hoelzer masters medball Michael Phelps middle distance Misty Hyman mobile video monofin neural Olympics one-hour swim open water Over training pace pace clock paddles paralympics parents passive drag propulsion pull pulling pulse rates pushoffs pyramid questiontaper race specific training racing recovery relay starts resisted swimming rhythm Robert Margalis Roland Schoeman Roque Santos rotation Sara McLarty science Scott Tucker sculling SEALs shoulders sighting snorkel speed work sprint Staciana Stitts Starts stations Steve Haufler straight arm recovery streamline stretch cord stretching stroke count stroke rate support swim across america swim camps swim fun swim technique swim training swim video swimming Swimming Golf swimming music Swimsense swimsuit taper teaching Tempo Trainer tether timing training Triathlon turn Turns underwater dolpin underwater pull Vasa water poloswimming water temp weights work to rest ratio

Who is GoSwim?

We are a group of swimmers who swim really fast, and like to help others learn how to reach their competitive potential in the area of professional swimming.

Want More GoSwim?

Subscribe to our RSS feed Subscribe to our RSS feed


 
built by devtwo