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Freestyle - Wrist Drag

Posted by Glenn Mills on May 12, 2009 12:00PM (12,051 views)

The standard approach for learning (or teaching) freestyle is to use a high-elbow recovery.  We've already covered the most typical drill for learning a high-elbow recovery, fingertip drag, but sometimes that's still not enough.  Just as with most teaching, to really start the process, you may have to dig a little deeper... literally.  That's where wrist-drag comes in.

Why Do It:
Wrist-Drag Freestyle requires not only that your elbows are high during the recovery, but also that you have a clear feeling of how your hands spear through the water during the extension forward.  It's an easy drill that will allow you to remain in balance, while you slowly work on your recovery.

How to Do It:
1.
  There are really only two steps to the drill, swim freestyle...
2.  Push your entire hand through the water... up to the wrist.

How to Do It Really Well (the Fine Points):
While the drill is very simple to accomplish, the proof is in the details.  Keep your recovery close to your body to allow you to remain balanced during the recovery.  Keep your eyes and head stable.  This is a great drill to do without taking breaths, to allow you to really focus on pushing the hand through the water.  

You'll feel great resistance while pushing the hand forward, then great release as your body "snaps" to the other side during the extension.  Don't force this; just allow it to happen.  It's merely an added benefit, but not the focus (this time). 

Freestyle - Wrist Drag drill is a great precursor to Freestyle - Fingertip Drag drill, so it's sometimes a good idea to practice them together.




Responses

Responded May 12, 2009 07:30PM

Don't forget that the swimmer needs to rotate to allow this to happen without impinging the shoulder as it crunches up. The swimmer in the video does a great job but with younger swimmers they would need to be drilled on the rotation first in my opinion to avoid swimmer's shoulder

Responded May 12, 2009 08:21PM

Swimmer's shoulder...have it right now on my right shoulder....

Responded May 12, 2009 09:47PM

Remember, drills are to be done for short instances anyway... if a drill is overdone to the point where injury is a possibility, then skip it and start doing something else.

Responded May 12, 2009 11:25PM

Who is the girl in the video? I notice that she does not extend all the way at the finish of the pull. They have been teaching that lately in sprint freestyle

Responded May 13, 2009 06:52AM

Glenn, I am just starting out in free for Tri's. My question is what would you recommend for drill interval lengths in warm ups prior to doing the regular session? For example, if i have a WU of 500m with drills, what length and type of drills should i be doing. thx. I love your videos. They ROCK!

Responded May 14, 2009 11:36AM

Older(!) members might remember Howard Firby in the 70s packaging this up in his "Swimming history" series of drills, starting with dog-paddle and progressing through the two drags up to full stroke. The whole sequence was worked through as a single drill set.

Responded May 14, 2009 11:55AM

Hey Stephen. I like to mix up the strokes, or the recovery during warm up... here's a drill which explains it a bit:

http://www.goswim.tv/entries/5442/freestyl...

For a 500m, break it up by 25s, switching at the half-way mark, or by 50s, doing a length of drill, and then swimming one. Basically, there aren't any rules, just keep playing with what makes your arms feel good before you get ready to hammer.

Nice Mike... it's all about progressions, and guys like Firby showed the way.

Responded May 14, 2009 09:10PM

Thanks Glenn, I hope to be able to swim like that guy in the video one day. I have a loooong way to go. Need to work on high elbow recovery and "ice skate through the water" as Dave Scott puts it. You should come out here to Boulder sometime and do some videos at Flatirons Athletic club. Loads of talent there.

Responded May 17, 2009 01:06AM

Es muy bueno el video aca en mexico lo practicamos hace muy poco despues de una clinica que nos dieron hace un año.

Responded May 17, 2009 02:04AM

Juan is saying, "The video is very good. Here in Mexico we practiced doing it very little after a clinic we took a year ago."

(Um, I'm a little confused by the use of "hace" here. So this could be totally not what Juan is saying.)


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