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Swimming Set of the Week - February 12, 2010

Posted by Barbara Hummel on Feb 12, 2010 10:31AM (3,416 views)

In honor of Valentine's Day on Sunday, this week's set is a cardio challenge.   It's not a lot of yardage, but it will test your heart in more ways than one.  

The set is 10 X 100 on a 3-minute sendoff, trying for the best possible average time.  

There are several ways to swim this set.  Some of them were discussed in a previous forum string on goswim.tv.    Typically, you would do the same stroke (or IM) all the way through the set.  You could start from the blocks or from the water; just be consistent.

Some cautions:
1.  Prior to starting the set, do an adequate warmup of at least 1000.  Start with some slow, easy swimming/drilling, progress to some repeats at threshold pace, and finish with some shorter repeats that push your heart rate just a bit.  Finish the workout with an adequate warmdown of 200 to 400.  
2.  These are not all-out, race-effort swims.   Race-effort swims done over and over again can be hard on your nervous system.   If you follow the REC, EN1, EN2, EN3, SP1, SP2, SP3 parameters, this set would be swum in the SP1 zone.   A reasonable goal would be to swim all 10 X 100 at your best racing time plus 10 to 15%.  E.g., if your best 100 freestyle is 1 minute, you might try to hold  1:06 to 1:09 on these swims (60 seconds X 110% = 66 seconds; 60 seconds X 115% = 69 seconds).  

Valentine's Day Weekend is also "Swim Quick" weekend.  This is an event created by Swim Across America (SAA), whose mission is to raise money and awareness for cancer research, prevention and treatment through swimming-related events.  Swim Quick weekend was created by SAA to honor 6-time Olympic coach Richard Quick, who died last year of brain cancer.  If you'd like to dedicate your weekend swim to coach Quick or to a loved one affected by cancer, you can find out more at Swim Across America.




Responses

Responded Feb 12, 2010 05:22PM

Hi Barbara...
Just one question.
In what ways will this set test the heart...or what is it that I should measure?
Thanks.

Responded Feb 12, 2010 05:40PM

That's two questions.
1. Read "heart" as a symbol for your overall fitness, your ability to go fast, your ability to recover from going fast, and your ability to hang in there through a set that demands physical and mental toughness.
2. Measure your best possible average time.

Responded Feb 14, 2010 12:51PM

About 2 months ago we did 15X100m, on a 1.45 min.sendoff, the last 2 were very difficult to hold on the same pace.

Responded Apr 07, 2010 05:58PM

@Eldad Boazy: I think that it depends on the swimmer and the kind of trainning he´s taking on.... beacuse, A regular set for me in my club is: 20 X 100m (SP2), on a 1:25 min sendoff... That is the regular, because when we are working hard we do: 40 X 100m (SP2), on a 1:30 sendoff or we do 20 x 200m, ten of them on 2:50min sendoff and the rest on 3:00 sendoff... so it depends...


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