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Freestyle - Ball Catch

Posted by Glenn Mills on Jul 27, 2010 07:19AM (20,161 views)

Anything that gets swimmers focused on their catch is a good thing.  When it costs so little, it's even better.  Here is a standard drill used by Pinecrest Head Coach Jay Fitzgerald.

Why Do It:
Becoming aware of how even parts of your hand can be pinpointed when thinking of the catch can help many swimmers identify how to grab the water with more effectiveness.

How to Do It:
1.
  Pick up a pack of practice golf balls, or ping pong balls (very cheap), and have the swimmers grip them between their thumb and index finger.  Extend the other three fingers to use as the catching surface.
2.  Swim naturally, focusing your attention on catching the water with the outside edge of your hand.
3.  Try to focus on how the large outside base of your palm connects with the water.
4.  You can swim long or short swims with these, paying particular attention to how your hand connects, and making sure you don't drop the ball.
5.  When it's time, switch back to normal swimming, feeling how the hands now interact with the water.

How to Do It Really Well (the Fine Points):
Depending on how many swimmers you have, and how long your pool is, we love how drills can change to swimming just about any place in the pool.  Swim for a bit with the balls in your hand, and about halfway down, drop the balls out of your hands and swim naturally the rest of the length.  This quick switch can be very effective in continuing to focus your attention on the front of the stroke... and it barely costs any money per swimmer.




Responses

Responded Jul 27, 2010 03:50PM

VERY GOOD IDEA , ILL MAKE IT ONE OF MY DRILLNG WAYS , THANK YOU

Responded Jul 27, 2010 06:02PM

Why is her head so low in the water?

Otherwise, this drill looks good.

Responded Aug 02, 2010 05:56PM

شكرا

Responded Aug 25, 2010 02:35AM

It is a great drill, i also use snorkels so they can focus more...

Responded Sep 02, 2010 12:52AM

Like how her shoulders and hips rotate on a perfectly straight axis, and what a wonderful camera angle.

I'll give this drill a try for sure, thanks

Responded Sep 21, 2012 07:58PM

i also use hockey pucks (they are a bit large especially for young kids); these are a good alternative

Responded Sep 24, 2012 12:35PM

Pretty cool. I can't help but imagine hockey pucks are easier to come by in Canada than in NYC. It's great to imagine how where we live impacts the tools we use. Thanks for the post Clint.


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