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Backstroke - Kick Extend Swim

Posted by Glenn Mills on Oct 11, 2011 07:31AM (14,906 views)

Helping swimmers overcome a crossover in backstroke is a pretty standard job of coaches.  Here's a quick progression that helps some swimmers.

Why Do It:
Starting the pull directly above the shoulder is much more productive than starting it across the head.

How to Do It:
1. 
 First, do some kicking with your hands at your sides, working on your balance and rotation.  Setting up the foundation of the stroke at the beginning of the progression means you won't need your hands to balance or leverage into this position.
2.  Make sure you're rotating the shoulders out of the water each time.
3.  Now do some kicking with each arm extended.  Be careful to keep the hand just outside the shoulder.  Try not to stack this too much... be aware of where the hand is.
4.  Swim backstroke, focusing on keeping the hands above the shoulders.

How to Do It Really Well (the Fine Points):
Feel wide.  If you're having trouble with crossing over, make sure the hands "feel" wider than you think they should be.  While kicking in the extended position, make sure you feel the hand is ready to catch... that will be close to your starting point when you swim.




Responses

Responded Oct 11, 2011 10:13PM

I like this drill Glenn - Good instructions also.

Responded Oct 14, 2011 04:09PM

Hey Glenn, like the drill but had a question on a previous drill from way back.

I have a kid who likes to do opposite of what we are looking for in his recovery, sweeping wide ("outside in") instead of straight over the shoulder ("inside out") we want (from a drill we use hand-clap double arm, Sinnott). He just cannot seem to get it, would you think marching solider could help with that? Do you have any other suggestions to get rid of that recovery path? Thanks in advance, Erik

Responded Oct 15, 2011 01:02PM

Interesting Wilken... what about something like Marching Soldier and then at the top, have him fall directly out to the side into the catch... keeping in him mind a lot of right angles... a right angle between the arm and the water at the top of the recovery, and then falling to a right angle between the body and arm upon entry. Totally radical in the approach as he'll feel like he's only taking 1/2 pull, but I doubt he'll fall straight over to the side.

It's all trial and error... just trying something radical and seeing what happens. I've done this plenty of times, just made something up... and more often than not, it doesn't work... but what the heck, what's it hurt to give it a try? :)

Responded Oct 15, 2011 11:19PM

Thanks, appreciate the idea and will give it a go (I will try it in the pool tomorrow and see what happens)! Next time though, drop the L.. Wiken.

Responded Oct 16, 2011 11:22AM

Whoops... typos happen. Sorry. :)

Responded Oct 17, 2011 12:16AM

Thank you! This is very timely, as I am really struggling with backstroke.

Responded Oct 27, 2011 11:56PM

Very informative!!


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