font size A A A

Backstroke - "Wave" Recovery

Posted by Glenn Mills on Jun 25, 2003 02:01PM (8,446 views)

Why Do It:

To develop a backstroke that takes advantage of the natural movement of the body to aid in the pull.

DESCRIBE THE IMAGEHow To Do It:

1. Start on your side, with one arm at your side and the other arm extended above your head. Stay long and straight from fingertips to toes as you flutter kick. Eyes should look directly at the ceiling.

2. When you feel balanced (horizontal and long), lift your trailing arm straight up toward the ceiling, and then put it back down. Keep the lead arm exactly where it started, extended and long.

How To Do It Really Well (the Fine Points):


The point of the drill is to stay balanced (horizontal and long) as you initiate the recovery. The key is to move the trailing hand, and NOT the leading hand.

If you watch young swimmers try to do backstroke, you'll notice that they instinctively want to move the LEAD hand first, they want to pull first, then recover. This drill can help to correct that instinctual, and ineffective, windmilling. It teaches you to WAIT, and not to pull until the trailing hand begins to recover.

Two huge benefits of this drill:

1. You'll learn how to stay balanced while you begin your recovery.

2. You'll drive your lead hand a little deeper in the water when it's time to initiate the pull.

Troubleshooting:

Unsure how high to raise your arm? Less is more. If you raise it too high (beyond 90 degrees), you'll start to fall into the next stroke and will feel a bit awkward.

Starting to sink when you hand is at the top? Don't stop at the top! Just raise the arm a bit, and put it back down. Don't stop the motion. Just up and down... that's it, like waving a handkerchief.

Starting to sink as soon as you raise your arm? Your balance may be off. Trying rolling a little more toward your back, and start by lifting your arm just a little bit and quickly putting it back down. Continue to increase how far your raise your hand, until you finally take a stroke and land in the starting position on the other side.




Responses

Responded Mar 13, 2010 01:47PM

Should the recovering hand get out of water thumb or pinkie first ? I'd like to know what is generally teached, what great swimmers do, what is the proportion between thumb/pinkie. Everyone agree with pinkie first entry. What about the pros and cons of pinkie/thumb exit ?

Responded Mar 15, 2010 02:20PM

Thumb. :)

Responded Mar 16, 2010 06:07PM

I've read somewhere that coach Blythe Lucero (coach of year 2008) teaches a pinkie first hand recovery. West coast specificity or is it just taught as a drill ?

Responded Mar 16, 2010 06:14PM

Read both then, and determine which works best for you.


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