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Set of the Week - February 22, 2008

Posted by Glenn Mills on Feb 22, 2008 06:24AM (2,647 views)

Standard Warm-up

Writing interesting and challenging practices isn't an easy task. And, as coaches, sometimes we get "writer's block." This is when you [b]know[/b] you have to put together something that gives your athletes the work they need, but won't put them to sleep.

The toughest part about any writing when you're stuck is simply getting started. This is one of the reasons we usually use a "standard warm-up." By doing the same thing every day, the getting started part is taken care of, and usually is just the spark needed to continue the process.

While this could potentially be seen as boring for the swimmers, I like to think about morning practices, or the simple routine of just getting in the water. It seems to me that no matter how long you've been swimming, or what level of swimmer you are, we pretty much all have the same problem with that initial entry into the water. Rather than spending time fighting with swimmers and trying to coerce them into the water, and allowing them the opportunity to waste MORE time by asking for the explanation of the warm-up, a standardized warm-up takes away any discussion other than get in. There's really nothing for the swimmers to think about other than getting to the task at hand, getting in, and getting moving.

With all that said, I use two standard warm-ups (guess that ruins that theory, huh?):
600 or 400.

The 600 is a simple 200 swim, 200 kick, 200 pull progression, allowing the swimmer to play a bit with some toys early on. I don't worry that the joints aren't warmed up enough for these toys. The swimmers are moving so slowly at this point that the simple act of having to stop, think, and either put on or grab a piece of equipment is part of the process of waking up their minds.

The 400 is a straight 400 free. Really not much to it but to do it. The idea is to just keep moving for 5 to 7 minutes. By the time they're done, it's time to start moving.

By standardizing the first thing you do in the water, especially in the morning, you remove the chance that your true creative energy will get wasted on something that the athletes aren't ready to take advantage of anyway. I liken this idea to a story I heard about Albert Einstein wearing the same style of clothes every day because he feared the mental energy he used choosing what to wear each day could potentially get in the way of thinking of something truly important... which is why I wear a Go Swim T-shirt every bday. I do have more than one by the way. ;)




Responses

Responded Feb 22, 2008 09:37PM

We have a "standard warmup" here at Nova Masters. 6-7 minutes and practice starts.

200 Free
100 Back
100 Breast

Cruiser Lanes start with:
200 Free
50 Back
50 Breast

Ahelee

Responded Feb 29, 2008 11:03AM

I can't believe that so many people bypass a good warm up. We switch between 2 that include drills, kicking as well as swimming

#1 IM Drill Based
8 x 75 @ 1:30 50 Drill/25 Swim-IM order
10 x 50 Kick @ 1:00
6 x 75 Free @ 1:10

#2 Free Dill Based
6 x 75 50 Drill/25 Swim FREE
10 x 50 Kick
8 x 75 @ 1:20 50/25 (50Fly/25back) (50back/25 Breast) and so on...

it takes about 30 minutes 1500 yards and the group is ready to go as well as getting good quality Drills and kicking

Responded Feb 29, 2008 12:06PM

I guess I should have further clarified... we ALWAYS do another set immediately after this quick standard entry. The first set is really the continuation of the warm-up and gets the blood moving. We don't just jump into hard swimming after the above. It's just that having the first thing they do standardized seems to make things so much easier.

Responded Mar 13, 2008 02:25PM

We use 2 different kinds of "standard" warmups.

The first one is used when the following set mainly has short distances uninterrupted swimming (e.g. a set of 100s). This warm-up is just swimming 400m continuously, but changing stroke latest after 2 laps.

The second one is used if the following set has longer uninterrupted swimming (with not too much focus on technique). It consists of some easy stroke-building progressions, like 25 kicking / 25 kicking in different body position / 25 easy/well-known stroke integration drill / 25 easy full stroke swimming, repeated 4x (400 in total).

Andreas


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