Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
60 minutes of speed & power
Free Swimming Workouts, Sets, Ideas, and Dryland Exercises from Professional Coaches Around the World
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
Todd Kramer
Assistant Coach
Columbia Swim Club
Here is a set that we did at the Columbia Swim Club earlier this week. Our hours have been limited this week at our pool, so we had to swim our Senior 2, 3, and 4 groups together. Swimmers are 13-18, ranging from just below the Sectional level to OT qualifiers. This was done LCM. We just wanted to get a tough freestyle set in designed to push their limits, physically and mentally. ‘Empty the gas tank’ is just a phrase to remind them to not ‘save up’ for later in practice. We wanted them to push the fast parts of practice to their limits from the beginning of practice.
5×250 Free – add on fast 50 from back to front @ 3:20/3:30/3:40
5×250 Free – all fast @ 3:10/3:20/3:30
1×200 Free – Empty the gas tank @ 3:30
2×350 Free – #1 change gears each 50 #2 all fast @ 4:30/4:45/5:00
1×300 Free – Empty the gas tank
Clarke Nyman
Eagle Swim Team
Here’s a creative way to break up the monotony of 40×100 or 20×200 aerobic blocks.
**This set paces on 1:15 for 100’s. (1) is a spike to amp it up a bit. Dolphin kicks and walls are a top priority.
See Coach Nyman’s other posts here.
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
SW 5 X 150 2:10
– MIDDLE 100 FAST
SW 4 X 125 2:00
– 50 DPS / 75 FAST
DR 1 X 100
– NON FREE 2:00
SW 5 X 100 1:25
– FAST TURNS / CHOICE
SW 4 X 75 1:05
– 1ST 50 FAST / 25 DPS
DR 1 X 100
– NON FREE 2:00
SW 5 X 50 1:00
– NON FREE / BUILD
SW 4 X 25 :45
– NO BREATHER
Gordy Westerberg
Vipers of Albuquerque
One thing I did this year was 100s (only 3-5 at a time) on an easy interval where they do 25 all out horizontal egg beater kick on a board and then 75 DPK on like 2:30. Totally trashes their legs! Did this 2-3x per week at the end of practice. Brst had MAJOR drops this season. Really improved their IM as well. I’m going to have my entire team do it this season.
One boy went from 1:14 to 1:04.0
One boy went from 1:19 to 1:03.8
One boy went from 1:04.0 to 1:00.3
One girl went from 1:04.9 to 1:02.3!
Clarke Nyman
Eagle Swim Team
This is a great distance oriented set. Fastest p100 is 1:04. This can be edited to any Pace desired. Starts very make-able and turns into a real challenge, really fast. Great fun!! Will need a programmable clock or swimmers with great clock knowledge to run smoothly.
Max Effort 100’s
This was part of our main practice set I did this week for my 11/12’s. At first Glance they freaked but at the end practice they said “I liked this practice, challenging but good.”
100 Max Free (Training time +3) on 2:00
75 Kick (50 w/board 25 SKOB) on1:45 (Streamline Kick on Back)
25 Minimum breaths on 1:15
Repeat 8 times
For the breathing I Challenged them with 3 or less breaths on 1,4,6. 2 or less breaths on 3,5,7 and 1 or less breaths on 8
We set our training times every month based off our test set and meet results – normally 2 to 3 sec’s slower than best time.
My swimmers were hitting close to best times every 100 and really focused on doing less breathing then I had challenge them with
By Ryan Woodruff, Head Coach – Lynchburg YMCA, & Swimming Wizard Editor
I recently had my group try out SwimmersBest Power Bags. Essentially, Power Bags are a mesh sleeve with drawstring closures at each end. They can be employed in a multitude of ways to add drag to your swim training. SwimmersBest provided us with one pair of Power Bags to try.
We tried the Power Bag in two configurations:
1. With the top of the bag tied tightly around the ankles, letting the rest of it cover the feet and extend off of the toes.
2. With the top of the bag tied tightly around the upper calf (just below the knee) allowing the bag to cover the lower leg down to about the ankle.
They can also be used in a few different ways that we haven’t yet tried.
We did a set of 12 x 25 @ :50 in a SCM pool where I was asking them to underwater dolphin kick as fast as possible to 12.5m and then continue to kick on the surface the rest of the way.
Athlete comments:
“These are really good. They make it a lot harder to kick – I definitely have to use my core a lot more to kick”
“With the bags over my feet, it is like three times as hard. On the calves, it is like twice as hard.”
“Can I keep using these? I think they would really help me.”
Coaches’ Take:
I noticed that our swimmers were less likely to kick primarily from their knees and more likely to kick from the chest down. Naturally, with the resistance, their kick tempo was a bit slower, but they definitely were working the back side of the kick much more than normal, which is an underworked part of the kick for most swimmers, in my opinion.
With the importance of underwater kicking in the sport today, resisted kicking is a critical piece of the puzzle to building a swimmer’s underwater ability.
SwimmersBest doesn’t sell directly through their own website, but you can buy PowerBags on Amazon. They come in three different levels of resistance. The middle level (PB40) was perfect for my Sectional-level high school kids.
We loved them so much, I have ordered a bunch more for my team.
Other Swimming Wizard Reviews:
NC State Speed & Power Clinic
Jake Shellenberger’s Book: Power & Towers & Swimming: The Guide
Coach Gordy Westerberg
Vipes of Albuquerque
2x through:
300 (Open turn at the 150 to hear split) @ 4:30
2 x 150 (Open turn at the 75 to hear split) faster than 1/2 of 300 @ 2:20
4 x 75 Faster than 1/2 of 150s @1:15
6 x 50 Get after it! @ 1:00
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
Cheshire Y/Sea Dog Swim Club (CDOG-CT)
We did this kick set a month or two ago and the kids really liked it. They named it the “Wild and Wacky Kick Set”.
8x {5x Streamline Blastoffs @ :25
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
Mathieu Leroy
Chartres, France
Wednesday 26 april 2017
Elite Age-Group 13-15
15h30-18h30
LCM
A) 1 hour of dryland
focus on prophylaxic work (rotateurs cuff)
focus on abdominals and core work
B)