Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
First round fly set the bar high, but we were able to make most of the race pace after that.
Free Swimming Workouts, Sets, Ideas, and Dryland Exercises from Professional Coaches Around the World
John Ravestein
TYDE Coach – National Team
YMCA of Northwest North Carolina
Here is another 400 IM set that we are going to do tomorrow.
50 KICK FLY W/SNORK, drop snor/100 BUILD FLY
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
The primary purpose of this set was in the 4 x 100. We are challenging ourselves to get out agressively on #1 and then hang tough through that fatigue on #s 2-4. Most of our swimmers were able to achieve the stated objectives, but really had to work to make it happen. In my opinion, that means the bar was set at exactly the right height.
Edie Rogers
Charlottetown Bluephins
Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada
1. Distance with drills
4 x 500 free on 7:30 SCM
#1 All open turns with no breathing for first 2 cycles
#2 Every 4th length long arm dog paddle
#3 Easy down, fast back
#4 Flip mid-length and no breathing for first 2 cycles after the flip
2. Freeway set:
Start 3 swimmers in a lane at 2 second intervals. Swim continuously for approx 400 metres or any length you like. The third swimmer must pass the 2 ahead before getting to the wall. The lead 2 swimmers must slow their pace to let this happen, the last swimmer is then the leader for the next length, and so on……
Coach Richard Heselton
UK
I often think that the first swimming gala (meet) warm-up can be a daunting experience when the lanes get full. To prepare our junior swimmers I like to set the following swim down.
Cheshire Y/Sea Dog Swim Club (CDOG-CT)
After the first test we will adjust the starting time looking at how many swimmers “win” the set. Usually we will start the set :05 faster starting with the second test and keep it there for the rest of the season. We keep an all time top 5 list and kids really fight to get on that list.
We have posted a new workout, set, or idea here every day this year. Here is the most popular post from every month so far.
January: Middle Distance IM Set from Nittany Lion Coach Ryan Sprang
February: Boom Boom 75s
March: Aerobic Power and IM Transitions with Coach Mathieu Leroy
April: Sprint/Power Workout with Coach Josh Udermann
May: 200 Free Mania
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
A few books every swim coach should read…
Editor’s Note: The Swimming Wizard Blog needs your submissions to keep going! We get tons of feedback about how much coaches like coming here for ideas, and we need YOUR ideas to help keep this a vibrant resource and to continue publishing a set every day! Find out how you can contribute a set here.
Recently, I have been enjoying Chris Ritter’s Sports Performance podcast. He has been interviewing an impressive list of coaches, and a recent one he spoke with new Pittsburgh (former U Penn) assistant Coach Marc Christian, and in it Christian spoke about a kick set his mentor Jim Steen used to do at Kenyon.
Coach Christian used this set once every 8-10 days with his sprinters at Penn.
Animal Kicks
10 x 100 kick @ :10 rest, aiming for the fastest possible overall time. Record total times and seek gradual improvement every time the set is performed.
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
3x:
15 Pushups
1 x 50 fast fly + 1 x 100 easy free @ 3:00
2x:
15 Pushups
1 x 100 fast fly + 1 x 100 easy free @ 4:00
1x:
15 Pushups
1 x 150 fast fly + 1 x 100 easy free @ 5:00
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
I probably got this idea from somewhere, but it is pretty simple so maybe I came up with it myself…
Want to use video to help your swimmers improve their technique? Great — buy an iPad and start filming. But there is a better way…
If you coach teenagers, they probably all have a camera phone. Have them pair up. Give them a prompt on what to work on (i.e. examine freestyle breathing technique, looking for horizontal head position) and give them 10-15 minutes to film each other and give each other feedback. Peer Coaching!
The benefits are many:
1. Tons of feedback for EVERY swimmer in your group, something that would take an individual coach hours to do by himself.
2. A chance to use a rapid feedback loop in a way that isn’t easy to do in a normal workout. Do it…watch it… do it again, better… watch it… do it again better still.
3. The teaching swimmer learns as well. Teaching is one of the best ways to learn.
4. Team bonding! Swimmers enjoy working together and helping each other improve.
I promise you… give this a try and you will love it. If not, I will give you a full refund of your purchase price for this post.
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
Coming after the set we posted yesterday, this was a real burner.
Ryan Woodruff
Head Coach
Lynchburg YMCA
LCM. Wanted to get some good swimming of both of these strokes in today. Being within the best+30 goal on the 200s wasn’t a problem for most, and the conscientious ones were able to be within 20 for the most part. Rest intervals allowed for good flexibility on lane assignments and stroke choices. Swimmers had to stick with either stroke for a round before switching.
John Ravestein
TYDE Coach – National Team
YMCA of Northwest North Carolina
We did this yesterday, I liked it because it gave the kids some freedom of what they wanted to descend but the intervals were still hard enough that they couldn’t slack on the other part. I also played a game to see if I could pick which one they descended based on their effort. You can also have them pick it before they start to give them ownership of the set.
Saint Cloud Area Family YMCA Gators
3 x 100 @ 2:00 hold 500 Pace