Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA

Free Swimming Workouts, Sets, Ideas, and Dryland Exercises from Professional Coaches Around the World
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
This one came in two parts.
Part 1:
Part 2:
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
Did some fast swimming on this one. In each set, we performed some 50s at 200 pace and then followed it up with some “all-out” 50s, unleashing our performance from the mental constraints of “race pace.”
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
SCM. We timed the first 15m from a dive with a target time from our pace cards. The next 70m was focused on good turns, breakouts, and underwaters. With 15m to go, swimmers paused and floated/sculled at the surface. When 1 swimmer in each lane was ready, a coach yelled “Go” and they commenced a sprint to the finish.
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Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
SCM pool. The goal was to really push ourselves to hold some aggressive times in practice. The main group did the top set while the distance crew did the bottom set.
If done in a SCY pool, I would probably change the goal on the 150 to “beat your best 200 time by :20”
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Mike Anzano, Assistant Head Coach, COM Swim Team
Great workout from our 11-14 year-olds!
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Brad Herndon, Greensboro Community YMCA
Warm-Up (600):
600 – 75 Swim/25 Skull
Pre-Set (1200):
8 x
1 x 75 flutter kick on back @ 1:15
1 x 50 Swim (IMO by rd) @ :45
1 x 25 Dk or BR Kick @ :30
PULL SET (800):
1 x 800 FR Pull with paddles, buoy, snorkel
Build ¾ c-up into sprint last 25 of each 100
Main Set (2100):
4 x (FINS)
8 x 25’s w/ Fins FAST @ :15 (Goal is to hold under 12 with great underwaters)
1 x 100 EZ @ 2:00
– Extra 1 x 100 without fins @ 2:00 (Prep for Sequel)
4 x (NO FINS)
6 x 25’s FAST @ :20 (Goal is to hold under 15 with good race habits)
1 x 50 EZ/Prep @ 1:00
Post Set (1500):
3x (SHORT FINS)
1 x 200 Fr w/ paddles @ 2:30
1 x 150 Skull or kick mix @ 2:30
1 x 100 Backstroke build turnover @ 1:30
1 x 50 All out anything @ 1:00
Kick-Drill-Sprint Set (700):
7 x 100’s @ 1:45
All are 1 x 50 burnout flutter with board, 25 focused drill, 25 all out sprint
Cool-Down (100):
100 EZ (minimum)
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
Little bit of speed, underwater kicking, and fly. Dirty 20 = 10m no breath free sprint, flip, and dolphin kick back to the wall. B3 = breathe every 3 strokes.
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Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
In this set, we used orange hockey pucks on the bottom of the pool to mark the 10m mark we wanted them to kick past.
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Mike Cook, Mason Makos
1 of our favorite ways to start practice is w/ a good quote. Here’s a bunch to try, conveniently divided by the occasion in which you might want to use them: https://swimmingwizard.com/e-books/
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
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Coach Mathieu Leroy, Bishop’s Stortford Swimming Club, UK
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
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Josh Sinclair
target was PB+1, and worked off about a 4min cycle.
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
Our sprint group enjoyed this one recently. P100 = at 100m race pace. The 350/300/250 was just steady good technique freestyle with the distance option decided by their relative distance capacity.
Mathieu Leroy, Bishop’s Stortford, UK
Age-Group 13-18 / 50-100-200 swimmers.
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Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
SCM
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
It’s free, it’s useful, and can help with your coaching today: https://swimmingwizard.com/e-books/
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
Recently at practice about half of our group was missing for a high school meet. We had a block of about 45 minutes that I wanted to get in some good speed work. How to get them excited for it and get some good results? Wacky relays.
We had 12 swimmers split into 4 teams of 3, which allowed us to swim at a roughly 1:2 work-rest ratio. We did 5 relays followed by some active recovery swimming.
Relay 1: 450m each person swims 6×25 free (keeping it simple to get us started)
Relay 2: 450m, each swims 6 x 25 no free
Relay 3: 450m, each swims 25 no free, 75 free, 25 no free, and 75 free
Relay 4: 450m, each swims 25 free, 75 no free, 25 free, 75 no free
By this time, each relay team had won a single race thanks to my expert dividing of teams. The final race would decide who had to do the longest warm down:
Relay 5: 300m each person swims 2 x 50m free dragging a partner holding on to their ankle.
Result: all teams disqualified for various forms of cheating.
The 4-way tie mandated an immediate 50 fly swim-off by a single swimmer from each team.
I got way more energy and effort out of them with this strategy than I would have with a traditional set!
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Coach Todd Kramer, Columbia Swim Club
Here is our main set from last Friday 11/23. We were six days out from our mid season rest meet. We wanted to do some quality swimming after hitting them with some high intensity/short rest sets the previous couple of days. We did the OTB (off the blocks) in three heats, so swimmers ended up having about a 1:3 work to rest ratio on those. The kick intervals gave them a bit more than a 1:1 work to rest ratio. The drill/swim was recovery with a strong focus on the little details. The goal of the set was to do some high quality fast swimming followed by working the legs with the idea of helping to develop good kicking late in their races. In hindsight I would have given the kids more specific time targets on the OTB (which was choice based on their best events). A couple of kids had to be given time targets to refocus, but once we got into the workout I think it went very well.
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
Most of the time on this blog, I publish single sets that we do within a larger workout. Today, I am publishing the entire workout how I have it written out for my group. You may need to zoom in a bit to see it well.
I usually start with a quote — sometimes we discuss it, sometimes we just get right in. Today we did our “Standard Warmup,” which we probably do for 80% of our practices. Our standard warmup is:
400 smooth swim choice @:20 rest
4 x 150 choice kick/drill/build by 50 @:20 rest
4 x 50 choice sprint any 20 of the 50 @:20 rest
Total: 1200m, ~18-20 min
For this workout, we combined 3 power stations with a set of 6 x 50 off the blocks. We did it three times through, meaning each swimmer did each station once and the 6x 50s set three times. It was a good day for us — team energy and spirits were high, performances were good, and we spent time during our subsequent dryland discussing the previous weekend’s meet.
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Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
This set led us to several swimmers posting lifetime best practice times at the end! The blue times with the arrows indicate extras rest time.
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Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
As we transition back to short course season, we used this set to dial in our cycle counts that we will use to achieve our goals this season.
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
Everything is from a start
Coach Brad Robbins
This one was just dynamite for us tonight (July 1)
Dive swims we’re focused on front end speed. Push swims were geared toward the middle/back end finishes. Lots of active recovery to give them just enough to get up and go again!