Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
SCM
IMO = IM order. 1st time is fly, 2nd time is Bk…etc.
Free Swimming Workouts, Sets, Ideas, and Dryland Exercises from Professional Coaches Around the World
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
SCM
IMO = IM order. 1st time is fly, 2nd time is Bk…etc.
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
Here is a underwater kicking and sprint combo that we did recently. The part in red was done with stretch cord resistance.
After the kicking pre-set, we did the 60 x 25 set adapted from this article about Gregg Troy’s favorite sprint sets. Turned out to be an awesome day!

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
Lately we haven’t had as much lane space as we are accustomed to, and one day last week we had nearly 40 high-school-aged swimmers in 4 lanes. We did the following kick stations that allowed us to put nearly 20 swimmers in one lane for the first station while spreading the other 20 out over the three remaining lanes. Turned out to be a pretty good kick set.

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
I like incorporating dryland exercises I to practice occasionally, and deep water means it is an opportunity for one of my favorites — press-outs. A press out is essentially a vertical push-up at the side of the pool. The swimmer starts in the water with his belly close to the wall and hands in the gutter. Pressing down on the gutter, he raises himself up until his upper body is entirely out of the water and then drops back in. It is a great exercise for developing strength for all strokes. Here is one of my favorite sets to incorporate press-outs:
16 x 100 free LCM
#1 – with 4 press-outs at the 50 @1:30
#2 – with 3 press-outs at the 50 @1:25
#3 – with 2 press-outs at the 50 @1:20
#4 – FAST swim (no press-outs) @2:00
You can vary the number of press-outs and the interval to create many different interesting combinations of speed and reps. Make sure your swimmers’ shoulders are ready for the stress and don’t do too much too quickly.
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
This SCY set allowed us to keep the group together on the same 5:00 interval. Each group/lane swam different distances (as indicated at the bottom of the dry-erase board) based on their ability.
We started each new round together. Swimmers were instructed to descend (swim faster) across the three swims even if/when the distance might stay the same.

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
FPA = Fastest Possible Average

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
SCM

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
We did this set as a fun twist on our tradition of doing a fly Set today. The secondary goal was to expand their knowledge of times (and encourage them to memorize theirs).

One swimmer picked a category and distance. I then asked them for the correct question (this is Jeopardy, remember) to go with my answer.
For instance, if a swimmer picked “Your best times (SCY)” for 200, I gave the answer “this is your best time in the SCY 200 IM. Swimmer would say “What is 2:01.26.” If he was within the range mentioned in the picture above, the group performed the 200 as 50 kick/100 drill/50 swim all fly. If he was incorrect, we did the 200 fly fast for time and a 100 ez free.
This picture below shows which swims we ended up doing fast (red X) and which we did as 1/4 kick, 1/2 drill, 1/4 swim. The swimmer who was the contestant selected the member of the group who went next.

There are of course tons of variations you could do on this theme. I printed up our best times, team records, and world records ahead of time, but I imagine this could also be fun to do with swimming trivia.
Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
SCM intervals for our kids. Interval for the 200s decreases 1-4, and the interval for the 100s increases.

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
JMI = Just Make It
Red parts are smooth
SCY

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
This was our speed set for the week. At over an hour in length, it was pretty intense. Our kids did well.

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
The 200 breast included 20 eggbeater kicks in a vertical streamlined position in the middle of each 50 (so we could use deep water. SCY.

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
We did this set aimed at helping our breaststrokers feel propulsion from their pull and their kick separately and then combine them into full stroke swimming. We modified the three 150s so that they did a 50 of each instead of 150 of each as written. The second part of the set emphasized leg quickness and strength with the descending 100 breaststroke.

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
The purpose of this set was to work on the 3rd 50 of our 200 events. The shorter interval on the 2nd 50 makes that 3rd one a bit tougher, so the goal was to keep #3 equal to number 1 and 2. Then bring #4 home even faster. The first three were done to a “foot touch” and the last one to a hand finish.

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
The goal was to all out on each 75, keeping the ones from a push within the margins listed in the box on the right. Swimmers could choose their stroke but had to do the same stroke for an entire round.

Ryan Woodruff
All 25s were timed to a hand finish.

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
This a two part SCY workout. The first set was a freestyle and has two options — long swims for the distance group, 75s for the middle distance kids. We did a 200 ez before the second part, which proved to be quite a challenge.
Part 1

Part 2

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
We did this set to allow us to swim more cycles consecutively than we usually get to do in our 25m pool. The 4 x 24 cycles are done with only the return to the wall as rest. We used stretch cordz held by a partner standing on the pool deck.

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
SCM

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
We use 5 lanes of our 6-lane pool during practice. We did the following circuit that used an underwater camera hooked up to a time-delayed DVR and TV. The camera was positioned to gets “head-on” look at the swimmer coming down the lane. We looked at the video immediately after each swimmer finished the 25 in lane 6. This allowed us to make some technical adjustments while still performing a challenging set. Swimmers left the wall :15 apart so that the camera could adequately film each one.

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
HVO from dive = fast swim at ~P100

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
“Race Pattern” means swim similar relative splits as you plan to swim in the race.

Ryan Woodruff, Lynchburg YMCA
This set can be done in a SCM or LCM pool. All 35, 65, and 95s are done from a start and times to the head crossing the line.
Athletes are instructed to go all out on the 35. The goal for the 65 equals 2 x 35m time. The goal for the 95 equals the 35m time + the 65m time.
4x
35m sprint, 100 ez @4:00
65m sprint, 100 ez @4:00
95m sprint, 100 ez @5:00
We did the set 4x through to allow our IMers to go 1x each stroke.