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Paul Talks Swim Gadgets On IM Talk

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3 Steps To Improve Your Breathing

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One of our favourite subjects on the Swim Smooth Blog (which we revisit every 6 months or so because it's so important and so often over-looked) is your exhalation technique into the water.

Many swimmers hold their breath as a natural reaction from having their face in the water. Others were told to deliberately hold onto their breath when they learnt to swim - and then exhale it at the last moment as they rotate to breathe. 

Holding your breath underwater might work OK for sprinters racing over 50 or 100m but for those swimming over longer distances it's a very bad idea because:

- It increases the buoyancy in your chest which lifts you up at the front and sinks your legs.

- It causes CO2 to build up in your system which makes you feel out of breath and anxious.

- Breathing out late inevitably reduces the time you have available to inhale.

Breath holding is incredibly common in swimming, in fact around 90% of swimmers who attend Swim Smooth clinics need to work on it!

With that in mind, here's a sequence of three simple exercises to try the next time you swim to improve your own exhalation and feel an immediate improvement:


Step 1. Practise Sink-Downs

A sink-down is a simple exercise which you normally perform at the deep end of your pool.

Start by treading water. Take a normal inhalation and then allow yourself to drop down underwater with your legs straight and arms held gently by your side. As you do so smoothly exhale through your mouth or nose (whatever works best for you):



You may find that you have trouble letting go of the air and need to consciously focus on relaxing and letting go. Don't force the air out but think about sighing into the water.

If you don't sink to the bottom of the pool this is a strong indication that you are holding on to your breath - there's probably a lot more air in there to get rid of than you think! Relax and just let it go...

Once you have sunk down, as soon as you feel low on air push up towards the surface again. Take 10 or 20 seconds to compose yourself and then repeat a few more times.

You can find out more about developing this key exercise in the Swim Smooth Coaching System here: app.swimsmooth.com/video/h5/sink-down-drill/


Step 2. The 3-5-7-3 Exercise

Once you've got the hang of sink-downs, swim normal freestyle exhaling bubbles constantly into the water. Run through this breathing pattern as you do so:

- Take your first breath after 3 strokes
- Then your second breath after 5 more strokes
- Then your third breath after 7 more strokes
- Then back to the beginning, take your fourth breath after 3 more strokes and keep rolling through the 3-5-7-3 pattern.

Swim 3-5-7-3 for around 100m at a time, all the time blowing smoothly out into the water. The idea of the exercise is to make you appreciate that you can continue exhaling for much longer than you think before running out of air - in fact afterwards breathing every 3 can feel too frequent!

If you find 3-5-7-3 stressful then try it using a pull-buoy between your legs or whilst wearing a pair of fins for support.

Try some more breathing exercises in the Swim Smooth Coaching System here: app.swimsmooth.com/video/xx/using-mantras/


Step 3. Contrast Exhaling With Holding

Now let's feel the difference your new improved exhalation technique is making.

Simply swim 6x 50m at steady pace with about 10 seconds rest between each 50m - deliberately hold your breath on swims 1, 3 and 5, and exhale smoothly on numbers 2, 4 and 6. How do they feel in comparison? You should feel much more relaxed whilst exhaling!


Swim Smooth!

Remembering A Triathlon Legend And Direct Influence On Swim Smooth

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SS Clinics and Camps:



United Kingdom

Richmond / Wimbledon Workshops

Salisbury 1to1 Analysis

Twickenham Video Analysis

Lancaster SS Squad

Lancaster Video Analysis

Northampton Swim Squad

Acton London Video Analysis

Birmingham Video Analysis Clinic

Cardiff Video Analysis Clinic

Pre-Blenheim Freestyle & OW Course 25th April

Northampton Video Analysis Clinic

Yorkshire Squads (Pool & OW)

Yorkshire Video Analysis

West Lothian Video Analysis

Richmond SS Squad

Video Analysis Workshop Reading April




Europe

Swim/Tri Camps Alicante

Prague Junior Swim Club

Dublin Video Analysis

Prague Video Analysis


Lanzarote Swim Camp March 2016




Asia & North America

NYC / SC Video Analysis

Hong Kong Video Analysis

Dubai December Video Analysis Workshops

SS Clinic Connecticut April 15

Hong Kong Squads & Video Analysis

3 Day Camp, Florida April 1-3
A personal post from our head Coach Paul Newsome this week:
A personal post from our head Coach Paul Newsome this week:

I was deeply saddened late last month to learn of the untimely passing of one of the biggest idols, heroes and influencers of my athletic and coaching life, the great Julian Jenkinson.

Julian was taken from us suddenly at the age of just 49 from a heart condition whilst out riding his bike - something he was very good at - on his home turf in the New Forest in the UK. Julian had held the British Ironman record at an incredible 8h15m for some 13 years and was still knocking out in excess of 1,000km per month on the bike at the time of his passing. He leaves behind his partner of some 17 years, Erica, whom he wed just 6 months ago. 

Besides a great athletic background, Julian was also renowned as a property tycoon down in the Southampton area, owning in excess of 200 student properties (see link: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/property/3358514/Master-of-home-economics.html). The story of how this all came about is shrouded in folklore but as I recall it directly from Julian, he was unfortunate enough to have been knocked off his bicycle in the 90s whilst out on a training ride in the USA. The driver wanted to settle for his damages out of court and with this compensation Julian was faced with the prospect of either buying some fancy new carbon fibre race wheels, or listen to the advice of his friend and invest in the relatively affordable Southampton property market, something he did with aplomb - and then some!

I first met Julian when I was studying Sport & Exercise Science at Bath University (1997 to 2001) where I was also fortunate enough to be on the World Class triathlon program. Those were simply electric days at Bath University for a young influential sponge like myself - the entire British triathlon team was based there at that time. It was like a who’s-who of triathlon and as a young whipper-snapper I’d feel like I was perpetually in a state of awe at the fortune I had to be learning my craft from the very best.

Five times world triathlon champion Simon Lessing and Olympic hopeful was of course the biggest name to train there in Bath during that period, but it was long-course athlete Julian Jenkinson who - along with the fantastic coaching team of Chris Jones, Richard Hobson and Robin Brew - really inspired me to be the best that I could be as an athlete. Little did I know at the time just how much Julian’s support, encouragement and influence would go on to have in my more recent coaching career. In fact, for those of you who know me well and experienced first hand my fastidiousness for proper pacing and the benefits this can have, you really have Julian to thank for that. In many ways, his influence and encouragement inspired everything that is at the essence of Swim Smooth.

Julian had this unique ability to really drill-down to the core of what people needed to know and do to be the very best that they can be. In reading many of the remembrances penned by his fellow athletes, friends and colleagues - it is evident in their words that Julian held a similar role-modelling position in all their hearts and minds too. He will be deeply and widely missed.





I want this week to dedicate and share a brand new 5km Red Mist endurance session in Julian’s name - something, I hope, he’d have really enjoyed himself. My squad here in Perth had the fortune to try it first themselves and by all accounts it was very well received. I hope you will join us in having a go with this session yourself, see below.

Of all the snippets of information and advice that Julian passed on to me in Bath, it is without doubt his emphasis on pace awareness and the mental control that this takes when everyone else is racing off ahead of you, that stands out the clearest. In fact “becoming a diesel engine” is a term of expression I coined from Jules, who was quite literally the greatest diesel engine I’ve ever met. 

Every Tuesday evening we’d have a 10 to 12km tempo run at the University of Bath around the campus, winding in and out of the 1960s concrete jungle hovering up there on the hill well above the beautiful Roman City below. As a massively excited teenager and wannabe triathlete superstar (we all were!), it was all too tempting to go off like the clappers each Tuesday night to try and stay with the Big Guns. Of course this was great for the first 5km or so, but then I’d blow my doors off and end up being caught, and passed, by the back markers time and again. In my head I believed that one day I’d just be able to hang on to this break-neck pace, but it wasn’t until Jules took me aside and literally forced me to run side-by-side with him all night that I finally started to understand the value of pacing. I had a great run that night - possibly my best ever - and the memory of it today is as visceral as if it were yesterday, not nearly 20 years ago! 

To this day - as this sad event has caused me much reflection - I can now clearly see that all of my best ever races have been done with good pacing. I never did manage to hang with the Big Guns when the Big Guns were clearly too fast from the outset, but in my heart of hearts I’d like to believe it was Julian’s pearls of wisdom that spoke sense to me on the 8th June 2013 when I actively forced myself to slow down and recognise that my early pace was just too great to survive 28.5 miles (46km) in the frigid, dirty waters around Manhattan Island in New York. I waved goodbye to the early leaders thinking I’d never see them again and resigned myself to - at best - a top-10 finish, but low and behold that little seed that Julian had so firmly implanted in my head some 15 years earlier started to sprout and came roaring to the fore as I crept back up on those leaders and took the lead myself with only 15km completed, and some 5 hours of racing to go. The empowerment and sense of satisfaction this created filled me with massive confidence that day and through the mental control that Julian had shown me how to play out like a poker game, I went on to win my biggest ever victory. It was the perfect race. The perfect result. Brought about by good preparation and an exceedingly well executed pacing strategy that I’d learnt all those years ago from a man who stands quite simply at the top of list of those that have inspired me over the years.

Someone recently tried to complement me with some feedback that what they love about Swim Smooth is how it seems to have grown totally organically given the perception that in the last 12 years we’ve been instrumental in changing the world view on many aspects of efficient freestyle swimming. A “game-changer” she called us. I couldn’t accept her complement though (as nice as it was) as we’re all products of the advice and influences we’ve been fortunate enough to have experienced over the years. So, if you’ve found that our advice on training strategies and particularly pace awareness have really helped you, that’s great, but it’s Julian you should be thanking. I thank you for reading this post this week as it means a lot to me for Jules to be recognised in this manner.

Here’s the set on the squad board:




Swim the:
Lane 1 column if your CSS pace is around 1:48 /100m
Lane 2 column if your CSS pace is around 1:34 /100m
Lane 3 column if your CSS pace is around 1:27 /100m
Lane 4 column if your CSS pace is around 1:20 /100m

Bear in mind that the squad swimming this session are our strongest fastest group and if your CSS pace is slower than 1:50/100m you might want to tone down the session slightly.

After a warm-up of 500m including drills, the main set commences and is itself broken down into six parts:

Parts 1, 3 and 5 are multiple intervals of increasing distance (from 200m to 400m) and involve you setting your Tempo Trainer Pro to a progressively tighter RM Cycle (see here for RM Cycle calculations). All you have to do here is beat the beeper to form your rest, but you need to show control here as burning all your matches in one go will result in a massive blow-up later in the set.

Parts 2, 4 and 6 are longer intervals (400m, 600m and 800m) on a very specific target pace based on your current CSS pace. Set the beeper to notify you of your pacing every 25m in the 400m, every 50m in the 600m and every 100m in the 800m. Reducing the frequency of this pacing reminder in this way really requires you to be in control of your pacing otherwise it will be “goodnight Vienna” very rapidly. This is also progressive in that you’re expected to hold a faster time for the final 800m than you swam for the 400m at the start. Not easy! As you can see, all nine of our sub-groups hit their target times on the 400m, one group missed their target on the 600m and only 5 out of 8 sub-groups hit their targets for the 800m - was this because they were overly excitable in Parts 1, 3 and 5? You’ll find out yourself by giving it a try!

In memory of a great athlete, a huge influence on myself and Swim Smooth generally, and most importantly, a great friend. Rest In Peace Julian Jenkinson, you’ll never be forgotten.

Paul Newsome

2016 HUUB Wetsuits Are Go & Open Water Training In The UK

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The open water season is about to start in the northern hemisphere and our Certified Swim Smooth Coaches are busy readying their venues for the lighter evenings and warmer weather ahead.

If you're intending to enter any events involving open water it's essential to practise your open water skills to develop your confidence and competence swimming in the great outdoors. So, find your local session from the list below and get some great Swim Smooth coaching whilst having a lot of fun at the same time!






The 2016 HUUBs Are Here!

Fresh from the HUUB factory, the 2016 HUUB wetsuits have just touched down this week and are now on sale in our Swim Smooth shop:


Super fast: Helen Jenkins and Richard Varga model
the new Atana and Aerious 2

Every HUUB wetsuit has design input from Swim Smooth to ensure it is matched to your individual stroke characteristics. This means you instantly swim faster and feel more comfortable in the right HUUB for you.

Also featuring fluid dynamic expertise from Prof Huub and design innovation by Dean Jackson - the brand new 2016 Atana and Aerious 2 wetsuits are faster than ever!

A few of the models have limited stock so don't delay and secure yours today.

Can't quite stretch to the price on a new suit? You can also hire a HUUB from us: full details here

Swim Smooth!





2016 SWIM SMOOTH OPEN WATER LOCATIONS


SS Coach Annie Oberlin-Harris, Heron Lake, Staines and Berinsfield, Oxfordshire, UK
Beginner and open water skills: http://www.triswimcoaching.com/#!openwatersessions/cgmr
One to one coaching also available: http://www.triswimcoaching.com/#!openwatersessions/cgmr

SS Coach Morgan Williams, Blue Lagoon, Doncaster, UK 
Open water squad: http://www.coachmorg.com/?q=openwatersquad
Workshops throughout the summer for all levels: https://clients.mindbodyonline.com/classic/home?studioid=290701

SS Coach Fiona Ford, Heron Lake, Staines, UK
Open water squads and one to one sessions: http://www.swimheron.co.uk/coaching-2/
http://www.triathloneurope.com/

SS Coach Emma Brunning, Lake Windermere, UK
Beginner sessions: http://www.activeblu.co.uk/intro-to-open-water-swimming/
Open water squad: http://www.activeblu.co.uk/open-water-development-squad/

SS Coach Steve Bailey, Ellingham, Hampshire , UK
Coached sessions: http://www.stevebaileycoaching.com/ellingham-open-water-swimming

Cramp When You Swim? Some Tips To Shake It

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Getting cramp when you swim is not only unpleasant but can be a serious disruption to your training. Worse still, in races it can completely ruin your performance. So what can you do to avoid this annoying problem?

Cramp isn't completely understood in the medical and sports science worlds but there’s definitely some risk factors unique to swimming:

- Swimming in a pool or open water the lower leg gets cooled by the water - this happens even in a wetsuit.

- Swimming with good technique with your toes pointed holds the calf muscles in a shortened state.

- Swimming a length with the lower leg doing relatively little and then suddenly flexing and pushing off hard from the end of the pool places a great deal of stress on the calf and foot muscles.


These three factors combine to mean that swimmers tend to suffer from cramp more than in other sports, particularly in the lower leg. If you do suffer from cramp when you swim here’s some tips to try and improve the situation:

- Make sure you’re not dehydrated before swimming - a leading cause of cramp.

- Drinking coffee before swimming seems to be a factor for many swimmers (over and above the dehydrating effects) - try cutting it out.

- Introduce a regular stretching routine on the foot and calves; gently perform these stretches before swimming. Our recommended routine is the Swim Smooth Coach System here.

- If you have quite large calf muscles then the tightness of a wetsuit over them can squeeze the muscles and cause cramp. This is one reason why we designed calf-releases into HUUB wetsuits to reduce the pressure on the calf:



- In races, warm-up properly beforehand if at all possible. Going from cold to full-pace swimming without a warm-up places a lot of stress on the body.

- You could try drinking a source of quinine (e.g. tonic water) before swimming as this has been shown to be effective in reducing cramp for some people. (Sorry, you'll have to pass on the gin with tonic water!)

- If it’s a major problem for your swimming you could try some regular sports massage on the effected muscles in the build up to a key race - helping to remove any knots and flush out waste products.

- Too little potassium, calcium or magnesium in your diet can contribute to cramping. A balanced diet containing these minerals is recommended but you could also experiment with taking a salt tablet a couple of hours before swimming to see if it helps.

- Swimming with fins can cause cramp in the foot and calves. Make sure you are using a long flexible fin or avoid longer fin based drill sets.


Unfortunately there's no silver-bullet to curing cramp but hopefully the tips above will help alleviate the symptoms.

Let us know your own experiences by posting on the blog comments here!

Swim Smooth!

An Introduction To CSS TWEAKING - The Future Of Distance Swim Training

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CSS training is a great way to improve your swim fitness for any race distance over 400m. It focuses on your fitness around your lactate threshold - developing your ability to sustain a strong pace over a long period of time. In Swim Smooth parlance, we call this "Becoming A Diesel Engine".

Up until now to work out the speed you should be swimming during a CSS session you need to perform the CSS Test - a training session where you swim a 400m time-trial followed by a 200m time-trial. You put the two times you achieve in the CSS calculator on the Swim Smooth website here or use the more advanced analysis in the Swim Smooth Coaching System here.

These calculators spit out your CSS pace per 100m, which you then program into a Finis Tempo Trainer Pro to accurately target during your training sessions.

CSS training works brilliantly but there's a few common problems with the CSS test itself:

- We recommend you retest every 4 to 6 weeks, however you can make some quite large improvements week by week, meaning your fitness might have moved on without you taking account of it.

- The calculation to find your CSS pace is very sensitive. If you pace your 400 or 200 wrongly and end up with a slower time than you are actually capable of, then the calculated CSS pace can be wrong (either too fast or too slow).

- The CSS test itself takes up a valuable training session and since it's only 600m of fast swimming, it has little benefit as a training session in its own right.

That's not ideal but don't worry, there is a solution coming - it's called "CSS Tweaking" and it's the future of training for distance swimming!

CSS Tweaking

Tweaking is a clever Swim Smooth algorithm that adjusts your CSS pace as the weeks and months go by without you having to perform the CSS Test. It's simplicity itself and it's included in version 2 of the Swim Smooth Coaching System which we're launching next week (more on that below).

Say your current CSS pace is 1:50/100m and you swim a great session, hitting the target times nicely or even getting slightly ahead of your beeper. In the system just tap the "Bold" button, or if you were really feeling great then use the "Heroic" button! The app will automatically "tweak" your CSS pace by just the right amount for your next session:


(click image to expand)

Conversely, if you were finding things hard, hit the "Off-Day" or "Bad Patch" buttons - tweaking things to be slightly slower for the next swim.

With a little bit of Swim Smooth magic the tweaking algorithm adjusts your pace week by week and session by session to make sure you are always swimming the right speed for your fitness at that exact point in time - genius!

Not Just Tracking But Actively Leading

What's more, because the tweaking process anticipates the small fitness gain you get from a good session, you are actively leading your fitness forwards. These fitness improvements are very small session by session but incrementally they add up over many weeks of training to some very significant improvements.

Get your training right using the tweaking process and over 8 weeks we often see between 4 and 10 seconds per 100m improvement in CSS pace! And of course the new system tracks this for you over time so you can see your progress:



The beauty of CSS training is that it gives you maximum fitness gains for minimum fatigue. Plus because you swim fast but the pace is controlled, it allows you to maintain your stroke technique during the session. And now by 'tweaking' you can achieve all this without the potentially confusing results or the interruption to your training of the CSS test.

The training effect of CSS tweaking combined with using a Tempo Trainer Pro is way beyond what you can achieve using any other training method or swimming gadget. Even swim watches, which are great for counting lengths and timing swims, only give you feedback. They don't pro-actively lead you forwards.


The Guru Is Coming

If you're excited by this new tweaking process (and we hope you are!) this is just one of many features we've added into Version 2 of the Swim Smooth Coaching System which we're launching on May 4th next week:


You might have seen a few snippets on social media about this cuddly character - he's the new face of Version 2 offering you tips and advice from within the system. In fact we're renaming the whole system "The Swim Smooth Guru" :
Guru says: Don't fear training - fast it will make you!

We can't wait to tell you about all the other new features of V2 on next week's blog!

Swim Smooth!

Houston We Have Lift Off: The Swim Smooth Guru Is Live!

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The whole Swim Smooth team is today very proud to announce version 2 of the Swim Smooth Coaching System: The Swim Smooth Guru!

The Guru is our Virtual Coach, offering you all of Swim Smooth's coaching direct to your computer, tablet or phone and now subscriptions start at just £1.99 / US$2.99 / AU$3.99 a month! :



For more information and to sign-up, visit: www.swimsmooth.guru

Whether you're learning to swim, improving your stroke technique, training for triathlon or competing for medals, the Guru will take your swimming to the next level. Containing all of Swim Smooth's coaching knowledge in one easy to use system, the Guru is accessible to you anywhere, any time and on any internet connected device.

The Guru is not just a catchy name! As your virtual
coach he guides you through the system
improving your stroke technique, training and
open-water skills, step by step.
Check out our videos and content immediately
before you hop in for a swim. And log details
of your session immediately after you've finished.

A Big Upgrade Packed With New Features

For version 2 of the SS Coaching System, we decided to rename the system "The Guru" to reflect its intelligent nature and give the system a little bit more identity. Version 2 is a significant upgrade in nearly every department, offering everything from version 1 plus a whole host of new features:

A complete over-haul of the interface to make the system easier to use, particularly on smart phones.
The introduction of much more intelligence into the system - for instance the sophisticated 'Goal Setter'. Tell the guru about your key race or goal and he will lay out a swim-by-swim plan to take you from now until the big day.
The introduction of two price points. The standard version costs just £1.99 / US$2.99 / AU$3.99 a month offering you all of our essential coaching content including all of our drills, elite swimmers, stroke fault fixers and our inspiring Learn To Swim Program.
The extensive PRO version for £9.99 / US$15.99 / AU$19.99 includes all of our training plans, The Virtual Squad, Swim Type system, goal setting engine, Catch Masterclass and training analysis tools!
A brand new version of the Swim Smooth Learn To Swim Program. Can't swim a lap? Not for much longer! Let the Guru inspire you and show you how to become the swimmer you always wanted to be.
Extensive new training logging and analysis features, letting you see your swim fitness developing and how to keep it moving things forwards. And if you're a Training Peaks user, we calculate an accurate sTSS score for every swim workout for you.
As mentioned last week on the blog, we've included the introduction of CSS tweaking, a brilliant way of tracking and developing your swim fitness over time. Always swim at the perfect speed for maximum improvement!
Extensive new training plans for pool only swimming and open water events of less than 5K, 5K and 10K distances. Oh, we've added some special short "lunch-time" sessions too!
The inclusion of the Swim Smooth Blog so you can read posts and follow links to Guru content without leaving the system.

Get stuck in ahead of your mates and rivals today at:


Swim Smooth!

You (Yes You!) Can Now Join Our Perth Squads

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Guru says: After training, notice the
benefit in 7-10 days you shall.
Last week was a big week at Swim Smooth with the launch of our new virtual swim coach - The Swim Smooth Guru - thanks to everyone who subscribed and thanks for all the positive feedback, posts, tweets and comments!

The Guru has been a huge success so far, in fact since the launch a week ago, users have logged 870 sessions swimming over 2170km in the process. Loving your work guys!

There's a new feature in the Guru which we didn't make too much noise over last week but could be fantastic for your own swimming. We call it the Virtual Squad and it means that you can now swim the exact same sessions swum by the Swim Smooth squads in Perth, Western Australia just a few hours earlier!

Here's Paul Newsome's Virtual Squad introduction:



Twice a week Paul will be posting "live" squad sessions from Claremont Pool into the Guru along with video shot during the session itself, including Paul's key coaching points for the session and feedback / tips from the swimmers themselves. Tackle the sessions yourself and share how you got on with other users in the comments section - it's a lot of fun!

The sessions include general technique sessions to work on all aspects of your stroke, CSS sessions suitable for any level of swimmer to improve your swim fitness and a challenging Red Mist session for those experienced swimmers to get their teeth into:


The Virtual Squad is available in the PRO version of the Guru (which you can trial for a month with a Standard subscription for just £1.99 / US$2.99 / AU$3.99 per month). Make your next session a Perth Squad Session! Signup here:


Current users visit the squad directly here:



Full Training Plans Too

Of course the Virtual Squad is only one training option within the Guru, the other being to follow one of the 16 detailed training plans each aimed at a particular level of swimmer and race distance from super-sprint triathlon right up to swimming the English Channel(!) :


There's also training plans for building up to swim your first mile, pure pool swimming and even a selection of short lunch time sessions for you.

Plus don't forget the inspirational Learn To Swim Program - available in the standard version of the Guru:



Swim Smooth!

What Should You Focus On In Your Stroke Technique During A Race?

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If you live in the northern hemisphere then you'll know the triathlon and open water race season is getting into full swing, and if you haven't swum in your first race it's likely you will do soon.

A common question we get asked at Swim Smooth is what should you think about during a race in terms of your stroke technique? Should you think about being long and smooth or turning your arms over as quickly as possible, or what?

Race Focus

First up, whatever you focus on it needs to be very simple. Swimming is a very technical sport and there's lots of elements to the freestyle stroke but in a race where you are sustaining a strong effort you don't have much spare capacity to think about anything complicated. Plus there's probably technical aspects of the race to be keeping an eye on such as any current, swimming straight and finding a good swimmer or two to draft off.

Because of this you're largely going to swimming on autopilot (hopefully with good technique from good preparation in training) whilst keeping an eye on perhaps one or two simple things in your stroke.

Here's 4 ideas on what you might focus on. For the right swimmer each can be brilliantly effective and make the difference between a great performance or a poor race. Experiment with these in training - ideally within a tough training set such as a CSS or Red Mist session - to see which keeps you smooth and swimming well:


1.Exhaling Smoothly Into The Water

Super simple this one and so easy to overlook but can make the difference between having an enjoyable swim or a full-blow panic attack. Most swimmers feel anxious in open water to a greater or lesser extent and the first thing you do when anxious is hold your breath underwater - which raises the CO2 in your blood stream and makes you feel even more anxious!

Simply blowing bubbles smoothly into the water breaks this vicious circle and instantly calms you down. Recommended for any swimmer but particularly anyone nervous swimming outdoors.


2. Legs Straight, Feet Turned In And Big Toes Tapping With A Light Flutter

Another very simple tip but incredibly effective for anyone who tends to kick from the knee or scissor kicks in their stroke. Converts the drag created by a poor kick into a little propulsion to lift the legs higher and push your forwards. Recommended for any swimmer with a tendency to kick from the knee - you should instantly feel smoother and more relaxed in your stroke.


3. 1-2-Straight Mantra

The majority of swimmers have some level of crossover in front of the head where the lead arm crosses the centre line. Not only can this harm your propulsion and create a scissor kick but in open water it can cause you to veer off course, losing you even more time!

You are much more likely to cross the centre line with the lead hand when breathing.

A great mantra to address this is to repeat to yourself 1-2-Straight-1-2-Straight where the 1 and 2 are normal strokes and Straight is your breathing stroke - the word straight keeping your focus on the lead arm extended straight in front of the head and not crossing the centre line

Of course this mantra will also have you breathing bilaterally which will help you swim straighter still. Recommended for anyone with a crossover or who regularly swims off course.


4. Pressing The Water Backwards With A Good Rhythm

This one focuses on the propulsion in your stroke in the right way. If you think about pressing the water back hard then the tendency is to press down on the water during your catch or wrench the water causing your arm to slip backwards with little traction.

A much better focus is to think about where you should be pressing the water (backwards to send you forwards) but instead of focusing on effort, think about doing so with a nice smooth rhythm. This creates the right amount of force in the right place to send you efficiently forwards.

Recommended for intermediate and advanced swimmers.


So there's a choice of four very effective things to focus on in your next race. Don't attempt to think about them all, pick the one that worked best for you, keep focused on that and you will have a fantastic race.

Swim Smooth!





 Swim Smooth Guru content relevant to this post:



** You can subscribe to the Swim Smooth Guru from just £1.99 / US$2.99 / AU$3.99 per month. ** 
If you enjoy the Swim Smooth website and blog you'll love the Guru - it contains all of Swim Smooth's coaching in one easy to use app!

Get started at: www.swimsmooth.guru

Technique vs. Training - An Olympic Swimmer's Perspective

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This week on the Swim Smooth Blog we have a special post from Olympian Anna-Karin Lundin, giving us her experience and insight on striking the right balance between technique work and fitness training with her own swimming and those she coaches.

As you'd expect, Anna-Karin is a brilliant swimmer herself (you can see some footage of her in action below) and is very much a "Smooth" swimmer with a very long silky-smooth stroke... But what happens when she tries out swimming like a Swinger just for kicks? The results are quite surprising...

Anna-Karin is currently training to be our first Swim Smooth Coach in Sweden - a big thanks for your insight A-K!





My stroke has always been in my favour, my strength. Up to the age of 13, I won races thanks to an effective stroke and a winner’s mind. It got me pretty far but eventually my competitors came up beside and passed me. I realized there and then: I have to start training for real! And so I did and my results came in an instant; number one in Sweden when I was 14, and one year later I qualified for the Olympic Games in Seoul, South Korea.

Now, 25+ years later, I have once again experienced almost the same thing. In a deeper way this time. Now with the why, the how, and the what. As a former coach for another swimming methodology, I was tired of not knowing how to best progress my own nor my clients’ swimming. Now, I know what I have been missing. This article is a declaration of what structured CSS-training has given me, both as a swimmer and for my coaching approach.

But let’s go back to my younger years and start from there: in the Swedish national team I was called "The Ant". Tell me what to do and I will do it. I did the work, the hard work, but unfortunately too often without knowing the why. Endless amount of meters clearly provided results, but it came at a cost. As a tired, mentally worn out 19-year old I quit swimming, bitter and lost.

It wasn’t until 2010 I took up swimming again. The masters World Championship was going to be held in August in my hometown, Gothenburg. When I learned about this, a little fire within me was lit. With eight months to go, I made a plan, using what little knowledge about training I had. This was fun, reading and learning a lot alongside the swim sessions. Trying new things, both in the pool and the gym. So much had happened since I was last active. I gave myself a challenge: “How fast can you get with only three to four workouts per week?” I must say it got me pretty far, ending up taking two WC gold medals and the journey continued with two more golds at Masters WC in 2012. As a 39-year-old mother of two, I was only three seconds off my all-time best performance 19 years earlier in 100 meters. So, what did I learn from this?


1) Understand what you do and why – that will motivate you further

2) Maximize the time you have – do the work that has to be done, skip the rest

3) Racing again was fun

At this time, I also started to help out some triathletes with their swimming. Initially just for fun but soon my full time job as a teacher was dropped to a part time, and then I started my own coaching business. I went to the States to get a Total Immersion coach license as I felt I needed a base for my coaching. My swimmers found my new skills exciting, first in Sweden to try this out by a licensed coach. It got so popular that me, myself and I were not enough to cover the expanding market. I educated 10 more coaches, we became the crew of Simcoachen.


With her extensive swimming background, Anna Karin has that
classical long smooth stroke style.
Very, very focused on technique and swimming beautiful, effortless, and one small detail at a time. In our world, there were a right and a wrong way of swimming, and we strived to get it right of course, forming all swimmers into one technique. Our swimmers got better, mainly from reducing drag. But quite soon I figured out that the swimming style we taught mainly suited one kind of triathlete/swimmer - the ones that likes to read, understand, analyse, taking things quite slow...

Obviously this is not ideal as my goal is to be able to coach all people regardless of ability, and level of ambition. In my own swimming I noticed that I was losing fitness, as I was busy trying to keep strokes per length to a minimal and looking awesome. Time did not matter and with a low frequency stroke (44 SPM) it was impossible to get fast times when I gave it a go. I started to see a similar trend with my competitive athletes, and I immediately realized I needed to change my coaching strategy so I started to look around for options.

I got my eyes on something completely different and immediately I felt that I found a secret treasure! This is what has been missing in my own swimming as well in my coaching: Swim Smooth with fitness, CSS, Jono van Hazel, Paul Newsome, Red Mist, Swim Types and using a Tempo Trainer in a totally different way. How very exciting!!! I got in at a three-day Swim Smooth workshop in England. I checked out the app (Ed: now The Guru) some weeks prior to my attendance, getting the unfit body moving again. I tested out some sessions to get a grip and to understand what I was about to learn more of.

Something happened with my fitness pretty fast and I went to England with hope, joy and curiosity. This was definitely something for me! During the workshop, one of the sessions included s 400m and 200m at full speed, a classic CSS-test (Critical Swim Speed). With a Dutch guy chasing, I was not in a million years letting him pass me! My heartbeat went back to normal after five hours. But this was so much fun – racing again! Getting tired and feeling alive! From this background, you can point out three things:


1) Something BIG was missing in my swimming and coaching: FITNESS

2) People are different, and you can’t squeeze everyone into the same mold

3) It is still fun to race!

I am an easy target to challenges. Coach Paul Newsome gave me an unreachable (yes, THAT hard) task and I swallowed the whole bite. Back home I started training with sessions from the Swim Smooth App giving me purpose, understanding and structure. Every set divided into three zones: warm up, building pace/technique and then a CSS-set. Same structure but different from day to day. Very challenging sets, but doable and smartly build to not reach lactate level.

I got tired, but not sore and worn out. I could keep both mind and body fresh and go back to the pool day after. My body was able to manage and slowly but accurately build a faster me. My swim fitness went from zero to "better" within a month. Everything smartly calculated on the hundred of a second, completely personalized from my CSS-times in England. Pretty fast I realized the importance of house holding with my reserves. I had to, otherwise the doable was not about to happen and this very important knowledge has been a key to managing longer distances at a high speed, for me and for those who I coach. My focus had moved from only technique work to CSS-training: building speed and motivation day by day. You have to do the work but the difference from my youth is now sets with world-class structure and a deep understanding. The circle was closed.

Swim Smooth was just what I needed motivation and fitness-wise and I dropped 22 sec/9 sec on 400/200 in 10 weeks. The joy for swimming was back, so much more fun to follow a red, focused thread than swimming blind. On my Perth-trip in January 2016, I got another challenge (from Adam Young this time) and this had to do with both stroke rate and personality: “Let your inner Swinger out and try 72 SPM”. Oh my God, I had been struggling with my rate around 60 SPM!


Video: Anna-Karin compares Smooth and Swinger styles (extract from SS Coach Training in Perth)

Now, three months later I have let my inner Swinger out and I love it, feeling comfortable and relaxed at 70-72 SPM and this has made me drop 3 seconds per 100 m.

Playing with higher stroke rate, working and taming the body to adopt has definitely been a major lift in my swimming, I am almost flying on the water. That is a feeling I share with my swimmers, they love the structure and CSS-work as much as I do since I am lucky enough to pass that feeling on week after week. They have learned so much in less than a year, getting much faster and this summer is the first for them to try out their new skills in Open Water, so very exciting!

Our swimmers are more motivated than ever before and their times in 400 and 200 have dropped amazingly, the times from the past are long gone. This is definitely the future!

Anna-Karin Lundin
www.simcoachen.se

Swim Smooth!

PS. For more information about becoming a Swim Smooth Coach, see: www.swimsmooth.com/becoming-a-swim-smooth-certified-coach.php



 Swim Smooth Guru content relevant to this post:

Another Reason You Might Sit Low In The Water - Breathing To The Sky

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If you are not from a swimming background you might have a low body position in the water with the legs sinking deep behind you:



This creates a huge amount of drag, so much in fact that working on lifting your body position higher should be your number one priority to improve your swimming.

For comparison, here is how high double Olympic Gold Medallist Rebecca Adlington's sits in the water:



Most people with low legs are aware it's a problem for them but if you are not sure, you can tell from how much easier you feel swimming with a pull-buoy or in a wetsuit. It's not uncommon for someone with low legs to be 5, 10 or even 20 seconds faster per 100m using a large pull-buoy or wetsuit!

If you suffer from sinky legs, you might never get as high in the water as Rebecca but so large is the drag created that even small improvements will make your swimming significantly easier and faster.

Another Reason You Might Sit Low In The Water

There are many causes of a low body position in the water such as poor kicking technique, holding your breath and tight hip flexors. In fact for most swimmers with low legs there's more than one factor at play which is why it can be hard to fix (see our full fault-fixer process in the Guru in the links below).

Here's one cause you might not have thought of - looking up to the sky to breathe:



For swimmers who do this, often their body position isn't too bad when not breathing, however as they rotate too far and crane the neck to look upwards, their body sinks low in the water:



By working on breathing across the pool (using the bow wave) rather than to the sky...



...you will find breathing much easier and significantly improve your body position at the same time - see the links below.

Swim Smooth!

(Thanks to Coach Shauqie completing his SS certification training in Kuala Lumpur for this extract from his video analysis!)






 Swim Smooth Guru content relevant to this post:

Announcing The New HUUB Kickpant

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Swim Smooth are very pleased to announce a new product jointly developed between Swim Smooth and HUUB Design - the new HUUB Kickpant:


Full information and to purchase: www.swimsmooth.com/huub-kickpant.php

Don't miss the special launch worldwide free shipping offer - must finish June 17th!

Until now the buoyancy shorts on the market have simply lifted you higher in the water (much as a pull-buoy would) but offered you very little else to improve your swimming. The HUUB Kickpant not only lifts you higher (in fact the 3/4 length design lifts you higher than any other buoyancy short) but the clever addition of high density neoprene and modulus insertion over the knee actively controls knee bend pushing you into a straighter leg kick technique as you swim.

What's more, the Kickpant features the lower half of HUUB's clever X-O skeleton system from their full wetsuits to improve your alignment and reduce snaking through the core. The result is faster, more efficient swimming.

So if you sit in the water a little like this...



...as many strong/athletic body types do, then the new Kickpant is the perfect training tool for you to improve your swimming.

Use it regularly in your pool training to simulate swimming in your wetsuit (without overheating) and you learn a better stroke technique whilst adapting to the higher stroke rate from swimming more quickly. Don your full HUUB wetsuit on race day and you're perfectly prepared for maximum performance!

Find the Kickpant in our webshop: www.swimsmooth.com/huub-kickpant.php


None Of The Disadvantages Of A Pull-Buoy

Training with a pull buoy also lifts the legs but it has two major disadvantages - because you have to hold your legs together to keep the buoy in place, it masks any problems with your leg kick. And secondly because you're not kicking at all, it causes your kicking muscle groups to de-condition.

This is the real power of the Kickpant - ditch the pull buoy, use the Kickpant instead and get your swimming technique back on track!


Kickpant Training Sessions To Follow In The Guru

To really make this unique product complete, we've written you some specific Kickpant training sessions to follow in the Swim Smooth Guru virtual coach app. Every Kickpant purchaser receives a free month's use of the Guru to follow the sessions and get maximum use from them - developing your stroke rate, body position, kicking technique and sense of pacing ready for race day.

If you're already a Guru subscriber, you can find the sessions here: www.swimsmooth.com/kickpant


Swim Smooth!

Announcing New SS Coaches In Chicago, Dubai, Belgium, Netherlands & UK

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New HUUB Kickpant:
Worldwide free shipping ends June 17th



SS Clinics and Camps:

Swim Smooth are very proud to announce the certification of five new Swim Smooth Coaches in Chicago, Dubai, Belgium, Netherlands and the UK!

Training to be a SS Coach is a huge undertaking. Developing the necessary skills and experience of advanced video analysis, stroke correction, squad coaching and open water skills takes time and cannot be rushed. We are fortunate enough to be able to pick our coaches from a large talent pool but even for the most experienced, training takes at least 1 to 2 years.

You've probably seen pictures of our the coaches training in Perth and whilst the endless sunshine and beautiful pools look glamorous, it's anything but a holiday. It's incredibly intense and exhausting as we push them to the limit with long days and endless challenges. Most coaches sleep all the way home on the plane from Perth before relentlessly continuing their development week in, week out at their home base, mentored by ourselves.

So whether you are a complete beginner or elite competitor, when you see a Swim Smooth Coach you can be assured you are seeing a brilliant coach, highly trained with the very best coach methods at their disposal.

A very big welcome to the coaching team Stacee, Merle, Rob, Filip and Jason! :



Stacee Seay, Chicago, USA: blueline-multisport.com


Stacee is a USAT, USAC and Swim Smooth Certified Coach who lives, works and trains in the Chicagoland area. She has a lifetime of experience as an athlete and has been coaching competitive and recreational athletes since 2008.

Her knowledge of anatomy, physiology and kinesiology gives her a unique understanding of the human body and how to adapt workload and training stress to get the best out of each individual athlete she trains around the world. She has coached all levels from children, youth and adults. Many of these athletes have become Elite National and World Champions in the sport of triathlon.



Merle Traviste, Dubai, UAE: triswimdxb.com


Under the desert sun Merle runs an endurance and triathlon swim squad, video analysis & private coaching, an improving beginners program and giving advice to anyone interested in improving their open water and triathlon swimming.

She is a true believer that coaching the athlete and not the stroke is the best way to get results. Dubai has an amazing environment and facilities that allow athletes to train year round, making it an age group athletes dream!

Merle is excited to introduce Swim Smooth to the growing triathlon community in the Middle East to ensure athletes have access to quality swim coaching to compliment the facilities available.



Rob Kwaaitaal, Nijmegen, Netherlands: swimsmooth.nl / snellerzwemmen.nl


Rob started his triathlon career in 1985 at the age of 15. Over the years he participated in hundreds of triathlons, bike-races, running events, open water and pool based swim races. As a triathlete Rob Kwaaitaal won multiple Dutch Championships at the Masters division (Olympic Distance and Sprint) and still competes at elite level in draft legal short course races in The Netherlands.

Rob likes to pass on the knowledge and experience he has gained in over thirty years of endurance sports to other athletes. The mission of snellerzwemmen.nl is to teach swimmers and triathletes to swim quickly and easily.



Filip Rigole, Zwevegem, Belgium: endurancepeakcoaching.com


Filip has been active in triathlon since the early 90’s, first as an active triathlete and since 2000 as coach.

In 2013 Filip founded endurancepeakcoaching.com, offering personal and online coaching for athletes all over the world.

It was on a Belgian coaching course that he first came across Swim Smooth and quickly found that this is the right approach if you want to improve your swimming.

Filip runs squads, video analysis and stroke correction sessions in Kuurne and Harelbeke.



Jason Tait, Swindon / Cotswolds, UK: southwestswim.co.uk


Jason has always been passionate about swimming and has always swum for either competition, fun or fitness. Jason had his first taste of coaching and teaching after his children were born, teaching them to swim at an early age and getting the bug of helping others achieve in the water.

He then went on to take his coaching and teaching exams, coaching at club level and then becoming one of the South West Regions only ASA and STA fully qualified Open Water Specialist coaches, also serving as an Open Water Coach for Wiltshire ASA and a local swimming club.

The range of athletes Jason coaches in both pool and open water is extensive from total beginner to Ironman athletes and channel swimmers, and from 8 year old kids through to 70 year old veterans.





For full information on all our Swim Smooth coaches see: swimsmooth.com/certifiedcoaches

For more information on training to become a Swim Smooth coach see: swimsmooth.com/becoming-a-swim-smooth-certified-coach.php


Swim Smooth!

ÖTILLÖ Isles Of Scilly & HUUB Kickpant Free Worldwide Shipping Ends Midnight

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SS Clinics and Camps:




United Kingdom

Intro to OW Workshop, June 25th, South Cotswolds

Swindon SS Squads

Lancaster Video Analysis

Northampton Swim Squad

Acton London Video Analysis

Birmingham Video Analysis Clinic

Cardiff Video Analysis Clinic

3 Week Open Water Course Starts 16th May

Northampton Video Analysis Clinic

Yorkshire Squads (Pool & OW)

Yorkshire Video Analysis

West Lothian Video Analysis

Richmond SS Squad

Open Water Beg & Int Courses London & Oxford

Richmond / Wimbledon Workshops

Salisbury 1to1 Analysis

Twickenham Video Analysis

Lancaster SS Squad

Sherborne Dorset Clinic, July 2nd




Europe

Nijmegen Video Analysis & Stroke Correction

Nijmegen SS Squads

Zwevegem Video Analysis (English - Dutch)

Prague Junior Swim Club

Prague Junior Swim Club

Dublin Video Analysis

Prague Video Analysis

Swim/Tri Camps Alicante




Asia & North America

Dubai Video Analysis

SS 1 Day Clinic NYC August 6

SS 1 Day Clinic South Carolina, July 10

NYC / SC Video Analysis

Hong Kong Video Analysis

Hong Kong Squads & Video Analysis


Our free INTERNATIONAL shipping offer on the HUUB Kickpant ends tonight. Click here to purchase yours!

We've started hearing from many of you who have purchased a Kickpant and have started integrating it into your training - and are simply amazed how fast you are swimming in them. Several of you who normally swim in the slowest lane of your squad have jumped up to the front of lane 3 swimming in the Kickpant!

Also, checkout the new video below filmed on Tuesday in Mallorca where where SS Head Coach Paul Newsome has uber-cyclist turned triathlete Kevin Dawson using them.

As Kevin says: They give me a lot more confidence and I can focus on the front end a little bit more, focus on that stroke technique and rotation."




Buy yours here: www.swimsmooth.com/huub-kickpant.php


ÖTILLÖ Scilly Isles

As we speak, Paul Newsome is travelling to the beautiful Isles of Scilly for the amazing ÖTILLÖ race on Saturday. This (slightly crazy) event involves teams of two swimming and running between and across the islands in 9 swim sections and 10 run sections - a total of 7.5km swimming and 37.5km running - carrying everything they need with them as they go:


Paul is racing with Matti Tordsson, a coach from Sweden who's 8 year old daughter is critically ill with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia. You can read more about Stina's journey at hejastina.se/about-stina-and-leukaemia which has seen her subjected to intense chemotherapy, resulting in no less than five strokes and a coma when her body rejected the treatment. It's been simply awful but Stina is a tough little cookie and has been doing incredibly well:



Watch out for Paul's race report next week but in the meantime please support Paul and Matti by making a donation to: www.barncancerfonden.se/1309393292/ (if your Swedish is not what it once was, follow this short video clip: www.youtube.com/watch?v=BmtmYN0Ge7w)


Swim Smooth!

Paul's 2016 ÖtillÖ Scilly Isles Race Report...a bit more than 600 words!

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0
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SS Clinics and Camps:




United Kingdom

Intro to OW Workshop, June 25th, South Cotswolds

Swindon SS Squads

Lancaster Video Analysis

Northampton Swim Squad

Acton London Video Analysis

Birmingham Video Analysis Clinic

Cardiff Video Analysis Clinic

3 Week Open Water Course Starts 16th May

Northampton Video Analysis Clinic

Yorkshire Squads (Pool & OW)

Yorkshire Video Analysis

West Lothian Video Analysis

Richmond SS Squad

Open Water Beg & Int Courses London & Oxford

Richmond / Wimbledon Workshops

Salisbury 1to1 Analysis

Twickenham Video Analysis

Lancaster SS Squad

Sherborne Dorset Clinic, July 2nd




Europe

Nijmegen Video Analysis & Stroke Correction

Nijmegen SS Squads

Zwevegem Video Analysis (English - Dutch)

Prague Junior Swim Club

Prague Junior Swim Club

Dublin Video Analysis

Prague Video Analysis

Swim/Tri Camps Alicante




Asia & North America

Dubai Video Analysis

SS 1 Day Clinic NYC August 6

SS 1 Day Clinic South Carolina, July 10

NYC / SC Video Analysis

Hong Kong Video Analysis

Hong Kong Squads & Video Analysis

This week on the blog we have SS Head Coach Paul Newsome's race report from the mighty ÖtillÖ race last weekend on the Isles of Scilly. This exciting new type of multisport event has a huge future - we hope you're inspired to give it a crack yourself! :




On Saturday 18th June 2016 I had the opportunity to participate in a crazy, exciting ‘new' adventure sport 28 nautical miles off the south west coast of the UK called ÖtillÖ (pronounced “urr-till-urr"), which is Swedish for “island to island”. Teams of two compete whilst tethered together using any means possible to cover 37.5km, split as 30km of challenging trail running and 7.5km of cold, ocean swimming. The race is divided into 19 continuous stages where you roll from the land to the water and back again like the proverbial amphibious beast emerging from the primordial soup of life… or something like that!



A great 3m26s video review of the race can be found here: https://vimeo.com/171616668 and if you have Facebook you can see an extended version here: https://www.facebook.com/otillorace/videos/1005483822882557/
Find out more about the sport here: http://otilloswimrun.com

The Isles of Scilly

Sitting squarely in the middle of the Gulf Stream in the wilds of the Atlantic Ocean, the Scilly Isles is an archipelago of over 100 small islands where many hundreds of ships have been wrecked and thousands of lives lost to the sea during unpredictable storms and weather patterns. 



The experience would prove to be life-changing in more ways than one and also sits atop all my other previous endurance challenges such as the 20km Rottnest Channel Swim, the 46km Manhattan Island Marathon Swim and even the mighty 34km English Channel in terms of difficulty and extremism. Yes, it’s that tough, but somewhat perversely more enjoyable at the same time!



ÖtillÖ, or the sport of “swim run”, is not actually that new. Dating back some 10 years since its first inception in the Swedish Stockholm archipelago, this would be the first official ÖtillÖ event outside of Sweden to form the new World Series. Each event allows up to 10 teams of two to qualify for the World Championships in Sweden on the 4th September each year. The event in Sweden comprises some 65km of hardcore trail running and 10km of open water swimming and island-hops between 26 different land masses. In comparison the Scilly Isles race was just 30km of beautiful coastal trail running and 7.5km of cold, ocean swimming visiting eight key islands with some six energy stations; you could think of this then as the “little sister”:



The fact that the Scilly Isles event was only 50% of the distance of it’s Swedish big brother sheds some perspective on how challenging the big kahuna really is; even the winning team featuring multiple world aquathlon champion and a former training partner of mine, Richard Standard from Great Britain, stated it was the hardest event he’d ever done! If Richard says it was tough, it was tough.



The concept is very simple: you and a partner (male or female) work together to follow a marked course and are typically bound together by a bungy-cord, which serves as a safety mechanism, or an anchor, depending on how you view the world and the differential in your speed! Pull buoy and paddles are allowed to help offset the drag of wearing your trainers when you swim, but depending on how you use them, they’re not always an advantage (myself and Richard Stannard both opting not to use paddles in order to keep the stroke rate higher in the cold, choppy waters).

ÖtillÖ’s number one philosophy is that you work together as a partnership to experience unbridled beauty in the environment as you seamlessly transition from the land to the water some 19 times, running in your wetsuit, swimming in your trainers (no easy feat let me tell you!) and navigating (hopefully!) the stunning flora and fauna of the islands:



Every twist and turn saw you experiencing a new landscape, never knowing quite what was coming next or how you’d handle it. It was as much liberating as it was a chance to view the world from a whole new perspective that you just can’t get from any other angle.

It’s a sport that encourages innovation rather than stifles it. A sport where the number one goal is survival rather than competitive performance and to use your tether like a metaphorical umbilical cord to feed each other both physically and mentally over the duration. A sport which embraces the environment rather than litters it with gel wrappers, empty CO2 cannisters and discarded water bidons. In short, it’s what triathlon felt like in the 80s and 90s before the big corporations came in and commercialised the whole experience to such a point that competitors are lost amongst a sea of anonymity. Never before in a sport have I felt so much inclusion - like a true sporting family - and having spent a lot of time with it’s founders Mats Skott and Michael Lemmel over the weekend listening to their hopes for the growth of the sport, something tells me this will always reside above the potential for commercialisation. It’s exactly the sport I have been looking for:



The excitement and air of participating in something truly special bristled over the entire weekend and extended to the masses of enthusiastic islanders and bewildered tourists who’d never seen anything like it before. I doubt I have ever felt so much support and energy from a crowd who truly wants you to succeed than on the Scilly Isles. It was the perfect place to run the event, no question.



A Tale of Two Journeys

I first heard about the event from a Swedish swim and triathlon coach called Matti Tordsson in March 2015. Matti was attending one of our 3-day Coach Education Courses in the UK and knowing my passion for all things crazy and my distant life as a triathlete, Matti enthusiastically suggested I’d love to have a go at the event which he’d experienced himself several times before in Sweden. At this stage I passed it off quite quickly as I hadn’t run for the best part of 10 years.

Sadly in September of 2015, Matti’s 8 year old daughter Stina was diagnosed with high risk Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia (ALL) and his whole family’s life was turned upside down in an instant. Stina has had to subsequently undergo intense chemotherapy and a bone marrow transplant, suffering in the process with five brain strokes and even coma in response to her critical state. Having a son who is just six months younger than Stina, I could not begin to imagine how such a terrible condition would wreak havoc on their daily lives as they came very close to losing Stina.



When the Scilly Isles race was announced in December, I recalled Matti’s earlier enthusiasm about the event. Having never been to the Scillies myself - but knowing it to be a magical place - I reached out to Matti and tentatively asked if he wanted to team up with me, not knowing if this would even be on his radar given everything he and his family was going through. I wished that the positive outlook of having a goal to aim for, and the chance to raise awareness of Stina’s condition, would be something that could help bring hope where mainly despair existed. As I was about to experience, the goal of completing this event also had a profound impact on me and what is truly important in life.

Obviously the practicalities of training for the event given Matti’s circumstances and the fact that we’d never be able to practice together until the actual event, meant that we had to approach the event purely as participants rather than competitors, though this emphasis proved to be exactly what the ÖtillÖ was all about:



Thankfully, nine months on and five months since the coma, Stina has been responding well to the treatment, but even up to the race day, we weren’t sure if we would be able to compete together.

Of course, you cannot pretend to understand the implications of having a child so gravely sick, but you can certainly reframe your perspective on life when someone you hold dearly as a friend is suffering so much. In the last 3 years since my Manhattan Island Marathon Swim win I have personally been through a bit of a slump. I endured major back surgery in late 2013 and have suffered through a shoulder issue for the last 18 months, both of which have prevented me doing what I love as much as I would have liked. I felt my body was starting to fail me at only 37 years of age. Other than that though I’m healthy, my family has been healthy and my coaching has been going from strength to strength. How utterly ridiculous it seems to be so self-absorbed that (what are effectively very minor issues in the grander scheme of things) can bring you to feeling down in some kind of mid-life crisis. The prospect and perspective of racing with Matti, doing it for Stina and raising awareness for the Childhood Cancer International and the Swedish Childhood Cancer Foundation has helped me to take a hold of what these types of events are all about and for the first time ever I was pleased to find myself smiling the whole way around a race, ditching my serious 'race face’ for a much more appreciative outlook:



And so to the race!

As mentioned, we expected very little from ourselves during the event, but ultimately this proved to be our biggest asset. Matti had managed precious few training sessions in the last nine months and I had only begun running again in December 2015. 3 weeks out from the race I injured my left glute (requiring a cortisone shot) and couldn’t run at all and Matti had also injured his foot too in the lead-up. We also had no opportunity to practice together at all until the gun went off to signal the start!

I watched in awe as over 100 teams arrived on the island looking super-fit and amped to practice on the course - I had to just sit and watch as they did. I felt every bit under-done and yet had the prospect of running further than I ever have over terrain that amplified the intensity one hundred fold:



What had I got myself in for? The only thing I knew is that I could not let Matti and Stina down. I had to start and I had to finish no matter how long it took or whatever happened to my body along the way; and very ‘strange’ things happened as I was about to find out…

Stage 1 RUN: Hugh Town to Halangy Porth (2.5km)

My lasting memory of the start was one of enthusiastic energy, not the dogged race-face anxieties of a typical triathlon or open water event, but perhaps that was just a change in my own perspective? We crossed the start line with a resounding shout of “For Stina!” and the race was on!

The plan was to start very steady knowing we had about 7 hours of racing ahead of us. We watched as the leaders raced away from us and peered wistfully down the cliff face as they entered the water some 500m ahead of us as we came to a standstill amongst the mid-pack on the single track high above the rocky shore. Several of my former racing and training mates were in the top-3 teams at this stage so it required a monumental amount of control and acceptance that I’m just not at this level of running anymore. The good news was that I felt no pain at all in my glute and actually felt quite light and easy on my feet.



Stage 2 SWIM: Halangy Porth to Bathinghouse Porth (2.0km)

As we poured into the water on the first swim I felt like this was our time to shine. This swim proved critical in us moving up from 35th place to 15th and eventually to 12th which unbelievably saw us miss a spot at the world championships in September by only two positions. It was a far cry from what we expected of ourselves and a strong indication that our pacing strategy was working out. We weren’t fast in any of the sections, but we always kept moving and this allowed us to steadily chip away at those in front of us:



The water was cool (13ºC) but clear and had huge clumps of seaweed to contend with like swimming through an organic version of the garbage collection bay in the Star Wars movie! I towed Matti using an elastic tether which allowed him to stay firmly within my draft zone. This worked really well and we moved swiftly past 20 teams. I was using a Finis Axis Pull Buoy between my ankles and whilst this slowed our transitions a touch I felt it held my feet higher in the water and reduced drag better than between my thighs. In my prior research I am about 10-12 seconds per 100m slower in all this get-up than swimming ‘au natural’ which apparently is ’normal’:



Stage 3 RUN-SWIM-RUN-SWIM-RUN-SWIM: Bathinghurst Porth to Castle Porth (6.0km)

The next six sections were a series of short runs and swims, many of which were more like wading through the shallow water, seaweed and slippery rocks, all of which made for slow going:



We finished this section with our first energy station where we took onboard energy drinks, gels, bananas and even some yummy cake! This might have been the source of my later stomach discomfort around the 4hr mark!

Stage 4 RUN: Castle Porth to Long Point (6.8km)



The first long run was simply stunning, starting with a run through the world-famous 200 year-old Abbey Gardens and then became more challenging as we edged out along the coastal path. We were moving well though and closing down on a few teams in front of us at this point just by holding a steady, consistent pace. Upon reaching the steeper climbs, Matti would immediately instruct us to walk so as to conserve energy for later in the race. Whilst this seemed to slow us down initially, it offered a bit of respite which definitely served us well on the final run of the day.




Stage 5 SWIM-RUN-SWIM-RUN-SWIM-RUN-SWIM: Long Point to Lower Town Quay St Martin’s (3.0km)

We then commenced another seven section zone where we were constantly in and out of the water. I’m not sure if it was a combination of the horizontal to vertical repetitive movement, the cold water, the carbohydrate-rich energy stations or the belt that I was wearing around my middle to tow Matti along, but towards the middle of this zone I started to develop some pretty severe stomach cramps. Ultimately I couldn’t hold things in any longer and as we approached the ramp of the Lower Town Quay at St Martin’s I crossed the proverbial last bastion of dignity and finally discovered how to “go #2” whilst on the move. It wasn’t pretty or comfortable but it was entirely necessary and made me feel better immediately after. Unfortunately though this was just one of fifteen subsequent bowel movements during the last two hours of the race which rapidly started to really dehydrate me - how’s that for an open / honest report!



Stage 6 RUN: Karma Hotel to Crow’s Nest (7.6km)

I went from hero to zero very quickly indeed and felt absolutely terrible during the second long run of the day. I didn’t let Matti see this, though I’m sure he felt the pace slow and my conversation ceased entirely developing a horrible cold sweat to boot. Even feeling like this I didn’t doubt we’d finish but I knew it could be a long way back to Hugh Town at this pace! I was desperate for a drink and even stopped to ask two hikers if I could steal theirs only to have Matti block my approach and warn of the impending disqualification if I did. I bowed my head and carried on, fearful that we’d start to fall back down the standings as my pace slowed. Eventually we reached the energy station and I drank what seemed like gallons of pure water to try to flush everything through. We spent a long time at that station but were cheered on by some fantastic volunteers which really helped. 



Stage 7 SWIM: Crow’s Nest to Innisidgen (2.4km)

The notion of starting what was billed to be the hardest challenge of the day when I was feeling at my absolute lowest took some resolve, drawing upon the doggedness that is required to swim things like the English Channel. Whilst only 2.4km, this swim was against the tide and we ended up meandering all over the place through fatigue, cold and (in my case) a touch of disorientation from the stomach issues. I figured we could well be in the water for about an hour and ultimately this proved to be the case. All that was driving me on at this stage was to not let the team behind us catch up, so we carried on, one stroke after the next and eventually reached the shore. I was heartened to later find out that even the great Richard Standard found this challenging also!



Stage 8 RUN: Innisidgen to Hugh Town (7.2km)

Incredibly, as soon as we had regained some feeling in the ice blocks that were now our feet and ankles, we actually ran really strongly for the final run and I felt great again. Anything better than terrible would have been a bonus, but we ended up putting 3 minutes into the chasing team at this stage which was a great way to finish the most epic of all challenges.

Crossing the finish line and the emotions were evident for both Matti and myself. To have done this side-by-side with Matti for 6h16m without a single moan or whinge from him was incredible after all he and his family have been through, but that’s what perspective does for you. Nobody holds a gun to your head forcing you to do these types of events. We are all privileged enough that we have the health to do it. We had finished 12th overall after expecting to finish in the latter half of the whole field, all things considered, and were 45 minutes quicker than I calculated we would be. Given that the winners were 25 minutes slower than predicted, this really was a great result and one which I’m very proud of.



Over 100 teams had entered the event but only 85 had made it to the start line. Of these 85% would go on to complete the entire course, including our new Japanese friends Umi and Hanae who were very fearful of the cold on the day before the race but in a great show of resilience powered through regardless - well done girls! Full results can be seen at http://otilloswimrun.com/races/isles-of-scilly/results-2016/ There’s also a complete set of images at https://www.flickr.com/photos/otillorace/sets/72157668427523542 if you like what you see here. (Photo credits: Nadja Odenhage / ÖTILLÖ Isles of Scilly 16 or Matti Rapila / ÖTILLÖ Isles of Scilly 16).



Training Plan

So if you’re still reading I’m assuming that’s because you’re as crazy as me and Matti and fancy the challenge of something new and exciting like the ÖtillÖ? This is what my typical training week has looked like since the start of April. You’ll note the extremely low volume involved. Two things caused this: 1) limited time availability with family and work; 2) having not run in 10 years I needed to respond to my body, running when I could, not when I’d planned necessarily. Ultimately I didn’t run at all in the last 3 weeks either:

  • Monday - 4km easy off-road run at ~4:30 per km / 2km swim using our Goldilocks CSS set as a template (reducing down from a CSS of 1:28 per 100m in April to 1:14 prior to the race). Total training time = 60 minutes
  • Tuesday - 3-4km swim including some longer intervals of 300m, 400m and 500m at CSS +2s/100m and mixing in some pull-bouy and paddle work to simulate the race and non-use of my legs. Total training time = 60 minutes
  • Wednesday - a repeat of Monday’s swim session. Total training time = 45 minutes
  • Thursday - a swim-run practice session lasting about 75-90 minutes. This was an integral part of my program. I’d typically cover about 3km in the open water with a group of friends, sandwiched in the middle of two 4km runs in all my gear. I was able to use this session to see not only my swim fitness improve again after a very mediocre 12-18 months, but to also measure the effectiveness of changes I made along the way to my kit. I started off being dropped like a lead-balloon by my mates in April with all the gear on (slowing me down by 10-12s per 100m) to being able to hold and then challenge them on the front of the group within 6 weeks. It was very frustrating at first to be swimming so slow and yet working so hard, but eventually I got there. I always tried to keep the swim to run ratio the same as what we’d do on the event itself, i.e. 20-25% swimming and 75-80% running. Total training time = 90 minutes
  • Friday - (always in response to how I recovered after Thursday) but typically another 2-3km swim session including some drill and technique work. Total training time = 45 minutes
  • Saturday - long, off-road run, building from 8km to 15km at ~4:30/km, or a longer version of the swim-run session on the Thursday (up to 2hrs). Total training time = 75 to 120 minutes
  • Sunday - day off with the family (or alternate with Saturday)

Total weekly training time = 7hrs (add to this 10-15 minutes every morning and evening 7 days a week running through some stretching for mobility and injury prevention)

We will be soon adding a complete swimrun training program within the Guru http://www.swimsmooth.guru to help flesh out these details a bit further - stay tuned! 

What did I learn from this event?

My ultimate personal goal for the 2016 ÖtillÖ Scilly Isles Race was to simply give myself a goal and pull myself out of the silly slump I was in. I simply wanted to feel fit and healthy again without the pressure of extreme performance. Ironically enough this mindset has been very agreeable for me and is one which I aim to continue. Always having the thought that we were doing this for Stina and the greater cause of uniting as a partnership on the day was incredibly motivating too. In total over 215,000 SEK ($26,000 USD) has been raised for the Childhood Cancer International and the Swedish Childhood Cancer Foundation - if you feel like you’d like to contribute to Stina’s cause, please visit: http://hejastina.se/about-stina-and-leukaemia/ and if your Swedish is not what it used to be, you can visit a quick video tutorial of how to donate here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BmtmYN0Ge7w&feature=youtu.be&ab_channel=MattiTordsson 



Above all, I learnt that to do the ÖtillÖ you need RESILIENCE, a sense of ADVENTURE and more than a realisation that you are doing this for FUN because you can. Not everyone is so lucky. Use your body, do something positive and make a difference. See you out there!



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Are You Letting Yourself Win?

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Triathletes and open water swimmers are often split into two categories, those looking to compete and those who just want to complete.

"Completers" love setting themselves a challenge which feels a little scary but creates a real buzz of excitement at the same time. They use that heady mix of fear and excitement for motivation to train for the big day. They try to fit training and racing in around their normal life and see their chosen sport as part of a bigger picture.

"Competers" on the other hand are all about performance. Just finishing an event isn't enough, it's about where they place and improving on their previous performances. They train hard and can't help but get a little obsessed about how things are going. Rather than fitting training around their lives they end up fitting life around their training.

Unfortunately Competers often look down on Completers thinking "If you just trained harder and believed in yourself a bit more, you could be so much faster than you are". And whilst that's undoubtably true, would getting more focused ultimately make them happier?

The thing is Completers are very good at something that Competers are very bad at: letting themselves win. They set a challenging goal but something that is actually achievable and feel great when they reach that goal.

Allow yourself to celebrate before you even start!

Competers on the other hand tend to set their goals just out of reach so they rarely hit them. Or, when they do hit them, immediately move their targets higher again. Rather than taking satisfaction from training hard and doing their best, they judge themselves and their self worth from their pure performance. All too often things end in failure: "I was 2 seconds per 100m slower than I should be" or "If I hadn't got that injury 2 months ago I could be winning my age group".

You should never be unhappy if you've given it all you've got.

If you are one of those competitive types, take a leaf out of the Completers book and occasionally give yourself a pat on the back, taking satisfaction from doing your best. Not your best as in the best you ever could be if you didn't have a job and never got sick and all the stars aligned on race day... but your best given there was a howling gale on race day, you had to go on that business trip and yes, your husband doesn't understand.

In a nutshell: let it go and let yourself win occasionally.

Swim Smooth!

Super-Fish Lucy Charles - The World's Fastest Female Triathlete In Water?

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A few weeks ago whilst testing the new HUUB Mad system at the fantastic Best Centre Mallorca, we had the opportunity to meet up again with two of the very fastest swimmers in triathlon - Lucy Charles and Reece Barclay from the UK.

Lucy made headlines at Ironman Hawaii last year when she set the fastest female swim split... racing as an age grouper! Jodie Swallow had a fantastic swim leading out the female Pro field by over a minute in 55:04 before Lucy decimated the age group field and shattered Jodie's time in a scarcely believable 52:20!

Lucy waiting for the start in Kona

After that fantastic performance Lucy turned Pro, finishing 3rd overall at Ironman Lanzarote (47:11 swim - first female) and 4th overall at Ironman 70.3 Staffordshire (23:36 swim - first female).

Lanzarote Ironman 2016

So what does this super-fish look like in the water and what can we learn from her swimming to improve our own performances? Just for you we took some footage if Lucy's stroke in Mallorca and have uploaded our analysis into The Swim Smooth Guru:




(If you're not a Guru subscriber yet you can subscribe to the standard version for just US$2.99 / GB£1.99 per month and study all of our elite swimmers, use every SS drill, correct your stroke using our fault fixers and follow our complete Learn To Swim Program!)


Three Key Aspects Of Lucy's Stroke

Lucy credits the strength of her swimming to the great work done by her coach Roy Shepherdson as a junior swimmer. Funnily enough Roy swam with Paul Newsome as a child in Bridlington and is still one of his best mates - swimming is a small world!

To get a full appreciation of Lucy's brilliance in the water watch the video footage of her swimming in the Guru from a range of different angles. For this post we've pulled out some key elements for you:


1. Keeping The Head Low When Breathing

When breathing Lucy keeps her head as low as possible in the water, this keeps her front end down and her legs up, reducing drag. Notice the shape of the bow wave to the side of her head and how it falls away creating a trough right by her mouth to breathe from:


Notice how Lucy keeps her lower goggle in the water as she breathes. Try this the next time you swim - get it right and you can see above and below the water at the same time: "split screen vision"!


2. Straight Legs And Pointed Toes

As you'd expect from a swimmer of her abilities, Lucy has a very high body position in the water with the chest, hips and legs sitting very near the surface. This keeps drag to a minimum.

One way she achieves this great position is to keep her legs nice and straight as she kicks with only a slight softness at the knee. Her ankles are flexible and feet nicely pointed behind her:



She's not looking to generate a huge amount of propulsion from her kick but to keep her body high with minimum effort.


3. A Perfect Open Water Arm Recovery

Lucy chooses to use a straighter arm recovery style with the arms swinging a little around the side of her body:


As you might have guessed, like most Pro triathletes and open water swimmers Lucy has the classic Swinger stroke style which is brilliantly effective for open water swimming.

This arm recovery gives her great clearance over waves and chop in open water and works brilliantly to overcome the restriction of a wetsuit. If you feel uncomfortable swimming in open water give this a try, it can make a world a difference!


4. A Phenomenal Catch And Pull!

Lucy has an incredible catch and pull under the water giving her huge amounts of propulsion from her arm stroke. To view this part of her stroke you need to be a Guru subscriber:



A big thanks to HUUB wetsuits for arranging the shoot in Mallorca and to Lucy for letting us show her stroke to the world. Follow Lucy on her blog and twitter feed here, she's a fantastic athlete who's cycling and running are quickly catching up with her truly brilliant swimming:



Swim Smooth!



More elite swimmers to study in the Swim Smooth Guru:

Swimming Training Stress Score And Tracking Your Swim Fitness

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** Our new Swim Smooth Coach in Belgium Filip Rigole has started translating many of our key articles into Dutch on his new blog. Subscribe here: www.swimsmoothbelgie.be **

We've just released a new video by our Head Coach Paul Newsome explaining how to use the Swim Smooth Guru to track your swimming fitness as you train and make intelligent choices about when to train, how much to train and when you just need to put your feet up and take a good solid rest!

If you've used a fitness model with a power meter on the bike this is a very similar concept. For every swim session that you tick off from a Guru training plan or enter manually, the Guru calculates a single number representing the training value of that session - "Swimming Training Stress Score" or sTSS for short*.

The Guru then analyses all your training to model your fitness and fatigue levels over time, allowing you to see what training is making the difference, how to improve versus previous years and when you are over-training:



Watch the new video explaining how this works:




The Swim Smooth Guru

The Guru is our intelligent coaching system to improve all aspects of your swimming from stroke correction to training plans to open water and racing skills. The Fitness Tracker (you can find it here in the Guru) is just one of many powerful features within the training area of the system.

You need a PRO license to use the Fitness Tracker and sTSS calculator. Signup today without any tie-in at:

https://www.swimsmooth.guru

If you are a Standard version subscriber you can change to PRO here:

https://www.swimsmooth.guru/changeaccount/


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* If you are a triathlete using Training Peaks user you can enter Guru sTSS figures straight into Training Peaks to assess your overall training load.

The "Press-Stud" Visualisation

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We've just released a video onto Youtube describing a new Swim Smooth visualisation to help improve your arm recovery over the surface of the water. If you have quite poor posture and feel your arms recover more around the side than over the top of the water when you swim then this for you!


The Press Stud Visualisation

The next time you swim, think about how your shoulder blade might be lifting away from your back as your shoulder rolls forwards. Imagine you have a Press-Stud (also known as a clothes popper or snap fastener) attached on the underside of your shoulder blade and on the other side to your spine:
As your arm recovers over the surface of the water, visualise retracting your shoulder blade down towards your spine by clipping the stud together. This will improve your posture and help the arm recover higher over the water.

Paul explains more:



A higher arm recovery means less chance of the hand catching on the surface and makes it less likely to cross the centre line in front of your head as you enter into the water. Your body roll should also be improved as the improved posture helps drive your rotation in your stroke along the long axis of your spine.

To get the most from the Press-Stud visualisation follow this simple training session in the Virtual Squad in The Guru (PRO subscription required):

https://www.swimsmooth.guru/sequence/cLk/c2s/session-20-pure-technique-press-studs/


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Related coaching in the Swim Smooth Guru:

Learn To Swim Freestyle With Swim Smooth This Summer!

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** Newsflash: We've just put a selection of ex-demo / pre-loved HUUB wetsuits on sale. Catch yourself a bargain! www.swimsmooth.com/huub-wetsuits-used.html **

Have you always wanted to swim freestyle (also known as front-crawl) but never managed to crack it? Struggled with breathing face down in the water or always felt like you're struggling and completely out of breath?

Don't worry you are not alone - most adults struggle with freestyle at first - there's lots of things to think about and coordinate which can make it very challenging. We need to break things down into different elements such as your breathing technique and your leg kick so you can practise one thing at a time before bringing them together and building up the stroke bit by bit.

We created the inspirational Swim Smooth Learn To Swim Freestyle Program to take you through Swim Smooth's unique method for teaching you to swim. The program comprises 12 easy to follow steps to developing your freestyle:

Through the program you can watch Paul teaching Sam to swim
freestyle - she's a complete beginner learning from scratch.

Learning to keep your head low to breathe is a critical skill
to stop your legs sinking.

Working on a good leg kick technique - a great energy saver.

See how the very best do it with brilliant footage of
elite swimmers such as Jono Van Hazel

Constructing the stroke slowly bit by bit.

Paul uses a little bit of Swim Smooth magic to get the
timing of your stroke right.

Sculling made easy - a key Swim Smooth drill for all levels of
swimmer to work on that all important "feel for the water".

Reach your goal like Sam - smooth relaxed freestyle!

The Learn To Swim Program is housed within the Guru coaching system
- available for you to watch and study any time, any place.


Start Today!

The Swim Smooth Learn To Swim Program is available in "The Guru" - our on-line coaching system which you can access from your computer, tablet or smart phone. It's super-easy to use and you can use it to learn to swim with a Standard license costing just GB£1.99 / US$2.99 / AU$3.99 per month:


So take on the challenge this summer and learn to swim freestyle with Swim Smooth - YOU CAN DO IT TOO!

Swim Smooth!
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