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All Strokes - Hand Instinct

Posted by Glenn Mills on Oct 25, 2011 08:24AM (2,416 views)

Instinct is a tough thing to discover, and what you instinctively do with your hands can have a direct impact on your performance.

Why Do It:
Shifting your mental focus to feeling what your hands naturally do at the front of your stroke, can make you aware of the difference between sliding through the water, or creating resistance.

How to Do It:
There is really nothing magical or tricky about this.  It's about becoming aware of the pressure you place on your hand during extension.  Many swimmers will naturally allow the hand to search during the reach in all the strokes, tilting or lifting or sweeping the hands in many directions, which can cause the arm to lead into the catch in a non-productive fashion.

During long sets, it's important that the swimmer takes a moment, while swimming, to explore how to discover a slide, or flying of the hands during the extension, rather than a press.

Placing the hands in positions that create resistance can mean it takes longer to get into the catch.  It can also place undue stress on the shoulders and joints.  The stress can add up.  If a swimmer trains 10,000 meters per day, taking 40 strokes per length, the hands will experience this feeling 8,000 times per day...five days per week.  Do the math.

Discovering instinct is tough, but forcing your hands and arms into more productive positions is absolutely necessary.  Use your mind to overcome physical tendencies that can slow you down.  And THAT'S the fine point!




Responses

Responded Oct 25, 2011 03:56PM

Slide! This is the perfect word. I've been using 'glide' and I don't think my kids get it.

Responded Oct 25, 2011 04:08PM

+1 for slide. Better than glide or stretch, they're up for interpretation, but some slide is always needed. Nice one.

Responded Oct 26, 2011 01:22AM

So what IS the fine point?

Responded Oct 26, 2011 03:47AM

Seems to me slide is the fine point that captures the transition from full reach to catch with very little slippage. I was watching a video of Rowdy Gaines at USMS Nationals in La Mesa and his hand seemed to bend around a curve in the water in front of him. I've played with it some and when you "slide" into the catch it builds the EVF beautifully and with much less strain on the shoulder. It's like the "sweet spot" of swimming. It disappoints me to realize how many strokes I've taken and not felt it ...

Responded Apr 13, 2012 10:01PM

Is any one else as annoyed as I am at the "that's for babies" Cherries girl that appears on the ads before these videos?


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