Individual Coaching for Competitive Swimmers

“To excel at the highest level - or any level, really - you need to believe in yourself, and hands down, one of the biggest contributors to my self-confidence has been private coaching.”

— Stephen Curry, 2014-15 NBA Most Valuable Player

Swimming Improves Confidence

Technique coaching one to one helps swimmers to build skills, develop strategies for racing, and become confident in performance.

It is not uncommon for parents to call us regarding lessons to improve technique for their club swimmer. Private lessons do add expense to the process of developing an athlete, but the results can be seen in not only skill improvement but also in many other areas both tangible and intangible.  Tennis players, golfers, cyclists, and athletes in various other individual and team type sports depend on private coaching to refine skills, improve fitness, change up strategy, and take them to the next level of performance.  The inherent nature of swim clubs and number of athletes per coach makes it difficult to provide individual attention to all swimmers.  At times, it is the gifted or elite athletes that gain the most attention during practices. This leaves other swimmers missing out on what could be the potential for a future in the sport beyond club or high school. What can a private lesson do for your swimmer? Well, for starters, it gives them an opportunity to communicate with a technical coach about what they need and want to work on with no pressure to do sets or have peers looking on. In addition to the skill components, private coaching can help a swimmer overcome a plateau, develop better race strategy, discover their strengths within the sport, and become mentally and physically engaged in the process of change so they can better apply this during practices and competition. Most importantly, it offers confidence boosting and the athlete gains self-belief from the experience. This can amplify performance in swimming as well as other pursuits in life.  

Performance Practice

Swimming for Performance

Training to compete is learned not acquired. Practice should be performance based.

Initially Develop Skills

Attention:  make sure swimmers are paying attention

Variety:  use variety not dozens of repeats of same skill

Engagement: be creative and let swimmers choose drills they like

Quality:  practice at shorter sets

Mastery of Skills - Set personal goals for skill in a manner that engages swimmer.  Engage swimmers with sets they like as options.

Performing Skills Well - at SPEED

Performing Skills Well – at Speed – under FATIGUE

Performing Skills Well – at Speed – under Fatigue – under PRESSURE

Performing Skills Well – at Speed – under Fatigue – under Pressure and CONSISTENTLY

Performing Skills Well – at Speed – under Fatigue – under Pressure and Consistently in PERFORMANCE CONDITIONS

Focus on mental skills, relaxation, not tension while racing.

Practice with consistency and prepare competition skills throughout the training not just before swim meets, build relationships, engage swimmers, and have fun.

~ Adapted and excerpted from Wayne Goldsmith, American Swimming, 2018 Edition Issue.

Open Water Safety

Swimming Keeps Us Safe.

Open water is a powerful force and can present many unexpected dangers:

80% of all beach drownings occur due to rip currents. They are powerful, channeled currents of water flowing away from shore that quickly pull swimmers out to sea. Rip currents typically extend from the shoreline, through the surf zone, and past the line of breaking waves. The best way to stay safe is to recognize the danger of rip currents. If caught in one, don't fight it! Swim parallel to the shore and swim back to land at an angle. Always remember to swim at beaches with lifeguards. (National Ocean Service)

Whether boating, water skiing, paddle boarding, or jet skiing, a PFD (Personal Flotation Device) is necessary equipment.  Be sure to wear the proper type and best fit U.S. Coast Guard approved device.  While safety practices and equipment are essential for open water activities, children and adults will benefit from learning to swim and becoming strong swimmers.

In addition, during summer months, electrical storms occur frequently so be alert.  At the first sound of thunder or sighting of lighting, get out of the water and move to a building.  Wait 30 minutes after the last sounds or sightings to re-enter the water and always wait for lifeguards to give the OK when they are supervising the beach, lake, or pool area. 

Respect the forces of nature and don’t enter water or swim alone. Learning to swim is the best defense for drowning, but while tempting, never swim in an unsupervised open water setting of any kind. Be smart and stay safe.

What Swimming Taught Me About Happiness

Swimming Brings Joy!

When I swim, I feel that I have all the time in the world, in part because much of what marks time — my everyday life — vanishes the moment I step in the water. And all the while I’m there with my buddies, bound by mutual exertion and joking about life.

Lesson No. 1: It’s not about how fast you can go.

One day, a few years ago, I was rushing from the pool dripping wet when a man with a Russian accent stopped me and said, “You must come to svim with the team.” I was in my early 50s — too old for swim team, I thought. But the coach — Igor was his name — persisted: “I see you are good svimmer.”

Intrigued, and being a sucker for flattery, I relented and joined his ragtag group of swimmers. Workouts started at 5:30 in the morning, when most sane people were tucked in bed. It didn’t matter because no matter how sleepy we were, we were guaranteed to be wide-awake, if not euphoric, when we finished. We enjoyed our camaraderie and although we were all at different swimming levels, we had one thing in common: We wanted to get better.

One day, a bunch of us were grousing about how little progress we were making in our swim times, how slow we were.

Ever the philosopher of the pool, Igor smiled and said, “You are all confused! Speed is not the goal; it is the result of perfect beautiful technique.”

What really mattered to Igor was excellence — the efficient stroke. Once you mastered that, he argued, speed would follow naturally. Speed was simply the welcome side effect of swimming well.

I’ve been thinking lately that there’s a lesson here that goes beyond the pool. We all wanted to swim faster and the more hysterically we tried, the more speed escaped us. The same goes for happiness. Everyone wants to be happy, yet the more directly we pursue happiness, the more elusive it becomes.

We’ve all experienced this phenomenon. Think, for example, about your coming vacation. You are excited about going to the beach or mountains and relaxing with lots of free time. How happy you are going to be! Then you start to plan out what you’ll do, what you need to bring, what restaurants you need a reservation for. Soon you’re feeling a bit stressed out about your future pleasure.

Research shows that thinking too much about how to be happy actually backfires and undermines well-being. This is in part because all that thinking consumes a fair amount of time, and is not itself enjoyable.

The researchers behind this study, called “Vanishing Time in the Pursuit of Happiness,” randomly assigned subjects to one of two tasks: One group was asked to write down 10 things that could make them become happier, while the other wrote 10 things that demonstrated that they were already happy.

The subjects were then asked to what extent they felt time was slipping away and how happy they felt at that moment. Those prompted to think about how they could become happier felt more pressed for time and significantly less happy.

This jibes with the argument the journalist Ruth Whippman makes in her 2016 book “America the Anxious: How Our Pursuit of Happiness Is Creating a Nation of Nervous Wrecks.” Trying too hard to be happy — downloading mindfulness apps, taking yoga classes, reading self-help books — mostly just stresses us out, she writes. So what should we do instead? Maybe simply hang out with some friends, doing something we like to do together: “Study after study shows that good social relationships are the strongest, most consistent predictor there is of a happy life.”

Which brings me back to swimming. When I swim, I feel that I have all the time in the world, in part because much of what marks time — my everyday life — vanishes the moment I step in the water. And all the while I’m there with my buddies, bound by mutual exertion and joking about life.

Our technique has improved, thanks to Igor. We have a smoother pull, never dropping our elbows, and a steadier flutter kick. Some days, I swim a little faster than I did before. But even if I don’t, I feel great.

In the end, happiness is a side effect of living well — just like speed can be the result of excellent swimming technique. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to the pool.

Richard A. Friedman is a professor of clinical psychiatry and the director of the psychopharmacology clinic at the Weill Cornell Medical College, and a contributing opinion writer for The New York Times

~Richard A. Friedman, The New York Times; NYTimes.com; July 27, 2019

Strength Training for Kids, is it a Good Idea?

Swimming Builds Strength.

Dry or Wet, using resistance helps build a strong body and a strong mind.

            CLIMB, SWING, JUMP, THROW, REACH AND HANG…ever watch young children play in a playground equipped with ladders, slides, rings, bars, and chutes!  All this fun is really about exploration and growing…growing in agility, coordination, endurance and STRENGTH.  So why is it that there are still doubts about resistance training for children?  Why do few sports programs offer young athletes a quality resistance training experience and why is childhood obesity in epidemic levels in the United States? Well, for year’s people believed that strength training would negatively impact growth. 

Two of the most common misconceptions are that strength training may stunt the growth of children and that children should not lift weights until they are 12 years old. There is simply no evidence to support either of these statements. In fact, all of the major fitness and medical organizations in the U.S. recommend strength training for youth, assuming that basic guidelines are adhered to and that appropriate leadership is present. And about the question of age, children can begin to train with weights as soon as they are able to accept and follow directions—usually around the age of seven or eight.” (Strength Training for Kids: A Guide for Parents and Teachers, American Council on Exercise Fit Facts)

Still, some coaches…and parents believe that strength training for children is unsafe.  So to get them in shape for sports, they prescribe calisthenics. But most young children have difficulty performing push-ups, dips, pull-ups and even sit-ups correctly or repetitively. Actually, a well designed moderate resistance training program provides a means for building specific strength in muscle groups that can improve kids’ ability to perform calisthenics and protect the joints from injury.  In fact, the American College of Sports Medicine states that fifty percent of pre-adolescent sports injuries could be prevented, in large part, by enrolling kids in youth strength and conditioning programs (ACSM l993)

Benefits of Swimming

Swimming is Healing.

Some will even tell you it is a spiritual time for them to meditate amidst endless laps. Most importantly, SWIMMING IS FUN!

While obesity has greatly risen among Americans and significantly in young people, the sport of swimming may well be the answer for a lifetime of health, fitness and wellness into old age. If you have ever spent much time around a lap pool, you will note that many seniors swim daily and maintain a great sense of overall wellbeing, healthy body weight, strength and flexibility, along with a youthful spirit. Those that swim regularly will testify that “we can't live without it” as it provides amazingly positive mind-body and physiological benefits. Some will even tell you it is a spiritual time for them to meditate amidst endless laps. Most importantly, SWIMMING IS FUN!

The benefits of swimming to overall health include:

  • Increased heart and blood vessel strength

  • Helps maintain lower blood pressure

  • Improves lung capacity and breathing

  • Increases muscle strength, endurance, and flexibility

  • Improves sleep

  • Helps with weight loss

  • Improves mental health

  • Helps keep kids and adults safe by preventing drowning

  • Anti-aging and senior sport safety and a great fitness activity for any age

  • Opportunity to compete and be successful

  • Opportunity for camaraderie and friendships

5 Life Lessons You Will Get From Swimming

Swimming Teaches Life Skills.

We always think we aren’t capable, that swimming or life finally has our number, but believe it or not, you will always be as strong as you need to be.

~Olivier Poirier-Leroy

Did you know that swimming can provide you with the tools you need for achieving success later in life?

I am not talking about time management and sportsmanship, although those two things are super important. Nor am I talking about having the ability to deck change faster than Clark Kent turns into Superman, or figuring out how to iron out the goggle and cap marks on your face before yearbook photos.

The following life lessons aren’t things you can put on your resume, and they aren’t taught in a classroom. They are dished out in the school of hard knocks, and if you pay enough attention over the course of your swimming career, you can unleash these lessons to achieve success in whatever endeavor you choose.

Here are 5 valuable life lessons to draw from the countless hours we spend paddling around in big, chlorinated buckets of water:

MAKING BIG IMPROVEMENTS REQUIRES PATIENCE.

Patience has never been something I have been all that good with. Once I decide that I want something, if there is not significant and immediate progress visible quickly I tend to get rather frustrated. I want my awesome swimming goals and I want them five minutes ago.

From the emails I get on a weekly basis, and in watching fellow swimmers over the years I suspect that I am far from alone in this respect.

Often what will result is that you will create a list of unrealistic expectations that match up to the lofty stuff you want to accomplish. Things like having perfect workouts every time out. Or seeing improvement every single session. Or pushing yourself too soon, too fast, landing yourself on the DL.

Long term progress requires patience in the short term.

YOU GOTTA BE ABLE TO PADDLE BEFORE YOU CAN SWIM.

Having those big lofty goals is necessary to achieve success in the pool. You need to have that compass that provides you with direction and purpose over the course of a long season in the pool.

Sometimes those big goals can be our worst enemy, however.

With the excitement of achieving big things on our minds, our veins pumping with excitement and drive, we hurtle headfirst towards our goals with reckless abandon. Overcome with enthusiasm we assume that we can skip the beginning steps, that because we deserve it, because we are more talented, or because we simply don’ t have the time for the necessary work.

Taking baby steps can be infuriatingly too slow for some people, but successful swimmers know that this slow grind provides a cumulative effect that makes a massive dent in the mid and long term.

Success in the pool – and life – is achieved step by step, mistake by mistake, small win by small win.

YOU’RE NOT GOING TO WIN EVERY TIME.

One of the quickest ways to see how people deal with the peaks and valleys in life is to watch them have a bad race.

Do they quietly pout back to the stands, foregoing warm-down and giving up on the rest of the meet? Do they spaz out, punch the touch pad and storm off inconsolably? Or do they walk back to coach, head down, but resolved to bounce back?

Over the course of our swimming career there will be times where you graze the top of the podium, just like there will be times that you place DFL.

You are going to have bad races. There are going to be times where life just doesn’t seem fair, where you should have won but didn’t, those performances that weren’t reflective of the work and commitment you had invested in the water.

The question then becomes, equally in the pool as it applies to life outside of the lane lines—how will you bounce back? What will you do to make that particular setback the best thing to ever happen to you?

RESULTS COME BECAUSE YOU ARE GOOD A LOT, NOT BECAUSE YOU ARE PERFECT SOMETIMES.

I will admit that I have caught myself wearing the perfectionist outlook numerous times over the years.

I mistakenly told myself that every workout had to be a 10/10, took the bad swims personally, and valued myself far too much on what I accomplished in the pool.

The reality is this: Not every workout will go perfectly. Not every race will go according to plan. Mistakes, DQ’s and suit rips will happen. And your self-esteem should not entirely rest on what you do with your swimming.

When we learn to chase greatness instead of perfection in the pool and in life we discover that we are more resilient to failure by creating more realistic goals. By chasing 8’s and 9’s in practice we make far more progress as opposed to expecting every workout be an elusive (and impossible) 10. Chase goals that are challenging, yet realistic, the accomplishment of which pushes us ever further.

IT’S ALL MENTAL.

Swimming, and sport, provides an exceptional proving ground for testing your mental limits.

I cannot count how many times I watched coach write a set up on the board (“oh wow…and he is going to put brackets around that thing too?” and felt myself inwardly cower, mind racing, with thoughts of how badly I was going to die over the course of the set.

But then what happened? I got in. Started the set, and talked myself through it. “Hey, this isn’t so bad.” A little bit later: “Okay, halfway done.” And finally, “I am going to punch this last rep in the face!”

The reality is you never know how shockingly tough you are until you are in the soup, crushing that set even though mere minutes prior you were mentally quivering in your swimsuit. This carries really well into the other challenges you will face in the course of your life. Things like epic writing assignments at university. Taking on large projects in work. Starting a family.

We always think we aren’t capable, that swimming or life finally has our number, but believe it or not, you will always be as strong as you need to be.