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SwimSwam Pulse: 47% Pick Florida Men To Win SEC Title Despite Swimulator Odds

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

SwimSwam Pulse is a recurring feature tracking and analyzing the results of our periodic A3 Performance Polls. You can cast your vote in our newest poll on the SwimSwam homepage, about halfway down the page on the right side, or you can find the poll embedded at the bottom of this post.

Our most recent poll asked SwimSwam readers to pick the winner of next month’s SEC Championships on the men’s side:

RESULTS

Question: Who will win the 2020 Men’s SEC title?

  • Florida – 47.3%
  • Texas A&M – 25.4%
  • Georgia – 10.8%
  • Missouri – 7.1%
  • Tennessee – 7.1%
  • Someone else – 2.2%

Swimulator projections have Texas A&M winning the men’s SEC title with a 230-point margin over Florida, but voters strongly favored the Gators in our poll.

The Swimulator is based entirely off of regular-season performances, so there can be plenty of flux when teams taper down for post-season competition. For example, as of this date last year, Florida was projected 106.5 points behind Mizzou in the Swimulator, but ultimately beat the Tigers by almost 100 points. However, Florida is more than twice as far back of the Swimulator leaders this year, so a comeback would take an even bigger conference performance.

Florida got 47.3% of the total votes, compared to 25.4% for Texas A&M. Georgia sits second in the Swimulator, and they got just over 10% of the votes. Missouri and Tennessee tied for fourth in our poll, with only 2.2% of voters picking the field.

 

Below, vote in our new A3 Performance Pollwhich continues our series on conference championships, asking voters to predict the women’s ACC champions:

Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post's poll.

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ABOUT A3 PERFORMANCE

A3 Performance is an independently-owned, performance swimwear company built on a passion for swimming, athletes, and athletic performance. We encourage swimmers to swim better and faster at all ages and levels, from beginners to Olympians.  Driven by a genuine leader and devoted staff that are passionate about swimming and service, A3 Performance strives to inspire and enrich the sport of swimming with innovative and impactful products that motivate swimmers to be their very best – an A3 Performer.

The A3 Performance Poll is courtesy of A3 Performance, a SwimSwam partner

Read the full story on SwimSwam: SwimSwam Pulse: 47% Pick Florida Men To Win SEC Title Despite Swimulator Odds


Giappone: Konami Open – 275 Mila Dollari Per I Record Del Mondo

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

KONAMI OPEN 2020

  • Sabato 15/Domenica 16 Febbraio 2020
  • Tatsumi International Swimming Centre, Tokyo, Japan
  • Vasca Lunga
  • Meet Information

In Giappone, dopo la Kosuke Kitajima Cup che è andata in scena la scorsa settimana, è già tempo di altri meeting di alto profilo.

Sono tre gli appuntamenti in vasca lunga che proiettano i giapponesi verso le Olimpiadi casalinghe.

La Kosuke Kitajima Cup, Kirara Cup e il Konami Open 2020, che si svolgerà a Tokyo il 15 e 16 Febbraio prossimi.

Ad Aprile, poi, è previsto l’evento più significativo: i Japan Swim. Questi ultimi rappresenteranno l’unica opportunità di qualificazione per le Olimpiadi di Tokyo.

Fa eccezioneDaiya Seto, che ha guadagnato la qualificazione con la doppia medaglia d’oro ai Mondiali di Gwangju nei 200 e 400 metri misti maschili.

Per accaparrarsi l’elite del nuoto giapponese, gli organizzatori del 36° Konami Open hanno arricchito i premi della manifestazione.

Tra i premi, il più allettante riguarda il Record del Mondo.

Chi dovesse infrangere un World Record durante la manifestazione porterà a casa un bonus di 275 mila dollari.

In palio c’è anche un premio del valore di 5 milioni di yen (circa 50.000 dollari USA) per ogni nuotatore giapponese che al meeting produca un nuovo record nazionale.

Storicamente, il Konami Open ha visto alcune performance degne di nota. Nell’edizione 2018, Katsumi Nakamurafissò il record nazionale nei 100 metri stile libero (47.87), ancora imbattuto. Nel 2016, Rikako Ikee stabilì invece il Record Mondiale Junior a soli 15 anni.

La medaglia d’argento ai Campionati del Mondo Katsuhiro Matsumoto sarà presente all’evento. Matsumoto ha già nuotato quest’anno 1:45.82 nella sua gara di punta, i 200 metri stile libero.

Alla due giorni di gare è stata invitata la nazionale giapponese convocata ai Campionati del Mondo del 2019 e la squadra nazionale Juniores.

approfondimento a cura di Retta Race

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Giappone: Konami Open – 275 Mila Dollari Per I Record Del Mondo

Eastern Michigan Awards $125,000 to 2 Athletes in Lawsuit Settlement

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By Torrey Hart on SwimSwam

Eastern Michigan University has agreed to pay out $125,000 to two student-athletes affected by the school’s athletics cuts in 2018, as well as commit $2 million to women’s sports on campus, MLive.com reported last week.

Tennis team member Marie Mayerova and former softball team member Ariana Chretien sued the school in June 2018 claiming EMU “was not providing effective accommodation to female student-athletes,” according to MLive. Mayerova, whose team was reinstated, will receive $25,000, and Chretien, whose team was not, will get $100,000. They’ll also be reimbursed for their legal fees.

Claims against EMU, its Board of Regents, Athletic Director Scott Wetherbee and President James Smith were dismissed as part of the agreement, MLive reported.

In March 2018, EMU announced it would cut women’s tennis and softball, as well as men’s swimming and diving, and wrestling, in an effort to lower its athletics budget by $2.4 million. In February of last year, a judge ruled that EMU must reinstate both women’s tennis and softball, but the school argued that instead of softball, it should start a women’s lacrosse program. That program will begin in the 2021-2022 school year.

Per MLive, the settlement agreement also includes the following:

  • EMU agrees to take steps to achieve sustainable “substantial proportionality” between the ratio of male to female athletic participation opportunities to the ratio of male to female full-time undergraduate students attending the University by the end of the 2022-23 academic year.

  • EMU agrees it will not eliminate any women’s varsity sports during the settlement period unless the elimination is the result of circumstances beyond its control, or the elimination will not cause participation of women to fall below the level of substantial proportionality. The settlement neither requires nor prohibits the elimination of any men’s varsity team.

  • EMU agrees to take steps to manage the roster sizes of men’s and women’s sports as are necessary to achieve substantial proportionality.

  • The University will commit at least $2 million more in total investment to women’s sports on campus over the course of the next three years, in addition to funding the lacrosse program. This amount includes capital projects as well as operations.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Eastern Michigan Awards $125,000 to 2 Athletes in Lawsuit Settlement

Competitor Coach of the Month: Dave Geyer, LSU

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

Competitor Coach of the Month is a recurring SwimSwam feature shedding light on a U.S.-based coach who has risen above the competition. As with any item of recognition, Competitor Coach of the Month is a subjective exercise meant to highlight one coach whose work holds noteworthy context – perhaps a coach who was clearly in the limelight, or one whose work fell through the cracks a bit more among other stories. If your favorite coach wasn’t selected, feel free to respectfully recognize them in our comment section.

The schedule looked brutal for LSU heading into January.

January 9: a Thursday dual against Missouri, ranked #13 for women and #11 for men. Two days later, a road trip to Delta State. Six days after that, another home dual against a ranked opponent: Florida State, ranked #18 on the men’s side. The following day, a battle with SEC foe Texas A&M (#17 women, #6 men).

But through that span, LSU came up with arguably the upset of the season, with the LSU women beating Mizzou 151-149. The next week, the women topped Florida State while the unranked Tiger men came within 4 of upsetting the Seminoles.

Coach Dave Geyer has the LSU men and women surging into the post-season. For the month of January, freshman Niamh Robinson ranks #4 in the nation in the 200 breast (2:10.42) and #19 in the 100 breast (1:01.35), junior Cassie Kalisz #7 in the 200 back (1:55.43), freshman Katarina Milutinovich#13 in the 200 free (1:47.66), freshman Summer Stanfield #17 in the 500 free (4:48.21) and senior Helen Grossman #19 in the 100 fly (53.94). On the men’s side, senior Karl Luht is #1 in the nation over the month of January in the 200 back (1:42.81) and #2 in the 100 back (46.09), junior Luca Pfyffer#11 in the 200 breast (1:58.27), freshman Brooks Curry#14 in the 200 free (1:36.70) and senior Lewis Clough #17 in the 100 fly (47.59).

 

About Competitor Swim

Since 1960, Competitor Swim® has been the leader in the production of racing lanes and other swim products for competitions around the world. Competitor lane lines have been used in countless NCAA Championships, as well as 10 of the past 13 Olympic Games. Molded and assembled using U.S. – made components, Competitor lane lines are durable, easy to set up and are sold through distributors and dealers worldwide.

Competitor Swim is a SwimSwam partner. 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Competitor Coach of the Month: Dave Geyer, LSU

Dolfin Swim of the Week: Shoma Sato Rising To Top of Japan’s 200 BR Ranks

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

Disclaimer: Dolfin Swim of the Week is not meant to be a conclusive selection of the best overall swim of the week, but rather one Featured Swim to be explored in deeper detail. The  Dolfin Swim is an opportunity to take a closer look at the context of one of the many fast swims this week, perhaps a swim that slipped through the cracks as others grabbed the headlines, or a race we didn’t get to examine as closely in the flood of weekly meets.

18-year-old Shoma Sato is quickly making a name for himself in one of the world’s deepest breaststroke nations. His 2:07.58 in the 200 breast this week puts him in the top 20 of all-time for swimmers of any nationality.

For the 2019 season (September 2018 through August 2019), Japan had five men ranked in the top 25 in the world in the 200 breast. That’s more than any nation besides the United States, which had seven of the top 25. (The only others close were Russia with four and Australia/Great Britain with two apiece).

Facing one of the toughest Olympic qualifying fields of any nation, the young Sato is steadily rising. He was 2:09.56 to win World Juniors silver last summer, checking in as the 25th-fastest swimmer of any age in the world for the season. But this week at the Kitajima Cup in Japan, Sato went 2:07.58, cutting almost two full seconds from his previous time and moving to #2 in the world this season – just three tenths behind Australia’s Zach Stubblety-Cook.

Sato moves up to #19 all-time, just .07 behind the legendary Kosuke Kitajimawhose name still adorns the high-profile meet where Sato had his big swim. Only three men have ever been under 2:07 in the event, but Sato has a chance to join them, either at the Tokyo Olympics in front of a home crowd, or perhaps even earlier.

 

About Dolfin Swimwear

Dolfin Swimwear represents quality and value. We are committed to supplying our customers with a durable swim suit and an affordable price. We also will continue to be the innovaters for fun and unique practice/training suits which gives swimmers something to smile about…even during grueling workouts.

About Dolfin’s Tech Suit LightStrike

LightStrikeTM was developed after years of research in biomechanics, active drag analysis, fabric innovation, and compression analysis. This new FINA approved suit is supported by Dr. Genadijus Sokolovas, PhD in Biomechanics and former Performance Director with USA Swimming and Styku® 3D Biomapping Engineering.

Visit Dolfin to learn more.

Instagram @DolfinSwimwear

Twitter: @DolfinSwim

Facebook: DolfinSwimwear 

Dolfin is a SwimSwam partner.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Dolfin Swim of the Week: Shoma Sato Rising To Top of Japan’s 200 BR Ranks

Eastern Michigan Awards $125,000 to 2 Athletes in Lawsuit Settlement

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By Torrey Hart on SwimSwam

Eastern Michigan University has agreed to pay out $125,000 to two student-athletes affected by the school’s athletics cuts in 2018, as well as commit $2 million to women’s sports on campus, MLive.com reported last week.

Tennis team member Marie Mayerova and former softball team member Ariana Chretien sued the school in June 2018 claiming EMU “was not providing effective accommodation to female student-athletes,” according to MLive. Mayerova, whose team was reinstated, will receive $25,000, and Chretien, whose team was not, will get $100,000. They’ll also be reimbursed for their legal fees.

Claims against EMU, its Board of Regents, Athletic Director Scott Wetherbee and President James Smith were dismissed as part of the agreement, MLive reported.

In March 2018, EMU announced it would cut women’s tennis and softball, as well as men’s swimming and diving, and wrestling, in an effort to lower its athletics budget by $2.4 million. In February of last year, a judge ruled that EMU must reinstate both women’s tennis and softball, but the school argued that instead of softball, it should start a women’s lacrosse program. That program will begin in the 2021-2022 school year.

Per MLive, the settlement agreement also includes the following:

  • EMU agrees to take steps to achieve sustainable “substantial proportionality” between the ratio of male to female athletic participation opportunities to the ratio of male to female full-time undergraduate students attending the University by the end of the 2022-23 academic year.

  • EMU agrees it will not eliminate any women’s varsity sports during the settlement period unless the elimination is the result of circumstances beyond its control, or the elimination will not cause participation of women to fall below the level of substantial proportionality. The settlement neither requires nor prohibits the elimination of any men’s varsity team.

  • EMU agrees to take steps to manage the roster sizes of men’s and women’s sports as are necessary to achieve substantial proportionality.

  • The University will commit at least $2 million more in total investment to women’s sports on campus over the course of the next three years, in addition to funding the lacrosse program. This amount includes capital projects as well as operations.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Eastern Michigan Awards $125,000 to 2 Athletes in Lawsuit Settlement

$275,000 USD Offered For World Record Broken At Upcoming Konami Open

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By Retta Race on SwimSwam

2020 KONAMI OPEN

  • Saturday, February 15th & Sunday, February 16th
  • Tatsumi International Swimming Centre, Tokyo, Japan
  • LCM
  • Meet Information

The 2020 Kosuke Kitajima Cup, which just concluded last weekend, represented the first of a trio of annual high-profile Japanese swimming meets bringing us into the height of the Olympic preparation season.

Along with the Kirara Cup, set for February 7th-9th and the Konami Open, slated for February 15th-16th, the three meets hold extra significance in this Olympic year, giving both veterans and rising swimming stars within Japan additional chances to fine-tune their racing craft before the all-important Japan Swim.

Set for April, the Japan Swim represents the nation’s Olympic Trials and the sole qualification opportunity for athletes to qualify for a home nation-hosted 2020 Summer Olympic Games. An exception to this is Daiya Seto, Japan’s first-ever double IM World Champion.

Olympic medalist Seto clocked a 400m IM winning effort of 4:08.95 and a 200m IM mark of 1:56.14 to top the podium twice last year in Gwangju. His gold medals automatically qualified the versatile star for both events for this year’s Olympic Games, per Japan’s Olympic selection policy.

To bring out the best in the racers competing next month, organizers of the 36th Konami Open have sweetened the pot big-time in terms of incentives, offering up a whopping 30 million yen prize to anyone who breaks a World Record at the meet. That equates to approximately $275,000 for anyone who fires off the fastest time ever in an event, across men’s or women’s races. (Nikkei)

Also up for grabs is a prize worth 5 million yen (approximately $50,000 USD) for any Japanese swimmer who produces a new national record at the meet.

Historically, the Konami Open has seen some stellar performances, including Katsumi Nakamura‘s still-on-the-books 100m free national record of 47.87 from the 2018 edition. At the last Olympic year competition, Rikako Ikee clocked a new World Junior Record of 24.74 at just 15 years of age.

Already this year, 18-year-old Shoma Sato rocked a big-time 2:07.58 200m breast swim to register an unofficial World Junior Record and sit under a second away from Ippei Watanabe‘s national record of 2:06.67 from 2017.

Ageless wonder Ryosuke Irie is also displaying impressive form, nailing a time of 52.59 last week to come within .35 of his own national record in the 100m back.

World Championships silver medalist Katsuhiro Matsumoto is also a name to mention for producing something special, clocking a winning time of 1:45.82 already this year in his signature event of the 200m freestyle.

Along with the Japnese national team, the nation’s World Junior Swimming Championships squad and Junior Elite squad have been invited to this 2-day affair.

With the aforementioned kind of money on the line, in addition to the increased adrenaline infused into Japanese swimmers longing to represent their country this summer on a home stage, anything can happen.

Among Women Invitees:

Tomomi Aoki

Reona Aoki

Chihiro Igarashi

Nagisa Ikemoto

Runa Imai

Yui Ohashi

Waka Kobori

Rio Shirai

Satomi Suzuki

Suzuka Hasegawa

Among Men Invitees:

Shinnosuke Ishikawa

Ryosuke Irie

Naito Ehara

Shinri Shioura

Daiya Seto

Katsumi Nakamura

Yoshida Keisuke

Shoma Sato

Read the full story on SwimSwam: $275,000 USD Offered For World Record Broken At Upcoming Konami Open

Tickets Now on Sale for Des Moines Pro Swim Series

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By SwimSwam on SwimSwam

Courtesy: USA Swimming

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Tickets are now on sale for the 2020 TYR Pro Swim Series at Des Moines event, which will take place from March 4-7 at the MidAmerican Energy Aquatic Center at the Wellmark YMCA in downtown Des Moines, Iowa. Tickets are available at usaswimming.org/tickets.

One the most competitive domestic events series on the calendar, USA Swimming’s TYR Pro Swim Series attracts between 400-600 of the world’s top swimmers, including USA Swimming National Team members, National Junior Team members and top 50 world-ranked swimmers. Events will be televised on the NBC Sports family of networks and via live stream on usaswimming.org.

Des Moines previously hosted the event last March, when current U.S. National Team members won 27 of 39 events. Michael Andrew (Encinitas, Calif./Race Pace Club) impressed the Iowa crowd, recording seven wins over the four-day competition, marking the highest win total at a single TYR Pro Swim Series competition in 2019. Andrew is expected to compete in Des Moines again at this year’s event.

Also slated to compete are Olympic medalists Caeleb Dressel (Green Cove Springs, Fla./Gator Swim Club) and Kathleen Baker (Winston Salem, N.C./Team Elite), both of whom recorded wins in Des Moines in 2019. Other Olympians joining Dressel and Baker in Des Moines are the decorated duo of Katie Ledecky (Bethesda, Md./Alto Swim Club) and Nathan Adrian (Bremerton, Wash./California Aquatics). Should Adrian enter the Des Moines water, it would be just his second TYR Pro Swim Series performance since his return to swimming following his cancer diagnosis in January of 2019.

The competition marks the third of five stops on the 2020 TYR Pro Swim Series calendar. Previous stops include Greensboro and Knoxville, while the series will continue in Mission Viejo and Indianapolis this spring. For the full TYR Pro Swim Series schedule, visit usaswimming.org.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Tickets Now on Sale for Des Moines Pro Swim Series


What Happened To Racing?

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By SwimSwam on SwimSwam

By Dr. Zachary Hojnacki

How Was Your Race?

Coach: “Good job, how do you feel about that swim?”

Swimmer: *shakes head* “That was terrible.”

Coach: “Why do you feel that way — your stroke technique was strong and efficient, and you executed the race well.”

Swimmer: “Because I added…”

Our program recently traveled across the country from New York to Arizona to compete in a terrific and uniquely formatted competition hosted by Phoenix Swim Club called the Arizona Dual Meet Championships. Aside from the benefits the team travel experience provided for our 14 & under athletes in their developmental process, the dual meet format brought out the best in our kids.  It was a significant departure from the traditional weekend swim meet experience, where the emphasis is often on maximizing the number of events swum and personal best times achieved.  This weekend was instead about racing: fighting for first not only for yourself, but for your team. Competition is pure and fun, and somewhat lacking in today’s swim experience. I believe we have somewhat overcorrected and could benefit as a sport from shifting our emphasis back towards racing.

Where We Got Lost

I suspect that in the early stages of the sport, competition was the primary focus.  Somewhere along the way, coaches and parents encouraged athletes to direct their attention towards improving their personal best times as a means to discourage obsessive comparisons to the success of other athletes, and to instead prioritize self-improvement.  I agree that is a healthy and appropriate mindset, and that constant comparisons to other swimmers is a recipe for constant disappointment and discouragement.

However, it feels as though we have veered off course from what that mindset was originally intended to promote.  Walking around the pool deck, speaking to my own athletes or listening to the conversations of others, times are often the only focus. Evaluation of race outcomes has become binary – drop time = good swim, add time = bad swim. As athletes grow older and less frequently perform their personal bests, their relationship with the sport begins to sour.  Even as they understand that a personal best time is not a realistic expectation at certain phases of the season, there is a tendency to compare times to past seasons or to other swimmers in an effort to project taper times.  If those times don’t meet the swimmers’ expectations, they are quick to panic and self-doubt creeps in. For some, there is a decreased willingness to compete in meets during the phases of training where fast swims are least likely, even as these competitions are important prerequisites for end-of-season breakthroughs.

What We Are Communicating to Young People

Parent: “Nice racing today!  3 out of 4 best times! We just need to fix that backstroke!”

Parent: “What happened out there?  Why were you so far off your best? Is something wrong?”

Coach: *Emphatically* “You dropped 3 seconds!”

As adults, we are culpable here.  Post-race feedback is often littered with discussion about races in terms of total time, proximity to best, etc., rather than objective evaluation on the basis of execution of strategy, technical proficiency, or in the context of training performances and goals.  We reward athletes for achieving personal best times by congratulating them and affirming the accomplishments as if they were solely a reflection of effort. The truth is that personal best times can be accomplished with less than maximal effort and poor execution, while swims slower than your previous best can be effortful and flawlessly performed.

The Stats

I believe that the overemphasis on racing times is somewhat dangerous, particularly for older athletes.  The national average improvement percentage for a 15-16-year-old girl in 2019 was .93%. The picture for 17-18 girls was bleaker still, with an average of negative.3%.When our communications exclusively reward personal bests and demand explanation for swims that fail to meet that criterion, it implies that swimming our best is merely a reinforceable behavior as opposed to a complex and challenging long-term pursuit.  This also suggests failure is always controllable and completely avoidable — which, in a sport where failure is incredibly common, is extremely demoralizing and simply not true.

It is important that our coaching leadership educate athletes on the impact growth and maturation has on performance in swimming, particularly for young girls.  Besides keeping young people enrolled in the sport, perseverance often pays off for those that can transition into strong collegiate athletes. Each year, I sit down with our teenage swimmers to discuss how age and physical maturity may impact short-term outcomes in the near future.  The examples of well-known Olympic athletes below illustrates how drawn out plateaus can be, but also how successfully navigating those challenging phases can pay dividends in the long-term.

Missy Franklin-

200 Bk:

  • 12->13: 2% improvement          13->14: 4% improvement
  • 14->15: <1% improvement        15->16: 2% improvement (Olympic Qualifier)
  • 16->17: <1% improvement (World Record)      1

Cammile Adams-

200 Fly:

  • 12->13: 0% improvement         13->14: 6% improvement
  • 14->15: <1% improvement       15->16: 0% improvement
  • 16->17:<1% improvement        17->20: No improvement (added time)
  • 20->23: 3% improvement (Olympic Qualifier)

Let’s Race!

Which brings me back to my original point.  I think it’s time to re-emphasize racing. In swimming, you have an opportunity to compete against seven or more others every time you dive in for a race.  We are built to compete — the human body responds physiologically to competitive demands by providing chemicals that enhance performance. It is often when athletes get caught up in a great battle against the person next to them that they are able to give additional effort and energy that leads to extraordinary performances for both parties.  Competition has a winner and loser, which forces young people to learn how to be both. There is a subtle distinction between confidence and arrogance, or humility and self-deprecation, and we as a society will benefit from cultivating the former of each. Racing also draws attention to realistic expectations for athletes of similar ages and in season phases; as we work to educate our young swimmers on how the competition calendar interfaces with season training plans, we can point to others and note that competing well within your heat is reflective of the fact that you are on the right path.

This shift in tone is important and necessary because our sport is at times brutal and unforgiving.  Swimming requires an incredible sacrifice of time and a comparatively absurd workload to many other sports — and yet the payoffs are often infrequent.  As coaches, our responsibility is to guide the swimmers through the hardest phases of the season so they can see success at the end of the tunnel. I think by encouraging and rewarding racing too, instead of simply performances times, we will find that our swimmers have another way to measure success, and subsequently have more fun and are more motivated as they see progress in one area when the other is stagnant, and vice versa.  More importantly, I think it encourages a healthier relationship with the sport that could address some of the issues of attrition and end-of-career plateau that we too often see.

Coach: “Let’s not obsesses about how much you added or dropped from your personal best.  Let’s discuss your racing splits, technical proficiency, and strategy in relation to recent training markers, the current season phase and your long-term goals. What does this race tell us about how we can continue to improve our daily preparation?”

Parent: “You raced hard today and I’m proud of you. I always love watching you swim.”

Key Takeaways

In my doctoral research at Arizona, I studied the roles that mindfulness and acceptance play in regulating performance under pressure in sports.  There is compelling evidence that suggests that adopting a mindful, non-judgmental approach to daily practice in sports can enhance long-term performance outcomes (Gooding & Gardner, 2009; Thompson et al., 2011; Zhang et al., 2016).  I posit that this is in part because athletes that practice this approach are able to separate their emotional responses from their objective evaluations of performance outcomes and are therefore more likely to learn from failure and remain motivated.  This is a daily approach to sports that leads to more consistency and effort over time, which ultimately is the key to success in anything.  We can contribute to this healthier attitude about performance by being mindful of what we say to young people about their performances, encourage using multiple objective measures to evaluate outcomes. Finally, let’s remember that swimming is not just about times, but also racing.  I think we would all do well to remind ourselves of that.

About Dr. Zachary Hojnacki

Zac is currently the head coach of the BGNW Marlins in Mount Kisco, NY. He swam for the University of Arizona from 2009-2012, qualifying for the 2012 Olympic Trials in the 200 breaststroke, and the 2013 World Championship Trials in the 100 breaststroke. In 2017, he received a PhD in Educational Psychology from the University of Arizona, where he studied the role stress and mindfulness play on athlete performance under pressure. Zac is passionate about utilizing athlete education to develop a well-rounded, self-sufficient person in and out of the pool.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: What Happened To Racing?

Caccia Al Pass Olimpico: I Meeting Internazionali Di Febbraio

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By Aglaia Pezzato on SwimSwam

La stagione olimpica che porterà a Tokyo 2020 sta entrando nel vivo. Conclusa la prima parte che ha visto molti eventi di alto livello disputati in vasca da 25 metri (come il campionato europeo di Glasgow o la ISL), ora i fari sono tutti puntati sulla vasca lunga.

Moltissimi atleti che hanno nel mirino le Olimpiadi amano gareggiare in questi mesi, chi per testare la propria condizione, chi per guadagnare il proprio pass per l’evento a cinque cerchi.

Alcune nazioni hanno in calendario dei veri e propri trials di qualifica mentre altri non hanno specificato nel loro regolamento l’evento durante il quale gli atleti devo conseguire il tempo-limite. In questi casi è disposta una finestra di tempo all’interno della quale ciascuno può decidere il proprio programma gare e tentare il colpo.

Questo significa che ci aspettiamo grandi prestazioni in ogni Meeting Internazionale che si terrà in questo periodo.

Il mese di febbraio sarà denso di appuntamenti in giro per il mondo, ecco una lista delle gare in programma.

INTERNATIONAL MEETING FEBBRAIO 2020

South Africa Grand Prix #2, Cape Town (RSA) 31/01– 02/02

Karl Dalhouse Memorial Invitational (JAM) 31/01 – 02/02

Meeting Internacional da Povoa de Varzim (POR) 01/02 – 02/02

Kirara Cup (JPN) 07/02 –09/02

Golden Tour Camille Muffat, Nice (FRA) 07/02 –09/02

Olympiaqualifikationswettkampf Magdeburg (GER) 07/02 –09/02

Midmar Mile (RSA) 08/02

HPS Grand Prix Victoria (CRO) 08/02-09/02

Internacional de Lisboa (POR) 08/02-09/02

Hamilton Middle East Open & Junoir Championships (QAT) 13/02-15/02

British Universities & Colleges (BUCS) Long Course Championships (GBR) 14/02-16/02

Victoria Open (AUS) 14/02-16/02

Konami Open (JPN) 14/02-16/02

Singapore Swim Series 2 (SGP) 14/02-16/02

Open FFBN Swimming Championships (BEL) 14/02-16/02

Greek Winter Open Swimming Championships (GRE) 14/02-16/02

Dubocica Cup (SRB) 15/02-16/02

Madwave Challenge (EST) 15/02-16/02

McCullagh International (IRL) 20/02-23/02

Open Natacao da Madeira (POR) 21/02-23/02

South Africa Grand Prix #3, Durban (RSA) 21/02-23/02

UANA Swimming Cup (PER) 21/02-23/02

Flemish Championships (BEL) 21/02-23/02

Lithuanian Winter Championships (LTU) 21/02-22/02

South Australia Division 1, Meet 3 (AUS) 22/02

Open Absoluto Invierno Comunidad de Madrid (ESP) 28/02-01/03

96th Latvian Open Swimming Championships (LAT) 28/02-01/03

Berlin Swim Open (GER) 28/02-01/03

10th Citta di Milano Trophy (ITA) 28/02-29/02

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Caccia Al Pass Olimpico: I Meeting Internazionali Di Febbraio

World Championships 4th-Place Finisher Philip Heintz Reinjures Hip

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

German swimmer Philip Heintz, fresh off becoming the 2nd German to hit a qualifying standard to the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games last weekend, has re-injured his hip. Heintz missed a medal at last summer’s World Championships in the 200 IM by less than a tenth of a second.

While training on Tuesday evening, Heintz says that he felt pain in his hip similar to what he felt at last summer’s World Championships, where the injury forced him out of the 400 IM final. After going to the doctor, the diagnosis is another hip injury, though Heintz says that it’s not as severe as the one he had last summer.

“I’m forced to take a break,” Heintz posted on his Instagram account. “I don’t know how long it will take. Hopefully not longer (than) 2 weeks, otherwise my belly will return,” he joked.

SwimTopia – Swim Software That’s Easy to Learn and Use

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By SwimSwam Partner Content on SwimSwam

Courtesy: Swim Topia, a SwimSwam partner. 

Swim Software That Simplifies Running Your Team
SwimTopia has managed to create swim team and meet software that’s perfect for summer swim team admins, who don’t have time to learn complex and cumbersome software. Swim team admins need three things in their software—an intuitive interface, features that are easy to learn and use, and responsive and helpful customer support—and, according to their customers, SwimTopia nails all three.

Intuitive Interface

“We tried a few different team management solutions with various levels of frustration. Swimtopia was the first where the coaches and administrators needed minimal training or instruction. It was very intuitive for them.”

– Michael S., Pinole Seals

 

Easy to Learn & Use

“Last year, our summer league team adopted SwimTopia and went from four separate registration, email communication, instant communication, and team management systems to one. The functionality is intuitive, mobile and, best of all, easy to learn. Our coaches, reps, and parents have all been very pleased!”

– Jennifer B., Windyrush Dolphins

Exceptional Support

“I can’t imagine life running the swim team without a tool as effective as SwimTopia. SwimTopia’s customer support is fantastic—always responsive and knowledgeable.”

– Joe P., Mt Carmel Hammerheads

 

SwimTopia’s mission is to eliminate hassle, save time, and—most importantly—to have happy customers. This is why SwimTopia customer support is provided by a team of Customer Happiness Specialists. Many teams have switched to SwimTopia after first trying other solutions. SwimTopia can provide references to customers with experience switching from a solution your team might be using or considering. Just ask.

It’s easy to get started and check out SwimTopia for yourself with a 2-week free trial. SwimTopia’s summer/rec pricing averages to less than $3 per swimmer, per year. There are no setup fees and no hidden fees, and that one low price covers all SwimTopia and Meet Maestro features:

Meet management

  • Fully integrated meet management with Meet Maestro
    ($150/year value)
  • CTS Dolphin compatibility

Swim team management

  • Custom website and hosting
  • Online registration
  • Meet entry management
  • Volunteer management
  • Flexible communications—email and push alerts
  • Merchandise sales
  • Meet and event RSVPs
  • Calendar syncing
  • Records tracking
  • Robust reports

Companion mobile app

  • Push notifications for team alerts
  • Live event/heat bar
  • Family overview
  • Live results (with Pro subscription)

Courtesy: SwimTopia, a SwimSwam partner. 


About SwimTopia: Launched in 2011 with a focus on ease-of-use and exceptional support, SwimTopia helps summer and high school swim teams save time and increase fundraising with a modern, cloud-based software platform providing web content management, electronic commerce, online registration, volunteer coordination, team communications, online swim meet entries, meet management, and more. SwimTopia is the flagship product of Austin-based Team Topia Inc.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: SwimTopia – Swim Software That’s Easy to Learn and Use

Ultra Swim Swimmer of the Month: Miriam Guevara, Northwestern

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

Ultra Swim Swimmer of the Month is a recurring SwimSwam feature shedding light on a U.S.-based swimmer who has proven themselves over the past month. As with any item of recognition, Swimmer of the Month is a subjective exercise meant to highlight one athlete whose work holds noteworthy context – perhaps a swimmer who was visibly outperforming other swimmers over the month, or one whose accomplishments slipped through the cracks among other high-profile swims. If your favorite athlete wasn’t selected, feel free to respectfully recognize them in our comment section.

The month of January for the Northwestern Wildcats:

  • Jan. 2-3: vs Arizona & Northern Arizona
  • Jan. 4: vs Arizona State
  • Jan. 9: vs Louisville
  • Jan. 17: vs Notre Dame
  • Jan. 18: vs Iowa
  • Jan. 24: vs Cincinnati
  • Jan. 25: vs Wisconsin

If that’s not a racing-heavy January, we’re not sure what is. But that flood of meets also allowed sophomore Miriam Guevara to account for 10 individual wins and multiple game-changing relay splits.

Guevara swept the 100/200 flys against Arizona and NAU. She did the same against Arizona State. She won the 200 again against Louisville, swept both against Iowa and won the 100 back against Cincinnati before returning to the 100/200 flys to win both against Wisconsin.

Opponent100 Fly200 Fly100 Back200 Back
Arizona/NAU54.592:00.74
ASU54.611:59.28
Louisville54.521:59.69
Notre Dame1:59.40
Iowa55.122:01.38
Cincinnati53.632:00.01
Wisconsin55.092:00.01

Compare to her best swims from last year: in January of 2019, Guevara’s best swims were 54.6/2:01.8 in backstroke, along with 53.9 in free, though she was 54.1 in fly.

Thanks in large part to Guevara, Northwestern’s women went 6-2 over the month of January, with their only losses to #14 Louisville and regular-season standouts Notre Dame.

 

About Ultra Swim 

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Ultra Swim is a SwimSwam partner. 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Ultra Swim Swimmer of the Month: Miriam Guevara, Northwestern

Olympians Lead Swim Clinic in Boston

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Olympic medalists Cullen Jones and Elizabeth Beisel helped members of the Boston Celtics kick off their swimming education by presenting players with swim caps and goggles, as well as leading a swim clinic in the Boston area. Celtics rookie Grant Williams participated in the swim clinic led by Jones, Beisel, as well as US Masters Swimming instructor Sue Jensen, along with members of the Charlestown Boys and Girls Club.

What Happened To Racing?

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By SwimSwam on SwimSwam

By Dr. Zachary Hojnacki

How Was Your Race?

Coach: “Good job, how do you feel about that swim?”

Swimmer: *shakes head* “That was terrible.”

Coach: “Why do you feel that way — your stroke technique was strong and efficient, and you executed the race well.”

Swimmer: “Because I added…”

Our program recently traveled across the country from New York to Arizona to compete in a terrific and uniquely formatted competition hosted by Phoenix Swim Club called the Arizona Dual Meet Championships. Aside from the benefits the team travel experience provided for our 14 & under athletes in their developmental process, the dual meet format brought out the best in our kids.  It was a significant departure from the traditional weekend swim meet experience, where the emphasis is often on maximizing the number of events swum and personal best times achieved.  This weekend was instead about racing: fighting for first not only for yourself, but for your team. Competition is pure and fun, and somewhat lacking in today’s swim experience. I believe we have somewhat overcorrected and could benefit as a sport from shifting our emphasis back towards racing.

Where We Got Lost

I suspect that in the early stages of the sport, competition was the primary focus.  Somewhere along the way, coaches and parents encouraged athletes to direct their attention towards improving their personal best times as a means to discourage obsessive comparisons to the success of other athletes, and to instead prioritize self-improvement.  I agree that is a healthy and appropriate mindset, and that constant comparisons to other swimmers is a recipe for constant disappointment and discouragement.

However, it feels as though we have veered off course from what that mindset was originally intended to promote.  Walking around the pool deck, speaking to my own athletes or listening to the conversations of others, times are often the only focus. Evaluation of race outcomes has become binary – drop time = good swim, add time = bad swim. As athletes grow older and less frequently perform their personal bests, their relationship with the sport begins to sour.  Even as they understand that a personal best time is not a realistic expectation at certain phases of the season, there is a tendency to compare times to past seasons or to other swimmers in an effort to project taper times.  If those times don’t meet the swimmers’ expectations, they are quick to panic and self-doubt creeps in. For some, there is a decreased willingness to compete in meets during the phases of training where fast swims are least likely, even as these competitions are important prerequisites for end-of-season breakthroughs.

What We Are Communicating to Young People

Parent: “Nice racing today!  3 out of 4 best times! We just need to fix that backstroke!”

Parent: “What happened out there?  Why were you so far off your best? Is something wrong?”

Coach: *Emphatically* “You dropped 3 seconds!”

As adults, we are culpable here.  Post-race feedback is often littered with discussion about races in terms of total time, proximity to best, etc., rather than objective evaluation on the basis of execution of strategy, technical proficiency, or in the context of training performances and goals.  We reward athletes for achieving personal best times by congratulating them and affirming the accomplishments as if they were solely a reflection of effort. The truth is that personal best times can be accomplished with less than maximal effort and poor execution, while swims slower than your previous best can be effortful and flawlessly performed.

The Stats

I believe that the overemphasis on racing times is somewhat dangerous, particularly for older athletes.  The national average improvement percentage for a 15-16-year-old girl in 2019 was .93%. The picture for 17-18 girls was bleaker still, with an average of negative.3%.When our communications exclusively reward personal bests and demand explanation for swims that fail to meet that criterion, it implies that swimming our best is merely a reinforceable behavior as opposed to a complex and challenging long-term pursuit.  This also suggests failure is always controllable and completely avoidable — which, in a sport where failure is incredibly common, is extremely demoralizing and simply not true.

It is important that our coaching leadership educate athletes on the impact growth and maturation has on performance in swimming, particularly for young girls.  Besides keeping young people enrolled in the sport, perseverance often pays off for those that can transition into strong collegiate athletes. Each year, I sit down with our teenage swimmers to discuss how age and physical maturity may impact short-term outcomes in the near future.  The examples of well-known Olympic athletes below illustrates how drawn out plateaus can be, but also how successfully navigating those challenging phases can pay dividends in the long-term.

Missy Franklin-

200 Bk:

  • 12->13: 2% improvement          13->14: 4% improvement
  • 14->15: <1% improvement        15->16: 2% improvement (Olympic Qualifier)
  • 16->17: <1% improvement (World Record)      1

Cammile Adams-

200 Fly:

  • 12->13: 0% improvement         13->14: 6% improvement
  • 14->15: <1% improvement       15->16: 0% improvement
  • 16->17:<1% improvement        17->20: No improvement (added time)
  • 20->23: 3% improvement (Olympic Qualifier)

Let’s Race!

Which brings me back to my original point.  I think it’s time to re-emphasize racing. In swimming, you have an opportunity to compete against seven or more others every time you dive in for a race.  We are built to compete — the human body responds physiologically to competitive demands by providing chemicals that enhance performance. It is often when athletes get caught up in a great battle against the person next to them that they are able to give additional effort and energy that leads to extraordinary performances for both parties.  Competition has a winner and loser, which forces young people to learn how to be both. There is a subtle distinction between confidence and arrogance, or humility and self-deprecation, and we as a society will benefit from cultivating the former of each. Racing also draws attention to realistic expectations for athletes of similar ages and in season phases; as we work to educate our young swimmers on how the competition calendar interfaces with season training plans, we can point to others and note that competing well within your heat is reflective of the fact that you are on the right path.

This shift in tone is important and necessary because our sport is at times brutal and unforgiving.  Swimming requires an incredible sacrifice of time and a comparatively absurd workload to many other sports — and yet the payoffs are often infrequent.  As coaches, our responsibility is to guide the swimmers through the hardest phases of the season so they can see success at the end of the tunnel. I think by encouraging and rewarding racing too, instead of simply performances times, we will find that our swimmers have another way to measure success, and subsequently have more fun and are more motivated as they see progress in one area when the other is stagnant, and vice versa.  More importantly, I think it encourages a healthier relationship with the sport that could address some of the issues of attrition and end-of-career plateau that we too often see.

Coach: “Let’s not obsesses about how much you added or dropped from your personal best.  Let’s discuss your racing splits, technical proficiency, and strategy in relation to recent training markers, the current season phase and your long-term goals. What does this race tell us about how we can continue to improve our daily preparation?”

Parent: “You raced hard today and I’m proud of you. I always love watching you swim.”

Key Takeaways

In my doctoral research at Arizona, I studied the roles that mindfulness and acceptance play in regulating performance under pressure in sports.  There is compelling evidence that suggests that adopting a mindful, non-judgmental approach to daily practice in sports can enhance long-term performance outcomes (Gooding & Gardner, 2009; Thompson et al., 2011; Zhang et al., 2016).  I posit that this is in part because athletes that practice this approach are able to separate their emotional responses from their objective evaluations of performance outcomes and are therefore more likely to learn from failure and remain motivated.  This is a daily approach to sports that leads to more consistency and effort over time, which ultimately is the key to success in anything.  We can contribute to this healthier attitude about performance by being mindful of what we say to young people about their performances, encourage using multiple objective measures to evaluate outcomes. Finally, let’s remember that swimming is not just about times, but also racing.  I think we would all do well to remind ourselves of that.

About Dr. Zachary Hojnacki

Zac is currently the head coach of the BGNW Marlins in Mount Kisco, NY. He swam for the University of Arizona from 2009-2012, qualifying for the 2012 Olympic Trials in the 200 breaststroke, and the 2013 World Championship Trials in the 100 breaststroke. In 2017, he received a PhD in Educational Psychology from the University of Arizona, where he studied the role stress and mindfulness play on athlete performance under pressure. Zac is passionate about utilizing athlete education to develop a well-rounded, self-sufficient person in and out of the pool.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: What Happened To Racing?


Kobe Bryant, the Coach on the Swim Coaches Base Podcast

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By SwimSwam Partner Content on SwimSwam

Courtesy: RITTER Sports Performance, a SwimSwam partner. 

This episode of the Swim Coaches Base Podcast is a little different than normal. Typically, Chris Ritter interviews swim coaches and talk shop.

On this episode RITTER Sports Performance thought it was appropriate to pay tribute to Kobe Bryant and specifically highlight lessons he has talked about when it comes to being a coach.

Subscribe to the Swim Coaches Base Podcast

Kobe discusses how he’s approached coaching his daughter and how even the parents on his daughter’s team were surprised at his approach.

He also talks about how he’s changed over time and the hardest thing that he has had to change.

This episode will help swim coaches evaluate what they can improve as a coach. Enjoy and be sure to subscribe to get the latest episodes of the Swim Coaches Base Podcast.

About RITTER Sports Performance

RITTER Sports Performance helps swimmers go faster and coaches get better, worldwide. Through our online resources on strength training, stroke technique, swim-training, race analysis or nutritional coaching–RITTER is ready to help you take your swimming to the next level. Are you?

CONNECT WITH RITTER SPORTS PERFORMANCE:

WEBSITE

INSTAGRAM

FACEBOOK

TWITTER

APPLE PODCAST

SPOTIFY PODCAST

Ritter Sports Performance is a SwimSwam partner. 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Kobe Bryant, the Coach on the Swim Coaches Base Podcast

Cullen Jones, Isabelle Stadden, Maxine Parker on Tap for Schroeder A+ Meet

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

35th Annual Schroeder A+ Swim Meet

  • January 31st-February 2nd, 2020
  • Walter Schroeder Aquatic Center, Brown Deer, Wisconsin
  • SCY (25y) pool
  • Psych Sheets
  • Meet Page (with results)
  • Results will also be available on Meet Mobile

The 35th-annual Schroeder A+ Swim Meet, the largest swim meet in Wisconsin and one that pulls swimmers from across the midwest, will run this weekend in Brown Deer.

Among the headliners of the meet will be two-time Olympic gold medalist Cullen Jones, who will be swimming his first USA Swimming sanctioned competition since April of 2018. He is entered to swim 1 race at the meet, the 100 yard free, which is an event that he hasn’t raced since March of 2016, when he swam 43.38. Jones will also make an appearance on behalf of Speedo, which is sponsoring the meet.

Also attending the meet is US National Teamer Isabelle Stadden, who trains with Aquajets in Minnesota. She has been a regular at this event, and last year broke Meet Records in both the 100 back (51.84) and 200 back (1:52.31). Stadden just missed her first senior international breakthrough for the U.S. in 2018, when she finished 3rd in the 200 back at the U.S. National Championships. She is one of the fastest junior backstrokers in history and part of (another) golden generation of U.S. female backstrokers on a collision course with the Olympic Trials in June in Omaha.

This weekend, she is scheduled to swim the 50 free, 100 free, 200 breast, 100 back, 200 back, 200 IM, 400 IM, and a pair of relays.

Also in Attendance:

  • Wisconsin’s top high school senior, Kaylyn Schoof, will attend the meet with the Elmbrook Swim Club. She’ll be the biggest competition for Stadden in the girls’ backstroke races.
  • U.S. Junior National Teamer Grace Cooper is scheduled to swim the 50 free, 100 free, 200 free, 100 back, and 100 fly.
  • World Junior Championships team member Maxine Parker, a Georgia commit, switched clubs to join Pittsburgh Elite in the fall, and has now joined NASA Wildcat Aquatics heading toward the Olympic Trials. She’s now representing that club in Brown Deer, where she’s scheduled to race the 50 free, 100 free, 200 free, and 100 back.
  • The two best high school boys in the class of 2020 in the state of Wisconsin, Michael Linnihan of EBSC and Kaiser Neverman of GBY, will go head-to-head in the 50 free, 100 free, 200 free, 100 fly, 200 fly, 200 IM, and 400 IM. They are the meet’s top 2 seeds in both butterfly races and the 200 free.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Cullen Jones, Isabelle Stadden, Maxine Parker on Tap for Schroeder A+ Meet

What Happened To Racing?

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By SwimSwam on SwimSwam

By Dr. Zachary Hojnacki

How Was Your Race?

Coach: “Good job, how do you feel about that swim?”

Swimmer: *shakes head* “That was terrible.”

Coach: “Why do you feel that way — your stroke technique was strong and efficient, and you executed the race well.”

Swimmer: “Because I added…”

Our program recently traveled across the country from New York to Arizona to compete in a terrific and uniquely formatted competition hosted by Phoenix Swim Club called the Arizona Dual Meet Championships. Aside from the benefits the team travel experience provided for our 14 & under athletes in their developmental process, the dual meet format brought out the best in our kids.  It was a significant departure from the traditional weekend swim meet experience, where the emphasis is often on maximizing the number of events swum and personal best times achieved.  This weekend was instead about racing: fighting for first not only for yourself, but for your team. Competition is pure and fun, and somewhat lacking in today’s swim experience. I believe we have somewhat overcorrected and could benefit as a sport from shifting our emphasis back towards racing.

Where We Got Lost

I suspect that in the early stages of the sport, competition was the primary focus.  Somewhere along the way, coaches and parents encouraged athletes to direct their attention towards improving their personal best times as a means to discourage obsessive comparisons to the success of other athletes, and to instead prioritize self-improvement.  I agree that is a healthy and appropriate mindset, and that constant comparisons to other swimmers is a recipe for constant disappointment and discouragement.

However, it feels as though we have veered off course from what that mindset was originally intended to promote.  Walking around the pool deck, speaking to my own athletes or listening to the conversations of others, times are often the only focus. Evaluation of race outcomes has become binary – drop time = good swim, add time = bad swim. As athletes grow older and less frequently perform their personal bests, their relationship with the sport begins to sour.  Even as they understand that a personal best time is not a realistic expectation at certain phases of the season, there is a tendency to compare times to past seasons or to other swimmers in an effort to project taper times.  If those times don’t meet the swimmers’ expectations, they are quick to panic and self-doubt creeps in. For some, there is a decreased willingness to compete in meets during the phases of training where fast swims are least likely, even as these competitions are important prerequisites for end-of-season breakthroughs.

What We Are Communicating to Young People

Parent: “Nice racing today!  3 out of 4 best times! We just need to fix that backstroke!”

Parent: “What happened out there?  Why were you so far off your best? Is something wrong?”

Coach: *Emphatically* “You dropped 3 seconds!”

As adults, we are culpable here.  Post-race feedback is often littered with discussion about races in terms of total time, proximity to best, etc., rather than objective evaluation on the basis of execution of strategy, technical proficiency, or in the context of training performances and goals.  We reward athletes for achieving personal best times by congratulating them and affirming the accomplishments as if they were solely a reflection of effort. The truth is that personal best times can be accomplished with less than maximal effort and poor execution, while swims slower than your previous best can be effortful and flawlessly performed.

The Stats

I believe that the overemphasis on racing times is somewhat dangerous, particularly for older athletes.  The national average improvement percentage for a 15-16-year-old girl in 2019 was .93%. The picture for 17-18 girls was bleaker still, with an average of negative.3%.When our communications exclusively reward personal bests and demand explanation for swims that fail to meet that criterion, it implies that swimming our best is merely a reinforceable behavior as opposed to a complex and challenging long-term pursuit.  This also suggests failure is always controllable and completely avoidable — which, in a sport where failure is incredibly common, is extremely demoralizing and simply not true.

It is important that our coaching leadership educate athletes on the impact growth and maturation has on performance in swimming, particularly for young girls.  Besides keeping young people enrolled in the sport, perseverance often pays off for those that can transition into strong collegiate athletes. Each year, I sit down with our teenage swimmers to discuss how age and physical maturity may impact short-term outcomes in the near future.  The examples of well-known Olympic athletes below illustrates how drawn out plateaus can be, but also how successfully navigating those challenging phases can pay dividends in the long-term.

Missy Franklin-

200 Bk:

  • 12->13: 2% improvement          13->14: 4% improvement
  • 14->15: <1% improvement        15->16: 2% improvement (Olympic Qualifier)
  • 16->17: <1% improvement (World Record)      1

Cammile Adams-

200 Fly:

  • 12->13: 0% improvement         13->14: 6% improvement
  • 14->15: <1% improvement       15->16: 0% improvement
  • 16->17:<1% improvement        17->20: No improvement (added time)
  • 20->23: 3% improvement (Olympic Qualifier)

Let’s Race!

Which brings me back to my original point.  I think it’s time to re-emphasize racing. In swimming, you have an opportunity to compete against seven or more others every time you dive in for a race.  We are built to compete — the human body responds physiologically to competitive demands by providing chemicals that enhance performance. It is often when athletes get caught up in a great battle against the person next to them that they are able to give additional effort and energy that leads to extraordinary performances for both parties.  Competition has a winner and loser, which forces young people to learn how to be both. There is a subtle distinction between confidence and arrogance, or humility and self-deprecation, and we as a society will benefit from cultivating the former of each. Racing also draws attention to realistic expectations for athletes of similar ages and in season phases; as we work to educate our young swimmers on how the competition calendar interfaces with season training plans, we can point to others and note that competing well within your heat is reflective of the fact that you are on the right path.

This shift in tone is important and necessary because our sport is at times brutal and unforgiving.  Swimming requires an incredible sacrifice of time and a comparatively absurd workload to many other sports — and yet the payoffs are often infrequent.  As coaches, our responsibility is to guide the swimmers through the hardest phases of the season so they can see success at the end of the tunnel. I think by encouraging and rewarding racing too, instead of simply performances times, we will find that our swimmers have another way to measure success, and subsequently have more fun and are more motivated as they see progress in one area when the other is stagnant, and vice versa.  More importantly, I think it encourages a healthier relationship with the sport that could address some of the issues of attrition and end-of-career plateau that we too often see.

Coach: “Let’s not obsesses about how much you added or dropped from your personal best.  Let’s discuss your racing splits, technical proficiency, and strategy in relation to recent training markers, the current season phase and your long-term goals. What does this race tell us about how we can continue to improve our daily preparation?”

Parent: “You raced hard today and I’m proud of you. I always love watching you swim.”

Key Takeaways

In my doctoral research at Arizona, I studied the roles that mindfulness and acceptance play in regulating performance under pressure in sports.  There is compelling evidence that suggests that adopting a mindful, non-judgmental approach to daily practice in sports can enhance long-term performance outcomes (Gooding & Gardner, 2009; Thompson et al., 2011; Zhang et al., 2016).  I posit that this is in part because athletes that practice this approach are able to separate their emotional responses from their objective evaluations of performance outcomes and are therefore more likely to learn from failure and remain motivated.  This is a daily approach to sports that leads to more consistency and effort over time, which ultimately is the key to success in anything.  We can contribute to this healthier attitude about performance by being mindful of what we say to young people about their performances, encourage using multiple objective measures to evaluate outcomes. Finally, let’s remember that swimming is not just about times, but also racing.  I think we would all do well to remind ourselves of that.

About Dr. Zachary Hojnacki

Zac is currently the head coach of the BGNW Marlins in Mount Kisco, NY. He swam for the University of Arizona from 2009-2012, qualifying for the 2012 Olympic Trials in the 200 breaststroke, and the 2013 World Championship Trials in the 100 breaststroke. In 2017, he received a PhD in Educational Psychology from the University of Arizona, where he studied the role stress and mindfulness play on athlete performance under pressure. Zac is passionate about utilizing athlete education to develop a well-rounded, self-sufficient person in and out of the pool.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: What Happened To Racing?

Practice + Pancakes: Tennessee Men Hit Suited Top-End Speed Post-Weight Workout

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By Coleman Hodges on SwimSwam

FORM is swim goggles with a smart display. FORM is a sports technology company with a simple mission: to break down the barriers between what swimming is and what it could be.

When SwimSwam was in Knoxville, we didn’t only get to see the lady Vols in the weight room. We also got to join the men in the weight room, as well as in the pool afterword for some suited top-end speed work. In the weight room, the men were going lower weight, higher intensity, working on feeling poppy and powerful.

Heading over to the pool, they suited up, got in a quick warm up, then had 2 stations. One was buckets with lighter weight than normal, again working on feeling fast and sprinty. But the show stealer was the running dive station, where we got to see Tennessee speed on full display. The set was focusing on working on breakouts and walls while going at top speed, or the speed you’ll ideally be at when you’re at conference:

2x

1 x 15 sprint + turn + sprint back to wall

1 x 25 sprint + turn

1 x 50 sprint

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Practice + Pancakes: Tennessee Men Hit Suited Top-End Speed Post-Weight Workout

Judge Orders Reopening of Rio Olympic Park Despite Safety Concerns

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

Brazilian court has ordered the reopening of the Rio Olympic Park less than two weeks after it’s closure was issued.

Following a request from Rio’s prosecutor office, the park’s facilities were closed on Jan.16 citing safety concerns. The office complained they had not seen safety permits for the venues.

However, things have been reopened as of Jan.28.

After a public prosecutor petitioned a judge to close the facilities due to a lack of safety certificates, it was temporarily closed to “preserve the security of the population.”

Rio’s mayor’s office has since appealed the ruling, and an appeal court ruled that the sites will be reopened provisionally pending an examination on Tuesday.

The park, located in the Barra da Tijuca neighbourhood, includes the aquatics complex, velodrome and tennis courts, and has been used primarily for concerts and exhibitions since the Games took place almost four years ago. Recently, the park hosted September’s “Rock in Rio” festival which welcomed 700,000 visitors over the course of a week of concerts.

Per local authorities, the Olympic swimming pool will be open to the public beginning Sunday, Feb.2.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Judge Orders Reopening of Rio Olympic Park Despite Safety Concerns

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