![]() |
Information and articles for everyone who is passionate about sport or wants to get fit. |
![]() |
|
Why Count Strokes?
Why Count Strokes? by Kevin KoskellaYou may have had coaches that make you count strokes throughout the workout, either by mixing it into drill sets, the main set, or at the end of workout. Some coaches recommend making a habit of always keeping track of your stroke count. As a coach of distance swimmers and triathletes, I believe stroke counting is a necessary part of most swimming workouts. If you stick with it and do it on a consistent basis, stroke counting in swimming is an excellent way to increase your DPS (Distance Per Stroke). The world’s best swimmers are faster than you because they travel further with each stroke, not because they are moving their arms faster. Keeping track of the number of strokes you take per length will allow you to begin to lengthen out your stroke, as well as add more speed and distance while keeping your heart rate down and allowing you to save your energy for later in the swim or race.
Consistently incorporating stroke counting into your workouts will, over time, help you to swim longer (or ‘taller’) in the water, and use less energy to go the same speed or even faster. And for those that don’t consider swimming to be their strength in a triathlon, this saved energy is sure to translate into a better bike and run! Copyright 2005 Kevin Koskella. Kevin spent much of his life swimming competitively through high school and at the University of California - Davis, where he achieved All-American status. After college, he began training for triathlons, studying nutrition, and working on his personal training certifications. He started coaching a masters swim team in San Francisco in January, 2001. While the traditional coaching philosophy in swimming has been ‘no pain, no gain’ and ‘the more, the better,’ Kevin didn’t subscribe to this way of grinding out workouts, and sought out a better way of teaching his swimmers. He came across the Total Immersion method of swimming, and began incorporating some of the techniques and drills in workouts, as well as in clinics and private lessons. This allowed swimmers to get more out of their strokes, swim faster, and swim more fluidly, while keeping their heart rates down. In other words, getting more out of less! He is now coaching age-group and masters swimmers at the Solana Beach Boys and Girls Club in the San Diego, CA area. He has just completed a guide for triathletes titled The Complete Guide to Triathlon Swimming, available on his website, http://www.triswimcoach.com. Kevin has competed in several triathlons and has been a top finisher at the Catfish Open Water swim in 2001 and 2002. |
|