![]() ![]() Some days, they can be your biggest enemies. Sometimes your teammates are your best friends. Get your equipment before practice all ready to go so you don’t have to worry about stealing someone else’s, or having someone steal yours.ġ6) What happens off the pool deck stays off the pool deck. If I grab a kick board for myself, please don’t reach over and grab it from my lane because you’re too lazy to jump out and grab one yourself. But, no one, I repeat no one, wants to hear you yell about how hard this set is and how everyone is going to fail at it. I completely understand this because it happens to me from time to time. Sometimes your coach gives you a set and you go into a full-on panic mode. But this does not mean you can take a few double arm backstroke pulls in the middle of the lane. If you’re doing a kick set on your back, it’s okay to do a stroke into the turn so you can work your backstroke flip turn. Not only can other swimmers tell when you’re doing this, but the coach sees you as well.ġ3) When you’re kicking on your back, don’t sneak in arm strokes. This allows a clear path to be made so everyone can hit the wall to practice their finish and get the extra five yards in that the first person easily achieved. When you come in to touch the wall, touch and move over. If someone does touch your feet and you know you can’t swim any faster, move towards the lane line to let them pass or stop briefly at the wall so they can flip ahead of you. Once you have done so give them a second to either go faster or let you pass them.ġ0) If someone is on your feet, let them pass! The way to go is to tap the person’s foot when you catch them. How will you get better as a swimmer if you don’t do the sets independently?ĩ) If you’re on someone’s feet, pass them! Not only are you making the set easier on yourself because you catch their wave, but you make it harder on them because they have to pull you. Swimmers can be territorial of their warm up lanes, especially if you moving from lane six to lane one will kick someone out who was already there.Ĩ) Don’t drag off other swimmers during practice. If you’ve warmed up in lane six for the past four months, don’t switch to lane one randomly one cold morning practice. It not only hindered my performance in the meet, but my mentality as well. I didn’t get to warm up as much as I needed. An away team visited our pool this year and took up every lane without asking. Being a distance swimmer, I need at least two times the warm up that my teammates need, so I get in much earlier than them. Unless the away team is told they have the full pool for warmup, this is just rude. It’s very important that everyone gets a feel for the blocks before their race so they can reduce any chance of a false start.Ħ) If an away team arrives to a meet and wants to get in for warmup, they should only take up half the pool’s lanes. These lines can get longer than the lines in the cafeteria. Whether you stopped to get water, or “stretch an injury,” don’t push off ahead of someone who is working hard at completing the full set – especially if you may stop again! Slip into the last spot and just do what you can without messing someone else up. This not only saves your fellow lane-mates’ arms, but prevents injury for you as well.Ĥ) If you stop during a set for any reason, don’t jump back in front of the swimmer who never stopped. If you’re about to hit them, pull a one arm stroke and go right back into your rhythm. ![]() If you’re the one doing butterfly, chances are someone doing freestyle or backstroke will not see your arm about to collide with theirs. If you need to get into a lane, wait until the person has already pushed off past the flags.ģ) If you’re doing butterfly, watch out for other swimmers’ arms. Not only can this be frustrating, but dangerous. This does not mean push off three seconds after them, or four or two.Ģ) Don’t jump in a lane where someone is just about to do a flip turn. Unless you’re told you should go 10 or even 20 seconds behind the swimmer ahead of you, always be courteous and give a full five seconds. Here’s a list of some of the unspoken swimmer laws that most swimmers abide by:ġ) ALWAYS go AT LEAST five seconds apart.
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