Monday, November 29, 2010
In regards to Teck Beng's sharing.
My simple add on:
It is most impt in sculling for the palm and forearm to be pitched in the correct angle(opposite of direction of where we want to move to) and to relax at the end of each push phase in each direction.
My sincere Apologies to all who wasn't well taken care of in the team or neglected as the group grow larger.. Please raise your questions to me if you have any..those who asked me knows that i always gladly answer them with as much help as possible..
Also, Well said, lawrence on the need to self practice.. As of that, i need to give praise to at least Vincent, Teck beng, Ebnu, KH and Sam who has been doing their own practices in their own private time and has came to me with questions to ponder and discuss.. It has come up with very fruitful results such as TeckBeng's heightened body position awareness and vincent's pace awareness, Kh's improved swim technique endurance and sam's improvement in coaching and her own streamline maintenance.
I hope that the above encourages all of you to do even better in your swim practice! Even though the rest of you did not approach me for discussion, i'd believe that you still do a little more than just the wednesday swim session.. Even if it is just more reading or watching videos of swim on youtube..:)
Cheers
KK
Friday, November 19, 2010
Why my sculling don't move ?!?!
When do the sculling, my movement is only coming from the kick...I was doing it all wrong.
Hope this is helpful to you....Teck Beng
Thursday, November 18, 2010
17112010 Swim Squad
1) Introduce Circular lap swimming (sharing of lane with similar ability swimmers)
2) Introduce moderate effort base training swim (fat burning)
3) Celebrate Wilson's Birthday with the team's first 2.8km swim in 1 yr. =Pp
W/U:
200m Easy FS
Drills:
6x50drill+50 fs swim
1) 3 x Butterfly kick + breast pull
2) Right arm pull only
3) Left arm pull only
4) EVF Sculling + super light fs kick
5) Right arm pull Left breathe, change to Left arm pull Right breathe on 25m
6) Right arm pull Left breathe, change to Left arm pull Right breathe on 25m
M/S
4x100 as 2x(Easy,Medium)
3x200 as (Easy,Medium,Fast)
6x100 as 2x(Easy,Medium,Fast)
C/D
200 Mixed strokes
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Please note during the swim we did left turns, next time, we'll do right turns next time. =)
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Happy Birthday Wilson! :)
-Team Sapphire
Cheers
KK
PS - Thank you Sam, Gen and Patrick for the pool and especially Patrick for joining us to swim!
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Strength Training (Brief How and Why)
Today's topic I'll touch on Strength Training and its effect on sports performance.
Before we go into the very conventional ways of thinking that….
Strength Training = Lifting heavy weights in the gym repeatedly until you feel pain, follow that by 1 min rest and do that for 'X' number of repetitions…
Lets think about what strength training actually does and how we can leverage on that for sports performance, specifically triathlon.
In summary, proper form of strength training will definitely aid in sports performance, and no elite sportsmen reach the podium without strength training. This is especially true in strength and power based sports (think Power lifting, 100m track sprints and contact sports like wrestling). However, we will learn how it can apply to cardio sports as well.
Like I've always shared, whatever we are doing, when we go down to the lowest level, it is always about muscles flexing and lengthening (yes, everything, even typing this post with my fingers!) and the heart and lung providing oxygen and blood being the medium of providing the needed fuel/nutrients.
So lets put the heart and lung out of the equation and zoom into the muscular aspect first.
What strength training does is that through Progressive Overloading, the muscle fibres will breakdown and reform to perform Specific Adaptation to the amount of load we put on it over a period of time.
In layman terms, Progressive Overloading refers to the amount of resistance, in addition to whatever we can handle currently, that we apply to our muscles.
Specific Adaptation refers to the process of your muscles growing stronger to do a specific movement that you've used to done the Progressive Overloading on.
With that in mind, we must then look further into Sports Specific Performance. Sounds similar to Specific Adaptation right? Because it is where Specificity will come into play.
Our body is made in a way that when you expose it out of a comfort zone, it will learn and it will adapt.
In the most extreme of example, if you have no clean food to eat and clean place to stay, you have to survive by eating cockroaches and live in unhygienic place, over time, your body will adapt and you will SURVIVE AND LIVE ON. That is provided the change is introduced over time in a Progressive manner.
Lets summarize again the points we've gone through so far.
The body will adapt to become better in handling a situation of change. The process of introducing the change, is called Progressive Overloading and the adaptation to the change is called Specific Adaptation.
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In the high level of sports performance, we can't take running as moving the body forward with your legs, and we can't take swimming as just using the arms to sweep through under the water and then your body will move forward as long as it is fairly streamlined.
It is true that we have to increase our arm power and back power so we can have a stronger pull in our swim. But does doing 20 pullups a day translate to a stronger pull in swimming? Or lets ask a more specific question, does the amount of strength that you gain from the adaptation of doing the 20 pullups a day translate FULLY, like 100% into swimming power?
Specific Adaptation states that we will get better at what we do as long as we kept doing it. A lot of people cannot perceive that it is a double edged sword. It is the same reasoning behind practice does NOT make perfect, practicing correctly makes perfect.
In order to get better in our sport, we need to understand the specific movements of each muscle in each specific movement that is required by the sport itself, before we can start training them to apply a higher amount of force in that specific movement.
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Let me digress into strength training movements in gym and their effects so that you gym goers can relate better. Generally we do single joint movements and multi joint movements in the gym with free weights and also machines like the smith machines.
A single joint movement such as dumbbell curls will train your biceps and depending on you do them standing or seated, you also may or may not train your muscles in your core to stand with stability while applying force to lift that dumbbell up with your arm flexion.
Take another single joint movement like your tricep extension (take your dumbbell, extend the arm above the head and start dropping the weight downwards then straighten the arm pressing the dumbbell upwards again), trains your tricep to become stronger in lifting a weight in that position.
So how good are they when we don't usually carry our grocery up and down like you were doing the dumbbell curls? How specific are they to your life? Do you do your swim by constantly flexing your elbows seated or standing and lifting the water up and down like your bicep curls? If not, I don't understand how they are to translate to swimming prowess since the application of force and stabilizer muscles used are completely different.
Multi joint exercises seem to have more benefits because they are more functional. An example like squatting a weight up seems to make more sense in our daily life (sitting on the chair and standing up is a squat). Cycling tend to benefit quite a bit from squats too but are they really that sports specific, I don't think so.
I use squats to help grandma and aunties to regain their ability to climb stairs properly and even stand up from their chairs on their own… But for bike strength and run strength, I rather hit the hills since they overload my muscles in the most specific way my sport requires them to exert force in, as in really cycling and running!
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Strength training does NOT have to come in the gym. It can happen on your bike, it can happen in your run and on the stairs, it can happen in your room and it can even happen when you go through your daily life just by carrying a heavier backpack. So, its time to think out of the box and throw whatever you know about gym training off the mind first.
Lets look back into sports specific performance.
- To perform running, we need to keep the legs moving and keep the body in a more or less upright position and leaning forward fashion.
- To perform a swim, we need to keep the body in a streamline position while applying force with our core and arms to pull ourselves forward.
- To perform a biking, we need to keep the body in a aerodynamic position while spinning the pedals with force.
Do you see a trend? All the sports requires us to hold a position while applying force in a fixed angle repeatedly.
And the muscles that we use to hold that position is generally called stabilizer muscles (of course there are scientific names such as antagonist, fixators and synergies but I'm not here to impress).
Stabilizer muscles are the primary muscles we should take note of while doing strength training because if you cannot keep your body in the position that we need them to be while applying force, we will 1) lose out in streamlining, 2) lose out in aerodynamics, 3) lose out in run efficiency because of non proportionate weight distribution above our legs.
That brings us back to Specificity in strength training. When you do a squat to train your legs, your focus is to train your biking and running strength capacity… and when you do a pullup, you want to increase your swimming power, when you do a tricep press you want to improve your swimming's push phase but consider these:
- Squat: Does your resistance come from the barbell on your shoulder when you bike?
- Squat: Do you go into your aero position when you do the squat? Elbows on the pad and sitting on a saddle?
- Pullups: Do you swim while hanging upright?
- Tricep extension: Do you really push with your tricep only or do you rotate your core and pull your body forward with an anchor in your EVF?
- Dumbbell curl: Do you swim with your fist clenched or fingers must hold a paddle shape?
Doing a pull up requires you to prevent your body from swinging forward and backward in air. Doing a squat require you to straighten your back and push a weight upwards. Doing a lunge require you to stride your legs forward with a weight by your side or a barbell on your shoulder. Specifically, does it help your run and your swim, I'd say no because of the different stabilizer used and also the angle of force application is different.
In summary, strength training in the gym can be done in the base phase of periodization training but once the training goes closer to the event (approx 3-6 months to race depending on distance of event), the strength training should occur specifically in the way you move your body for the event.
Again, why specific to the movement? There is also the phase where by your RELAX your muscles after each pull/stride/pedal… if you do it in the gym, how are you going to replicate the force application phase, timing and relaxation as per specific in the sport's required movement?
My advice to you is if you want to do strength training, study the below list of movements and how they are to be done in gym and think about how to replicate the movements, activating the same stabilizer muscles as you do when you're doing your swim, bike or run before you go and whack yourself with heavy weights. I will touch on the proper forms and also the difference between Training and Using them for performance if there are people who request that.
Just please remember that doing the movements with weight in the gym does not improve performance completely, because we still have the lung and heart aspect that is not covered in specific fashion (aerobic, anaerobic etc etc).
Freestyle Swimming (personally, I find that it is so hard because you can't hover in the air in that swim specific position and lying chest down on a chest means you're stable and you won't activate the core muscles needed like you were in the water:
- Arms:
- Elbow flexion at catch
- Wrist neutral and palm and fingers opened and placed together
- Elbow flexion at catch
- Legs
- Straightened but relaxed throughout the whole kick movement
- Slight knee flexion at downbeat of kick
- Hip flexion at kick
- Hip extension at kick
- Plantar flexion at feet (Relax effort at up beat and exertion at down)
- Straightened but relaxed throughout the whole kick movement
- Body
- Stabilizing as one piece and isolated from the arm and leg movements
- Ability to rotate from side to side
- Stabilizing as one piece and isolated from the arm and leg movements
- Shoulder
- Internal rotation at catch
- Depressing of shoulder (opposite of shrugging) before the pull and push phase
- Shoulder flexion when arms extended in front
- Shoulder extension when catch and pull starts
- Internal rotation at catch
Biking (easier to train):
- Arm
- Elbow flexion and Holding the position of aerobar (Specific width to your set up) or your road bar
- Relaxing on that position while holding your core tight
- Elbow flexion and Holding the position of aerobar (Specific width to your set up) or your road bar
- Shoulders
- Holding position of shoulder flexion at 90 degrees
- Holding position of shoulder flexion at 90 degrees
- Legs
- While holding a aero position, do the following:
- Knee flexion
- Knee extension
- Hip flexion
- Hip extension
- Dorsi flexion
- Knee flexion
- Body
- Just holding a tight core
- Just holding a tight core
Running
- Arms
- Elbow flexion
- Elbow flexion
- Shoulders
- Swinging of flexed arms (shoulder flexion and shoulder extension)
- Keeping shoulder depressed and prevent shrugging
- Swinging of flexed arms (shoulder flexion and shoulder extension)
- Legs
- Hip flexion to a specific height and degree required of your swim
- Hip extension
- Knee flexion (when you lift your heels off the floor)
- Feet Dorsi Flexion to neutral plane to the floor
- Repeat in an alternate legged manner
- Hip flexion to a specific height and degree required of your swim
- Body
- Keep the torso from swinging from side to side
- Keep torso extended and straight while doing the leg movements
- Keep the torso from swinging from side to side
Cheers
KK
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Race Poll
If you have any questions, kindly get to me personally and I will resolve it together with you. :)
In this post, I will like you to have a show of hands on who will be taking what events so I can train you guys specifically for that swim event.
NOTE THAT IF YOU DID NOT PARTICIPATE IN THIS POLLING, I WILL NOT BE ABLE TO SET FOR YOU SPECIFIC TRAINING FOR YOUR EVENTS PARTICIPATED.
So Please, help me to help you as I won't want to ask again and again which race you are joining in every single session so i can come up with an impromptu training for you that I cannot track....
Kindly add a comment upon reading this blog in the following format.
Name: KK (So i know who you are)
Races:
Race name / Importance Ranking A - C,
Rank C being the least impt and for learning or leisure purposes, Rank A being top priority.
Singapore Biathlon/ Rank C
Aviva Half IM / Rank A
OSIM Triathlon Olympic Distance / Rank B
Port Dickson Olympic Distance / Rank C
Power Man Malaysia / Rank B
Laguna Phuket Triathlon / Rank A
Goal: To achieve the Fastest timing that I can in every A race instead of just completing them just like I did in my previous years (except Singapore Biathlon).
Motivation Slogan: It's Race Time.
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List of main races in 2011 that I will recommend joining:
OCBC Cycle (4th to 6th Mar)
Singapore Sprint Series:
Sprint Biathlon - 27th February 2011 (Sunday)
Sprint Duathlon - 3rd April 2011 (Sunday)
Sprint Triathlon - 1st May 2011 (Sunday)
Singapore Biathlon (12th Feb, Saturday)
Aviva Half IM (20th Mar, Sunday)
OSIM Triathlon Sprint Distance (TBC, April, Saturday)
OSIM Triathlon Olympic Distance (TBC, April, Sunday)
Port Dickson Olympic Distance (July)
Power Man Malaysia 11km run, 64km bike, 10km run (Mid November)
Laguna Phuket Triathlon 1.8km swim, 55km bike, 12km run (End November)
Saturday, November 6, 2010
some videos to share, related to 3 Nov Practice
This video features the late US long distance swimming Fran Crippen...who recently passed away at a early age of 26. In the video, you will see how this young talent demonstrate this drill.
the video can be found here:
http://www.goswim.tv/entries/5847/freestyle---single-arm-breath.html
The other video is what coach talked about during the debrief session. I looked up on the internet and found one video that i thought is what he was talking about. Sculling.....
This is related to EVF. In the video, the person uses a finis snorkel...too bad they don't allow this in the pool.
Video can be found here:
http://www.goswim.tv/entries/5937/freestyle---evf-drill.html
Happy Swimming!!
Teck Beng