BreaststrokeOver
the years, breaststroke has changed more that any other stroke. The last big
change was allowing the head to go beneath the water surface, and lately, the
level of the shoulders has been re.defined. There have been more arguments,
theories, tears, disqualifications and nonsense involving this stroke than all
of the other strokes put together. Breaststroke and butterfly are known as short
axis strokes; but breaststroke doesn’t follow the similarities in force
generation in butterfly or in the other strokes. Drag force produces very little
to propulsive forces in breaststroke, it is mainly lift forces that generate
propulsion. In the short axis strokes there is what is called a
landing zone; and the key for rhythm is in the landing zone. It is not in the up
position at the top of the inscull, where many swimmers will have it. The timing
is from the landing zone, back to the landing zone, and there must be no
hesitation whatsoever at the top (highest body position) of the stroke. In
the forward lunge, you punt off the hips and use the head and the upper
body(shoulders) as a throw weight; the
head, shoulders and arms must land on the landing zone (water) at exactly the
same time; and the arms must be at full stretch. In
the glide your ears must be between your arms (as in the push off from the wall)
and look down, don’t look forward.At the end of the glide, the arms drift,
(not pull) straight and not bent, to the widest point of the outsweep. Then the
inscull.. From the time the arms start the inscull until they are at full
stretch at the landing zone, there is no hesitation or slowing up; this must be
the fastest part of the stroke: do not let the hands get way down below the
elbows(as in the old breaststroke), keep the hands shallow, the deepest part
must be at the beginning of the inscull: and from there they come up towards the
surface in a sculling movement with the hands pitched at about 40 degrees. With
this sequence the hands and arms are already going forward at the end of the
inscull: thus there is no delay or hesitation in getting the arms out fast. You
want to get out to the landing zone as fast as possible The fingers must be pointed forward, don’t point them down at the pool bottom. A common mistake is to make a sort of loop at the end of the outsweep when the inscull begins, which results in the hands pointing to the pool floor and slipping sideways through the water.The forearms must be almost parallel with the pool floor at the inscull, and the elbows must come in just in front of the chest. Don’t get your hands under your chin; your elbows will get stuck against your ribs. At this point you will be taking a breath; there should not be time to breathe out and also to take a breath. Breathe out underwater on the inscull, so that as little time as possible is spent in the lift position and you can get back into the lunge quickly. There should not be enough time to breathe in and out.The kick is still the whip-kick; the feet must be on the outside of the knees. If the knees remain stable, the feet will whip back in an arc and come together. Don’t kick down, kick straight backwards. Breaststroke Part 2 When lifting the legs for the kick, there should not be an angle at the hips. The body at this point is in the lift position, so the lower legs are brought up behind you, to almost 90 degrees to the upper leg. Always recover the legs after the glide as quickly as possible, and get the kick away, do not recover the legs slowly, even in kicking practice. The timing of the stroke is critical. If you watch a seal making its way across ice, you will notice that it punts off its hips and flattens out, then repeats this over and over. In breaststroke you punt off your hips, lunge to the landing zone and kick, and then glide. There is some difference of opinion of exactly when the kick is put in. As an afterburner to the lunge, say some. I believe that you should put your kick in as you lunge. If you try to do that it will happen only very slightly later, and that will be just right. If the kick comes too late, the forces responsible for momentum are not continuous and rhythm suffers. A few points to remember: · From the start of the in scull it should be one continuous movement back to the landing zone. · Blow out under the water before you come up for the lunge, there shouldn’t be time to breathe in and out in the up position. · The upper body must always be going forward, the in scull gives you the platform to punt off. Lift forwards and upwards; don’t simply come up out of the water. · The faster you get your arms out in the lunge, the faster will be your turnover. The only way to accelerate breaststroke is to increase the speed that your arms shoot out forwards. · Recover your legs quickly. In kicking drills, rather rest your legs in the straight position, never recover slowly. · Get your ears between your arms in the glide, and, never, never dive down at the lunge; go out straight. Your body will sink to the correct depth on its own. · Kicks straight backwards, don’t kick down and let your butt rise.
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Don’t lift your head to breathe on the out scull, wait until you
begin the in scull and let it come up with your shoulders.
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