by Coach Emmett Hines
More Efficient Speed
You are used to doing heart rate sets where you check your heart rate every so often and maintain some
minimum or maximum
heart rate or stay within a specific range. Typically this is done in an effort to make sure you are
working at the intensity
required to effect a specific training adaptation.
You are also used to doing stroke count sets where you swim distances using specific stroke counts.
Usually this means that
some or all of the distance is to be done at something less than your normal number of strokes per
length. This is done to help
you focus on making your stroke more efficient so you can go further with each stroke and encounter less
resistance.
And you are (or should be) very used to paying attention to your pace per 100 (or 200 or 50 or whatever)
while swimming a
long set.
But rarely do you put all three of these together in one set.
Recently we have been doing some long, moderate intensity sets where we ask you to maintain a HR in the
130 - 140 area.
>From an energy system training standpoint this type of set improves your body's ability to produce energy
for work through
lipid metabolism - burning fat. The more energy you are capable of producing by burning fat (which cannot
produce lactic acid)
the longer you can delay fatigue that results from lactic acid accumulation (produced by burning
carbohydrates).
This moderate intensity stuff is low stress work that you can carry on for extended periods of time. And,
truth be known, this
can get boring if you let it. But it is necessary work so let's explore a way to make it more
challenging.
As you know, speed is not always directly related to effort. (If this comes as a surprise think of one of
those recreational
swimmers you see from time to time that dive into the pool, and begin thrashing about, tossing water in
every direction, looking
more like a big splash moving slowly down the pool than a swimmer. This guy has a 200+ HR by the end of
25 yds and is
probably done with his workout. Lots of effort, not much speed.) Speed is more directly related to
efficiency than energy
expenditure. At any given physical effort level if we improve efficiency (as measured by strokes per
length or SPL) we increase
speed.
This gives us a natural, and very challenging, focal point for moderate intensity sets. Let's say the set
is 10x200 holding a
130-140 HR. The idea would be to see how fast you could swim each repeat while staying in the HR range
prescribed. Not
working harder, just swimming faster. The key here is to improve the efficiency of the swim. Decrease
your SPL by increasing
distance per stroke, improving your streamline position, longer glides off each wall, being aware of and
avoiding unnecessary
resistance etc.
And keep track of your times for each repeat. This is very important because improving efficiency can be
deceiving. If you are
one of the majority of swimmers that consciously or unconsciously equates effort with speed then, when
you swim more
efficiently, your internal speedometer may erroneously tell your brain you have slowed down. Use the
clock for speed
feedback and learn to trust it.
This efficiency=speed concept takes some getting used to. Applying it in workouts takes mental activity
and involves lots of trial
and error. Once you get good at this at moderate intensities you can apply the concept at higher
intensities.
Give it a try.
Coach Emmett Hines is the head coach of H2Ouston Swims. He has coached competitive Masters swimming in
Houston since 1982 and was selected as United States Masters Swimming's Coach of the Year in 1993.
Currently he
coaches workouts at the University of Texas Health Science Center, the University of Houston and The
Houstonian
Club.