By Coach Emmett Hines
Why does that guy/gal always speed up when I try to
pass him/her?
Ever experience this?
You are closing in on a swimmer and about to overtake him/her. Then you start to swim alongside the other
person in an
attempt to pass and, lo and behold, the inconsiderate boob chooses that very moment to begin getting more
value from his/her
workout dues by swimming faster. You either have to put forth a superhuman effort to finish what you
started or you end up
swimming side by side all the way to the wall where the whole scenario gets ugly - you're upset because
he/she wouldn't let you
pass and he/she is pissed cuz you cut him/her off.
(Jeez people, can we lose this hermaphroditic he/she, him/her garbage and just agree on "it"?)
When you are about to overtake a swimmer you are, in fact, drafting off that person for a little while
(drafting is where you
enter, and are carried along by, the stream of water that the swimmer in front of you has already started
moving - you benefit
from the work that swimmer has already done, you swim faster with less effort). Then you are ready to
swim past it (I'm
referring to the other swimmer, remember our agreement? - this is the kind of stuff you have to put up
with when you insist on
being politically correct.). At this point you swim out of the draft of water the other swimmer was
gracious enough to get
moving for you and into his/her (sorry, its kind of a habit these days) wake and turbulence. You now are
fighting more
resistance than ever before. Unless the wake is big enough to body surf on you will find yourself having
to work quite a bit
harder just to keep from slowing down.
Of course, from your vantage point, it may very well appear as though the other swimmer chose just that
moment to speed up.
This phenomenon is easy to see from the deck but is often misinterpreted, even by experienced swimmers,
in the water.
So, the next time you have trouble passing someone in mid lane be aware that it may not be all their
fault. Just realize what extra
effort will be required and go for it. Of course if you tap them on the toes before (or as) you pull out
to pass, they might have
the common decency to hug the lane rope and give you room to swim in. And, if you get lucky, they will
realize that it's best to
stay to the right as both of you approach the wall so that you won't be cutting across their turn.
(That's it! They/them/their instead of he/she, him/her, his/hers. I've always wondered why we use a
plural pronoun to refer to a
third, rather nebulous, individual. Now, I know. You learn something new every day don'tcha?)
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.