by Dan Thompson
Quick-Twitch Heaven
Sprinters of the world, unite! Masters swimming is tailor-made for you.
Are you a born sprinter? Do you have more in common with Carl Lewis than Janet Evans? Do you know how it
is to have
explosive overdrive but to hang on for dear life in any race beyond a 50? If you answer in the
affirmative to the above
questions, then Masters swimming is a fast-twitch package heaven-sent for you. Just think of it . . . 50s
in every stroke, the 100
IM, and a short- course season spanning September through May!
The prospects are enticing, but do you lack the time and inclination for the back-and-forth lap swimming
of workouts past? No
problem. If Mr. Lewis can be a speeding locomotive without 10K training, then you needn't train for the
Channel to be in top
sprint shape for a 50 yard blast. Four sessions per week of focused sprint work will do the job. Here are
the ingredients:
FLEXIBILITY
The time-constrained sprinter may view stretching as a luxury training item. But quick-twitch muscles are
less fish-like in their
elasticity than those of your slow-burn compatriots. Take ten minutes to stretch out before every
practice.
STRENGTH
Pump iron if you really must, but remember that you already possess natural fast-twitch power. By using
stretch cords, you can
harness that power in ten minutes per day. Do four sets of 20 repetitions, using heavy cords and a
butterfly pull-pattern. Stretch
back far enough to get a major triceps muscle-burn.
WARM-UP
This is but preparation for the speed set that follows. Go far enough that you are loosened and have a
feel for the water. Use
stroke drills, and introduce speed play by pace-building every third 25.
SPRINT SET
Believe it or not, you can train to race 50s by doing sprints of half that distance in practice. Apart
from warm-up and
warm-down, this need be your only set. It is staggeringly simple: 8 x 25 kick, a full recovery, and then
16 x 25 swim. The key
is to use long rest intervals, with a work-to-rest ratio of at least 1:4. Otherwise, lactate build-up
will hamper your
explosiveness.
Pure sprinters need a heavy kick, so work the kick set. Learn to stay aggressively focused. You can be
sociable some other
time. If your stroke falls apart, just stop, warm down, and go home. You're into power swimming, not
punishment.
SECRET WEAPON
Weeks have gone by and you are feeling strong enough to handle a greater training overload. Now is the
time to bring out the
magic potion, if there ever was one, for the Masters sprinter. Instead of adding yardage to the program,
simply keep the
yardage where it is but add resistance! Adding yardage will train your speed-endurance, but what you're
after is raw speed
itself.
You can get that raw speed by training hard against drag forces greater than those ever encountered in
competition. Track
sprinters do it by sprinting in sand dunes and by using parachutes. We do it by wearing sleeveless sweat
shirts and by using
hand paddles. On our kick sets, we do the same by holding the kickboard like a barge, underwater with the
flat surface
forward.
Resistance efforts like this one are a genuine form of weight work for the sprinter, and should be
carefully added to every other
workout. They will keep your training time short and will add an overload that makes ordinary sprinting
seem easy by
comparison. On top of that, they will satisfy the hunger of the primal sprint beast within your soul.
TAPER
On this type of program, you are always ready to rumble. The danger is in over-resting. Ten days out from
the big meet, drop
the cords and resistance work. Taper back the number of sprint repetitions, but maintain your intensity
and speed. Five days
out, switch from 25s to 12 1/2s.
CAVEAT
The exuberance that sprinters are known for is a gift that sometimes works against them. It goes without
saying that any training
program, especially this one, should be entered into cautiously and progressively. Also, there is no
suggestion here that you give
up fitness conditioning, which we all know is good for your health. If time allows and you are looking
for speed, you can graft
this regimen into your endurance program.
Dan Thompson swam IM for Harvard in the late 1960s. He has coached a sprint-oriented Masters team, the Texas
Sprinter-Beast. Last year, he gave up his Austin medical practice to become Head Age-Group Coach at Texas
Aquatics. Dan has used minimum yardage training with great success. At age 44, he set a USMS national
record of
:23.63 in the 50 yard butterfly.