A Frightful List of Every Swimmer’s Worst Nightmares

A List of Every Swimmer’s Worst Nightmares
By Olivia McKelvey
Life is full of the unknown. It likes to take abrupt twists and turns and throws the occasional curveball just to keep you on your toes. So, when it comes time to put on your game face and dip your toes into the immense puddle of competition, expect the unexpected. Compiled below are some of the most frightening scenarios that can turn any swimmer from calm, cool and collected to petrified, shocked and vulnerable. Enjoy this spine-chilling read!
1. Goggles Break Behind the Blocks

Photo Courtesy: Robin Sparf
2. Your Cap Falls off At the Beginning of your Race
3. No Cool Down Pool

Photo Courtesy: Brian Jenkins – UVM Athletics
4. Missing your Race

Photo Courtesy: Julie Karl
5. Your Tech Suit Rips, but the Show Must Go On

Photo Courtesy: Tony Lewis
6. Jumping Early on a Relay Exchange

Photo Courtesy: Travis Bender
7. DQ for DQ?
8. Missing the Wall
All commentaries are the opinion of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Swimming World Magazine nor its staff.
There is no such thing as Lactic Acid in swimmers…
Pls explain more
Kym Wood
During intense training, a swimmer can drive their pH levels down into the high sixes. This is well above the pH required to produce true lactic acid. If our swimmer had lactic acid in their blood, they would have to have a pH under six, and they would be rushed to hospital.
Why then do coaches and swimmers still talk about lactic acid in the body? Because of simple historical inertia. It has stuck in the minds of swim coaches and swimmers, but it is based on a misunderstanding about the chemistry.
This then begs the question if we do not have lactic acid, then what do we have? What causes the burn? Simply put… Our muscles do produce acid, but that acid is simply the positively charged hydrogen, not lactic acid as coaches and swimmer believe.
Scientists were long fooled because hydrogen and lactate exit the cell together in fact one cannot leave without the other. So when we measure lactate levels, it correlates with hydrogen+ ions.
Coaches believed they were measuring lactic acid, but it is merely a coincidence that when we measure a rise in lactate it happens to match with a rise in the very painful hydrogen + ion acid levels.
Note:
A swimmer’s lactate threshold is simply the point where the swimmer’s body produces both lactate and + Hydrogen ions faster than it can clear them.
Kym Wood
During intense training, a swimmer can drive their pH levels down into the high sixes. This is well above the pH required to produce true lactic acid. If our swimmer had lactic acid in their blood, they would have to have a pH under six, and they would be rushed to hospital.
Why then do coaches and swimmers still talk about lactic acid in the body? Because of simple historical inertia. It has stuck in the minds of swim coaches and swimmers, but it is based on a misunderstanding about the chemistry.
This then begs the question if we do not have lactic acid, then what do we have? What causes the burn? Simply put… Our muscles do produce acid, but that acid is simply the positively charged hydrogen, not lactic acid as coaches and swimmer believe.
Scientists were long fooled because hydrogen and lactate exit the cell together in fact one cannot leave without the other. So when we measure lactate levels, it correlates with hydrogen+ ions.
Coaches believed they were measuring lactic acid, but it is merely a coincidence that when we measure a rise in lactate it happens to match with a rise in the very painful hydrogen + ion acid levels.
Note:
A swimmer’s lactate threshold is simply the point where the body produces both lactate and Hydrogen+ ions faster than it can clear them.
Tony MacGuinness thank you
Kym Wood
Every book on swimming, every course, every lecture and especially tv commentators mention Lactic Acid… It’s about time it was corrected.
I lost my cap on an 800 free and my goggles broke just before a relay but coach asked a swimmer in our team to help me out. Our team won and we set a new record borrowed goggles and all!
Yep
Goggles came down on the dive and I had to swim the whole race with my mouth.
My suit ripped while coming to my marks, didn’t know until it felt drafty by the end of the race. I finished, felt the rip and was embarrassed.