Saturday, July 04, 2009

Nick White has some really great info. and he still does Triathlons!

3 Essential Open-Water Survival Tips

By Nick White

Last summer, one of my athletes felt great going into the water at the start of her goal event, a half-Ironman at Buffalo Springs Lake in Lubbock, Texas, only to get stuck behind a pack of slow swimmers.

A gap formed between her group and the leaders, but by the time she fought her way into open water she didn't have the power to get across to them. And while she ended the day with a new PR, her experience in the water revealed an opportunity for even more improvement. She needed some surge power and a more aggressive outlook on swimming in the pack.

Pack swimming is a relatively infrequent experience for most athletes, and it's difficult to replicate in a pool. Sure, you can swim laps right on someone's feet or hip, but there's little that compares to being smack in the middle of a few hundred swimmers out in open water.

So, without much opportunity to practice this skill, here are some tips for staying out of trouble.

Don't Get Pushed Around at the Start

Where you stage for the swim has a lot to do with how crowded you'll be in the water. Everyone wants to start in the middle of the shoreline to have the shortest distance to first buoy, but remember that all those athletes on the sides are going to be converging in toward the middle as soon as the gun goes off.

If you're not fast enough to get out ahead of them, you'll end up in the most congested swimming environment you can imagine. For my medium-speed swimmers (the ones who are in the first half of the pack coming out of the water), I actually recommend lining up more toward the ends of the shoreline.

You'll be able to catch a draft from the pack, but you'll have fewer swimmers to one side of you, meaning you'll have room to move around slow people. Yes, you'll have a little bit farther to swim, but swimming in better conditions often leads to faster swim times anyway.

Protect Your Face

Getting kicked in the face is one of the biggest risks and fears for triathletes. To reduce this risk try swimming catch-up style when you're in the pack. Catch-up is normally a stroke drill where you leave one hand extended in front of you while the other pulls through a complete stroke.

When that hand gets back in front of you, you begin your pull with the other arm. In a tight pack environment, swimming in such a manner means that one hand is always in front of your head to intercept a swimmer's wayward foot. Once you're in clearer water you can go back to a conventional stroke.

Think Before You Surge

Accelerating in the water to pass another athlete takes a lot of energy, so make sure you're doing it for the right reason. In the middle of the pack, passing one person isn't going to take you out of the draft, but if you're in a long line of swimmers you run the risk of pulling out to the side, slowing down because of the drag and then losing your spot as you fight to get back in line.

The most important time to work hard is right at the beginning of the swim. You'll burn a lot of energy, but getting into a good position in the pack—near the outside and with a group that swims as fast or a little faster than you can—will save you energy in the long run because you'll be able to do more swimming and less battling.

Of course, to get yourself into the sweet spot within your pack of swimmers, you need the ability to surge in the water, sometimes several times, and then recover while maintaining a strong pace.

The final few weeks leading up to your event are a good time to work on this because the workouts are relatively short and fit well into most athletes' tapering programs. I like to have my athletes perform the following workout twice a week in the three to four weeks before a goal event.

Nick White's Surge-Power Workout:
Warm-up: 500 yards

Drills: 400 yards total
• 3 x 50 yards catch-up
• 3 x 50 yards kick-on-side arm out with fins
• 100 yards sighting drill

Power-interval set: 1,600 Yards
• 8 x 200 yards. Intervals 1-4 pull with paddles; 5-8 swim focusing on high elbows and catch

Sprint-interval set: 900 Yards
• 9 x 100 rotating a 50-yard sprint through the set
• Interval No. 1: 50 sprint, 50 race pace
• Interval No. 2: 25 race pace, 50 sprint, 25 race pace
• Interval No. 3: 50 race pace, 50 sprint
Repeat twice

Cool-down: 150 yards
Total: 3,550

Nick White is a Pro Coach for Carmichael Training Systems, Inc. and works with athletes of all ability levels. To find out about CTS coaching, training camps and other services, visit trainright.com.

Related Articles:

Start to Finish: Owning the Open Water

6 Tips to Help Transition From the Pool to Open Water

More Open Water Training Tips