Never Do a Swimming Drill Again!

Courtesy of Bridger Bell

“Train” your drills.

“Doing” drills doesn’t improve stroke technique and doesn’t foster faster swimming.

You might read the statement above and think it falls in line with USRPT articles, which call stroke drills “harmful and irrelevant” (at least for elite swimmers). But no, this article is an attempt to salvage drills from being considered “harmful and irrelevant” and instead identify how to implement them effectively.

“Ultra-Short Race-Pace Training” (USRPT) advocates the exclusion of drills and equipment. While many programs could benefit from moving partway in that direction, the extreme that USRPT advocates may not be ideal for most: it rejects the use of kickboards, fins, paddles, etc. as well as stroke drills in training. Taking a more nuanced position, this article argues against “doing” drills but in favor of “training” drills.

It might be tempting to view that as a silly semantic distinction. It’s not. Words matter. Language structures our thoughts, which then influence our behaviors. When we speak of “doing” drills, it may promote:

“doing” drills without sufficient attention to how they program the body to perform desired movements and engage desired energy systems for an actual race. (Indeed,USRPT’s rejection of drills is based in part on drills’ irrelevance to training the energy systems that are actually used in racing.)

Yes, you “did” one-arm freestyle, but HOW did you do it? To what end? What was the timing of your breath within the stroke cycle? Was your kick strong and fast throughout? Was your nose pointed at the bottom of the pool when you initiated the catch? [Coaches, was each and every swimmer in the water performing the drill in a way that will effect the particular stroke changes you want to see?]

“doing” drills sporadically without sufficient repetition to effect motor learning.

Yes, you “did” the drill, but when did you revisit it? A few weeks later (rather than almost every day)? Doing a drill a few times a season won’t effect motor learning. Without thousands of stroke cycles over an extended period of time, the drill will have no effect on muscle memory programming and thus no effect on your racing stroke.

“doing” drills without sufficient speed and application of force to translate into racing.

Yes, you “did” single-double butterfly drill, but did you apply the same force with each pull that you would in a race? Was the tempo of your kick/stroke cycle the goal tempo for your races? Did your kicks have the speed and force you’re training to race with? Was your head position consistent throughout with the position you want in your race?

“doing” drills without enough attention to the essential aspects of the drill that effect particular outcomes in the stroke (the actual changes you want to see in your racing stroke)

Yes, you “did” breaststroke with a flutter kick, but was your catch explosive? Did you hide your head between your arms when you extended them? Did you whip through the top of the stroke to the extension in the blink of an eye?

“doing” drills and then UNDOING them by swimming full stroke with your old technique the rest of practice (or the next day)

Yes, you “did” a particular freestyle drill to effect a particular change in your stroke, but then did you come back the next day and warm up with poor technique that most likely just reinforced all your old bad habits, undoing any progress the drill had set you toward?

The idea of “doing” a drill often becomes akin to checking a box. Have we “done” drills? Yep. Check! Move on.

The better alternative is “TRAINING” drills.

“Training” drills means sticking with a drill for more than a month, training it (nearly) every day for thousands of stroke cycles to program muscle memory.

“Training” drills means ensuring your technique is correct, which means you and your coach must know exactly which aspects of the drill effect which outcomes in your racing stroke; then, perform the drill with exacting, unfailing precision every stroke cycle.

“Training” drills means performing them at full speed/tempo with the same timing as your racing stroke and the same explosive force with which you sprint.

“Training” drills means you don’t UN-train them, which means ensuring the technique developed by the drill translates into your full stroke every time you swim it in practice. This means avoiding long, slow swims of full-stroke that leave too much room for bad habits to resurface. Slow swimming begets slow swimming. Water is elastic: if you don’t apply explosive force, you slip through the water and it becomes forgiving of stroke mistakes / bad habits. When you’re “training” drills to effect changes in your strokes, be judicious about when and how you train the full stroke. Make each lap count. Know the purpose and find the value in each lap. Protect your progress.

Leave no swimmer behind (peer coaching):

When we introduce a new drill to a practice group, we want each swimmer to master the essential aspects of the drill before training it. It does no good to train a drill if it’s not being performed correctly. Often, the introduction of a drill is a great opportunity for peer coaching: “Team, help each other get there.” They often coach each other more effectively. Once everyone has mastered the drill, we train it and train it and train it. Swimming is a muscle-memory sport.

“Doing” a drill is a waste of time. “Training” a drill for thousands of stroke cycles over an extended period can effect desired stroke adjustments for racing and foster faster swimming.

by Bridger Bell

VIDEO: “DOING” vs “TRAINING” BREASTSTROKE WITH FLUTTER DRILL

Virginia Swim Camps will host three one-week sessions at Fork Union Military Academy in Fork Union, Virginia

Session 1: June 14-18
Session 2: June 21-25
Session 3: June 28-July 2

There is still some availability. Call (434) 964-1235

Don’t miss out on this great experience. Virginia Swim Camps includes among its graduates five Olympic Gold Medal winners including 2012 Olympians Matt McLean and Charlie Houchin. Additionally, multiple NCAA champions, numerous NCAA and High School All-Americans, and several world record holders have attended the Virginia Swim Camp.

Session enrollment is limited to ensure quality instruction with small coach-to-swimmer ratios. Expand the limits of your abilities, have lots of fun, and enjoy making new friends. Remember, availability is limited, so please call as soon as possible.

More information at: http://www.virginiaswimcamp.com

See Coach Bridger Bell’s personal coaching page here. 

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swimfan
9 years ago

Had a coach once who spent much of meet warmups doing drills. The 10U swimmers were getting swum over by kids from other teams…it really created a dangerous situation. And those drills were not helpful in a meet warmup.

In another situation, had coaches that used same drills often (ie, distance per stroke) and virtually every swimmer on that team had great technique.

More often, I see younger swimmers “cheating” on drills to “beat” their teammates, and no one getting anything out of the drills when they are not done properly.

hwimmer
9 years ago

I need to print this out and give it to my coach. We always “do” drills and I think it’s a waste of time! It’s very irritating!

ConfusedSwimmers
9 years ago

What kind of results has Mr. Bell achieved in his coaching career. It helps to see what success has been proven by these claims. USRPT has Andrews and a few others…Bell has?

Reply to  ConfusedSwimmers
9 years ago

You don’t need to have Olympians on your resume to have good ideas… by your implication since Bowman coached Phelps we should all, to a person, train the way Bowman says.

NaveDolan
9 years ago

Makes sense that USRPT doesn’t do drills seeing that Michael Andrew has some of the most busted looking strokes in swimming

Reply to  NaveDolan
9 years ago

And that’s 100% because of USRPT. Because all swimmers ever who do it the other way have perfect technique.

Josh Davis
9 years ago

Amen! Great article!!!

MaineSwimming152
9 years ago

I agree a lot with this article. Coaches love to make their swimmers do drills and yet fail to make them purposeful. I agree a lot with the USRPT idea of cutting drills. They should only be used if absolutely necessary. In a younger swimmer who doesn’t understand a technique you are trying to change or improve a drill can be very helpful. In more elite swimmers I believe drills should almost entirely avoided. Only if a swimmer can’t make the change with their normal stroke should a drill be used. If you have good technique whats the point of doing a drill?

The metaphor I like to use is: If you’ve learned a guitar solo well and don’t make… Read more »

liswimfan
9 years ago

Bridger Bell’s articles/videos are becoming great resources for swim coaches. I do not know off hand of any swimmers he has brought to the elite National level yet, but he does an amazing job of articulating many ideas/concepts I think coaches want to apply but cannot verbalize or organize in their heads. Good luck in your new position.