The Race Club: Five Traditional Swimming Techniques We Should Abandon

Courtesy of Gary Hall Sr., 10-time World Record Holder, 3-time Olympian, 1976 Olympic Games US Flagbearer and The Race Club co-founder.

There are certain swimming techniques that have been traditionally taught by many coaches for decades that we should seriously consider abandoning. These are not controversial swimming techniques. There are plenty of those and they may be worth keeping. These are the swimming techniques that are just plain wrong. They need to go. Here is my top five list:

1. Fingertips, wrist and elbow freestyle hand entry. This technique has been the traditional way of teaching the hand entry in freestyle. In other words, drive the hand down toward the water on the recovery, then extend it forward underwater. Some of the fastest swimmers in the world today, like David Popovici and Ahmed Hafnoui, and some from yesteryear, like Ian Thorpe, do the opposite. They drive their hands up, not down, during the arm recovery.  That makes sense. The amount of drag from the hand moving through air is inconsequential compared to pushing it forward through the water.

2. Eyes forward in the butterfly arm entry. This prevalent way of teaching butterfly technique is wrong. At The Race Club, we have measured the frontal drag of the head while it is tilted forward compared to when the chin is tucked down. Drag is lower with the chin tucked down. By tilting the head and looking forward at hand entry, not only is there more drag, but the swimmer also loses the opportunity of using the head as a coupling motion tool.

3. Narrow the pull in breaststroke. It has been widely held that a wide pull in breaststroke leads to more drag. It doesn’t. With the shoulders elevating and the arms moving in a circular arc, the swimmer’s arms do not move forward once the hands separate past the shoulders during the out sweep. Drag only occurs with the body parts that are moving forward. Pulling widely generates more lift for the swimmer to elevate the upper body out of the water and leads to greater propulsion when the hands do turn the corner. This should happen when the arms are at about a 90-degree angle with one another. Turning the corner with the hands too early during the breaststroke pull causes the swimmer to lose propulsion and speed.

4. Glide off the wall to hold your speed. Conventional teaching has been to glide off the walls on the turns to help hold the swimmer’s speed. It is not true. By immediately up kicking with the back of the legs and the bottom of the swimmer’s feet after the toes leave the wall, the speed is held better than by gliding. We have tested this technique seven times now, always with the same result. Compared to up kicking off the wall immediately, a short glide will slow the time to 5 meters by .1 seconds. A long glide will slow the time to 5 meters by .2 seconds.

5. Sprint freestyle with the high elbow pull. Using a high-elbow pulling motion, also called early vertical forearm (EVF), makes great sense for any freestyle event over 100 meters. That pulling motion will help reduce frontal drag, which is crucial for any mid -distance or longer event. In a sprint, however, it is better to pull deeper, generating more propulsion, even if it causes more drag. For a short swim, we can handle the extra drag. We can’t get enough propulsion, however, from the EVF pull to win a 50-meter sprint.

Yours in swimming,

Gary Sr.

Gary Hall, Sr., Technical Director and Head Coach of The Race Club (courtesy of TRC)

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THE RACE CLUB

Because Life is Worth Swimming, our mission is to promote swimming through sport, lifelong enjoyment, and good health benefits. Our objective is for each member of and each participant in The Race Club to improve his or her swimming performances, health, and self-esteem through our educational programs, services and creativity. We strive to help each member of The Race Club overcome challenges and reach his or her individual life goals.

The Race Club provides facilities, coaching, training, technical instruction, video, fitness and health programs for swimmers of all ages and abilities. Race Club swim camps are designed and tailored to satisfy each swimmer’s needs, whether one is trying to reach the Olympic Games or simply improve one’s fitness. Our programs are suitable for beginner swimmers, pleasure swimmers, fitness swimmers, USA swimming or YMCA swimmers, or triathletes; anyone who wants to improve swimming skills. All of our Race Club members share an enjoyment of being in the water and use swimming to stimulate a more active mind and body.

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Swim Alchemist
1 year ago

For #4, what about off the blocks? Seems that a small glide after the start would be beneficial since the speed from that is so high.

For #5, if there is an athlete who is not very strong, would the EVF pull not still be optimal for a 50? Granted, that swimmer might not be very good at the 50 if they aren’t very strong…

College Coach
1 year ago

Having trouble wrapping my head around #1. You mean on the entry having the hands go down and then forward underwater is the old way? How do hands go up on the entry? Or up as you start the recovery? How do hands go any other way?! I’m sure there is something here, the wording is messing with me

Sqimgod
1 year ago

Scratching races seems to be an outdated technique as well!

MDL
1 year ago

Not sure how I feel about #4. If you’re swimming the 50 then I believe you don’t need a glide, but obviously you’re going to move faster if you kick vs don’t kick. The point is speed and ease to 15m, not just how quickly you can get to the first flags

Last edited 1 year ago by MDL
Tea rex
1 year ago

I have never heard of #2. Head up on hand entry? That’s like early age group technique