Sun Yang and Emperor Penguins Teach Us Lessons

by SwimSwam 11

June 02nd, 2017 International, Opinion, Training

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

The other day I was doing my swim at Founder’s Park in Islamorada, when Chris, a marine researcher from Key Largo, swimming in the lane next to me, asked me if I had ever seen a documentary on emperor penguins in the Antarctic. I hadn’t.

“They have this amazing ability to sequester air under their feathers”, he explained. “When they are swimming under water and getting chased by sea lions, they somehow release all that air around their bodies which results in a sudden burst of speed. That’s how they avoid getting eaten for lunch.”

“Hmmm”, I thought. “Interesting.” I was wondering what the relevance of this was to us.

“I watched Sun Yang on Youtube”, he continued, “and couldn’t help but notice that he blows air out through his nose after each breath and a lot of that air ends up under his body. Do you think that makes him faster”?

I had never really thought about it, but perhaps Chris is right. Perhaps it does make a difference.

Sun Yang does a few things out of the ordinary. While swimming the 1500, he takes 3 or so successive breaths in to and out of each turn and often again in the middle of the pool. Except for the final 100 meters, he takes only four out of the six beat kicks, opting to rest on two during the breath stroke. He bends his knee on the kicks, when the opposite hand enters the water, more than one would think he should (what I call the ‘surge’ kicks). He takes no dolphin kicks off walls. And he seems to get more air bubbles under his body than most, coming from his nose. He tucks his chin down pretty close to his chest after the breath strokes and that may be responsible for the released air staying under his body.

He also has an enormous wingspan, pulls with an extremely high elbow, has a monster kick, especially in the last 50 meters (who else finishes under 26 seconds?) and with a stroke rate of 60, manages to beat everyone else and break world records.

With each of these quirky techniques, I can’t help thinking that there is a method to the madness. I can understand and appreciate that with a stroke rate of 60 breathing every cycle (30 respirations per minute) would not be enough to maintain such a high speed. The extra 5 or 6 breaths each lap could really make a difference. Giving up the two dolphin kicks off each wall seems a bit contrary to what most coaches would advocate, but perhaps the trade for the earlier breaths is worth it. I have never seen another swimmer use his unusual kicking technique, but in spite of forfeiting two kicks each cycle, he somehow manages to maintain his speed with a slow stroke rate. Undoubtedly, that enables him to finish with his incredible kicking speed. But what about those air bubbles?

It always seemed to make more sense to me to keep air in the lungs as long as possible before exhaling prior to the breath. After all, the more buoyant we are with the air in our lungs, the higher in the water, the less frontal drag. It would seem, but perhaps not.

Water is some 800 times denser than air and the frontal drag forces in water are astronomically higher than in air. The emperor penguins do not escape the wrath of the sea lion by kicking or pulling harder, but by reducing frontal drag, surrounding themselves with tiny air bubbles, rather than water, at that critical feeding time. I know that some racing boats put steps in the hulls in order to trap air under the boat and increase lift and reduce drag. Perhaps a few air bubbles under the chest of a swimmer has more impact on reducing frontal drag than keeping all of it in our lungs. Who knows?

I do know this. Swimmers, like Sun Yang, end up teaching us more than we think we know. It is up to us to observe, to think, to question and most importantly, to learn. Chris might be right. The emperor penguins and Sun Yang may be on to something.

Andy Potts (courtesy of The Race Club)

Andy Potts (courtesy of The Race Club)

Sign up for the Race Club Triathlon Camp July 30th-August 2nd in Los Angeles, CA.

See the camp schedule here (times may change slight):

Thursday, July 30th 5:30pm-7:30pm at Pali High pool
Friday, July 31st 7:30am-9:30am and 5:30pm-7:30pm at Pali High pool
Saturday, August 1st 9:30am-11:30am and 2pm-4pm at Pali high pool featuring Andy Potts
Sunday, August 2nd 8:30am-10:30am at Tower 26 Santa Monica beach

Yours in swimming,

Gary Sr.

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

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

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Crawler
6 years ago

I am not convinced by the bubble theory, and I don’t see how his kicking (which generates more drag than his peers) helps. I do think that the extra breathing in and out of the turns helps, especially in a race like the 1500.

garyhallsr
Reply to  Crawler
6 years ago

We will be testing the bubble theory soon in the keys, using our Ben Hur drag technology. You may be right…but in the meantime, it works for Emperor penguins and cruise ships, without a doubt. I also agree the extra breathing helps utilize his highly developed aerobic energy system.

Swimnovate
8 years ago

I love these outside the box approaches to swim technique.

bkkang
8 years ago

Apparently Sun Yang got a history of heart disorder maybe relate to MARFAN syndrome, TMZ was used to mitigate heart seizure in event of over-exertion or as a precautionary measure against sudden heart attack.The drug or medicine Vascorel is prescribed by the state medical physician for medical benefits and prevention of cardiac problems rather to enhance his athletic performance eg Flo Hyman with Marfan syndrome and M Phelps was tested for this syndrome, a genetic flaw that him very special,

garyhallsr
Reply to  bkkang
6 years ago

As a physician, I am familiar with Marfan’s syndrome. Not a good thing to have and can lead to aortic rupture, which killed Flo Hyman and other athletes, I believe.

Mike
8 years ago

I don’t like the Fact that he used Drugs and should not be allowed in the 2016 Olympics.
It is unfair to all the other swimmers that are Clean.

garyhallsr
Reply to  Mike
6 years ago

I couldn’t agree more. Anyone who knowingly uses PED’s should be banned for life.

Brett from ZenTri
8 years ago

It’s the combination of many things, all at the right time. Also, his high-elbow catch allows his upper body to submarine below the water, causing no cavitation drag behind his head, neck, and back. It’s truly amazing to watch.

garyhallsr
Reply to  Brett from ZenTri
6 years ago

Yes..for a tall guy, he has extremely low frontal drag, particularly at the surge point and during his high elbow pulling motion.

Gosh
8 years ago

I think you mean Emperor penguins.

garyhallsr
Reply to  Gosh
6 years ago

Yes…you are correct …Emperor penguins