Race:
Masters Swim Meet
Date:
9 February 2014
Location:
Franklin, Pa
AMYMSA Swim Meet in Franklin, Pa.
I had a great meet. I got three
personal bests out of four swims. Most importantly, I am still on track for
meeting my end-of-season goals. Let me set the stage: Last fall I had been
swimming well enough at meets, but I was not improving to the degree that I was
used to, nor what I knew I could accomplish. So in early January I worked with
my coach to set some goals, with the realization that reaching those goals would
require a commitment to pushing myself harder during practices. Today’s meet was
my chance to test whether I was on track in the 50-yard butterfly event. My goal
today was to set a personal best of 32.43 seconds, which would position me well
to swim it in 31.5 seconds by the end of the season in April. Read on to see if
I met today’s goal….
Event #2: 100 Individual Medley
My time was 1:14.69, which lowered my
personal best by about half a second. My swim was not without flaws, since my
back-breast turn was sloppy. But otherwise, this swim felt effortless to the
point where I had to remind myself to swim faster. My backstroke felt
particularly fast today. My stroke rate is often slower than my competitors due
to my long arms, but I was easily keeping up with them. I elected to use the
strength of each stroke propel me rather than quicken my turnover rate (this is
a quality over quantity argument; I went with a stronger stroke rather than a
faster stroke). My back-breast turn was poor because I initiated the turn too
soon and found myself a bit on my stomach before reaching the wall. I would have
been disqualified for that if anyone cared. My breaststroke segment felt good
and I concentrated on a more rapid stroke rate in combination with good forward
thrust of the arms. I saw no one in front of me during the breaststroke so I
thought maybe all my competitors were behind me. I continued to think I was
leading my heat during the freestyle segment. But at the end of the race I saw
that fellow age-grouper Gary was on my left and had beat me by a second. I did
not see him because I breathe on my right. We had a good chat after the
race.
Event #4: 50 Butterfly
My time was 32.32, so yes, I beat my goal and set
a new personal best. I had a fairly shallow dive and came to the surface a
little sooner than I like. Also, I glided too much into the far wall; I should
have taken another stroke to keep my momentum. But I was at least a body length
ahead of everyone else in the pool and I can’t tell you how exciting that is. I
knew this was going to turn out to be a great swim. After I got out of the pool,
a particularly fast swimmer named Jim came over to me and gave me much
encouragement. He said I had a powerful arm pull that carried me through the
water (you will always be my friend if you compliment my upper body strength,
which personally, I think is lacking). He said I could easily bring my time
below 30 seconds with a couple changes to my swim. First, I should keep my head
down. This advice surprised me, since I never really thought about my head
position when I am not taking a breath (I only took 3 breaths in 50 yards).
Second, my shoulder blades should pinch in the back as I bring my arms out of
the water on the recovery. He didn’t say why this would be an improvement, but
now that I think about it, I think this is just another way for me to thrust my
chest forward, which is what my coach has been trying to get me to do.
Event #5: 100 Backstroke
I have this event on my list of things I like
but it is far from my best event. My time was 1:22.57, which lowered my personal
best by exactly 0.04 seconds. I did not expect to break this record because most
recently I swam the event in 1:27.25. But in the water I felt really good. The
roof rafters and flags were really passing me fast overhead. My turns were
really quite good, too, which is a big improvement from last fall. I kicked like
crazy to get me to the finish.
Event #8: 50 Backstroke
My personal best in this event is 36.54. I swam
it today in 36.84. It took me a long time to recover from the 100 Back. My heart
rate took a while to slow down and my quadriceps were hurting so bad that I
walked with a limp. But somehow, at just the right moment, everything settled
down and I jumped in the pool to start my 50 back. I still felt fast and my turn
at the wall was pretty good. However, I misjudged where the wall was at the
finish, so I turned on my side way too early…coasting, reaching, and eventually
finding the touchpad with the grace and speed of a manatee. Before I was out of
the water, John K. raised his voice and told me my finish sucked. Yep, that was
true. He and I have a great relationship, so while this might have sounded harsh
to people who don’t know us, I felt the love inside his rebuke. He wanted me to
do well and I didn’t. Or at least, I didn’t do as well as I could have…because
36.84 was only 0.30 seconds off my best, and I would have beaten my time by a
lot if I didn’t mess up the finish. Later, I was talking with Victor and he said
I should work on my streamlining at the start: “Let your dive carry you farther
before starting your stroke.” Then I watched an 80 year-old woman do exactly
that. If she did it, I should do it. I should definitely start watching old
ladies in the pool! (but seriously, thanks for the advice Victor).
No comments:
Post a Comment