Front Quadrant Swimming from Swim Smooth

You might have heard of something called Front Quadrant Swimming which has to do with the timing of your freestyle stroke. It’s widely recognised as being an efficient way to swim and something that you should use in your own stroke technique but there’s a lot of confusion about what it actually means:

If you drew two lines, one through the swimmer’s head and one at water level you would create four quadrants:


Front quadrant swimming simply means that there is always one of your hands in one of the front quadrants (1 and 2) at any one point in time. Or, put even more simply, when your hands pass above and below the water, that should happen in front of your head, not behind it.

Let’s look at some examples. Here’s elite swimmer Jono Van Hazel from Perth:


Jono is a classic smooth and as you can see his hands pass in front of his head with classic front-quadrant timing. Jono’s got brilliant stroke timing which is one reason why he looks so smooth when he swims. Notice how when the recovering arm is passing the head the lead hand has started the stroke and is catching the water – it’s not pausing out front and doing nothing (more on that below):


You can see more of Jono swimming here: youtube.com/watch?v=s3HhNlysFDs

Interestingly, even swimmers using very fast stroke rates normally still have front quadrant timing. Here’s former triathlon world champion Tim Don swimming at a rapid 90 strokes per minute:


It’s closer but Tim’s arm s are still clearly passing in front of the head. Also 7 Time World Marathon Swimming Champion Shelley Taylor Smith (see clinics above) who was also famous for using a high stroke rate:


Here’s an example of a swimmer with the arms passing behind the head, breaking the front-quadrant rule:


Clare’s arm is collapsing downwards whilst she is breathing giving her no support in front of her head and making breathing much harder than it needs to be. If you swallow water when you breathe this is likely to be the reason – try the one-two-stretch mantra here.

Taking It To The Extreme

The confusion with front-quadrant timing is that some swimmers believe it means a full catch-up at the front of the stroke, where the hands pretty much meet at the front:


To achieve this position you must hold the hand out in front of you with a long pause-and-glide whilst the other hand fully catches it up. This long gap between strokes (we call it Overgliding) is very inefficient as you simply decelerate in the water whilst trying to glide and then have to use the next stroke to get up to speed again. Pause-and-glide timing also leads to common stroke flaws such as dropping the wrist and putting on the brakesand the overglider kickstart.

This catch-up timing is technically still front quadrant as the hands do pass in front of the head but it is really taking thing s to the extreme – it is not what was meant by front-quadrant-timing when the term was created.

The Fear Of Windmilling

The idea with front quadrant timing is that it is trying to avoid a full-windmill in the stroke where the hands are at near opposite positions resulting in the hands passing behind the head:


The key thing here is that even if you tried to do this deliberately you would find it very hard to do – it feels very extreme when you do it and it’s unlikely you’ll do it naturally, especially if you’ve been working on your stroke technique for a while.
Try It In Front Of A Mirror!

If you’re finding thinking about what both arms are doing in the stroke at the same time a little mind bending, don’t worry, it is! One of the best ways to get a feel for it is to stand in front of a mirror, bend forwards slightly and perform some practise strokes.

Try and reproduce your natural stroke as closely as possible and see how your hands pass each other. If they pass in front of the head (even if only slightly in front like Tim and Shelley) then you’re doing fine!

Conclusion

Our central point here is that the danger of windmilling is much over-stated. In most instances where the hands pass behind the head the reason is related to breathing and poor awareness of what the lead hand is doing (as with Clare above), not because the swimmer is windmilling in the traditional sense.

A far greater risk is taking things to the opposite extreme and adopting a full catch-up style of stroke. This is a very inefficient stroke style and a very difficult habit to break once developed.

Instead, work on developing all aspects of your stroke technique in a balanced way including: breathing, body position, alignment, kick, catch/pull technique and rhythm. Do that and the resultant stroke is almost guaranteed to give you good front-quadrant timing without you directly focusing too much on it.

Swim Smooth!

Coventry Sprints Sat 20/09

Please find attached details for this coming Saturday Open Meet at Coventry 50m pool.

Session one Warm up is at 9:15 with a start time of 10:00 am.I recommend you arrive around 8:30 – this will give you plenty of time, nothing worse than the swimmer running onto poolside all in a fluster!

Tom and Mandy will be on poolside, i hope to be there by the start too – seating can be very limited for the swimmer, so if you have a foldable chair (camping one) then please bring it along.

Make sure you have a T-shirt, towel, footwear, Drinks and food for poolside.

Coventry Sprint Programme 2014

Coventry Sprint Pre Info 2014

Regards 

Helen

Junior and Diddy Group

For the foreseeable future, the Junior Lengths groups will be taken by Mandy Blizard, and the Diddy Groups by Helen Pordage. Both are experienced level 2 coaches, and are known to the children. Please support them as they take these groups going forwards.

Boldmere Open Meet 21st to 23rd November

Boldmere’s BIG annual open meet – ‘The Open’ will be held at Stechford baths from Friday 21st to Sunday 23rd November.

This is a first come first served meet, so we need to get the entries in early. £5.75 an event.

If you are unsure what to enter, please talk to your coach as soon as you can 🙂

http://www.boldmereswimmingclub.co.uk/b_open.php

There are qualifying times for this event – please see this document:

The Open 2014 Qualifying Times

Please send your entries in to Helen Pordage by the 1st October – thank you.

Session 1

 

Event No Gender Event
1 F 400m Individual Medley HDW
2 M 400m Individual Medley HDW Warm Up TBA
3 F 400m Freestyle HDW Start TBA
4 M 400m Freestyle HDW
Event No Gender Event
5 M 200m Individual Medley HDW

Session 2

6 F 100m Breastroke HDW Warm Up TBA
7 M 50m Fly HDW Start TBA
8 F 100M Backstroke HDW
9 M 200m Fly HDW
10 F 200m Freestyle HDW
11 M 50m Breastroke HDW
12 M 50 Skins Final
13 F 100m Freestyle Heats
14 M 200m Backstroke HDW

Session 3

15 F 200m Breastroke HDW Warm Up TBA
16 M 100m Fly HDW Start TBA
17 F 50m Backstroke HDW
18 M 50m Freestyle HDW
19 F 100m Freestyle 10 years Final
20 F 100m Freestyle 11 years Final
21 F 100m Freestyle 12 years Final
22 F 100m Freestyle 13 years Final
23 F 100m Freestyle 14 years Final
24 F 100m Freestyle 15+ years Final
Event No Gender Event
25 F 200m Individual Medley HDW

Session 4

26 M 100m Breastroke HDW Warm Up TBA
27 F 50m Fly HDW Start TBA
28 M 100M Backstroke HDW
29 F 200m Fly HDW
30 M 200m Freestyle HDW
31 F 50m Breastroke HDW
32 F 50 Skins Final
33 M 100m Freestyle Heats
34 F 200m Backstroke HDW

Session 5

35 M 200m Breastroke HDW Warm Up TBA
36 F 100m Fly HDW Start TBA
37 M 50m Backstroke HDW
38 F 50m Freestyle HDW
39 M 100m Freestyle 10 years Final
40 M 100m Freestyle 11 years Final
41 M 100m Freestyle 12 years Final
42 M 100m Freestyle 13 years Final
43 M 100m Freestyle 14 years Final
44 M 100m Freestyle 15+ years Final
Lunch TBA – Interval – 15 minutes – 9 year olds are not permitted to enter the 100m events – Lunch TBA

9 year olds are not permitted to enter the 100m events
Event Entry Time Event Entry Time
50m Freestyle 50m Breaststroke
100m Freestyle 100m Breaststroke
200m Freestyle 200m Breaststroke
400m Freestyle 50m Butterfly
50m Backstroke 100m Butterfly
100m Backstroke 200m Butterfly
200m Backstroke 200m Individual Medley
400 Individual Medley
Total No of Entries: @ £6.00 (paper entry) per Event – @ £5.75 (electronic entry) per Event £ 

Volunteers needed for the Birmingham Water Festival

help2The annual Birmingham SAG Water Festival will be held at Stechford Swimming baths on the morning of Sunday 19th October with the warm-up starting at 08:30. The gala will finish by 1:30pm. Beeches will be supporting this event once again, to give our younger swimmers the chance to swim in an organised event, many for the first time.

The format of the gala is like a standard ‘Open Meet’ and is intended for developing swimmers aged 8, 9 and 10 years who have little or no competitive experience. We need your help! The Water Festival is an ideal opportunity to volunteer to help at a gala in a friendly environment. So you can be a Chaperone, Marshall, Runner, Timekeeper…if you would like to offer your time to help support this event please leave a message via ‘contact us‘ on this site or leave your details at the desk at Beeches. Many thanks for your help and support.

Train Together, Win Together, Have FUN Together