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Backstroke - Double Arm

Posted by Glenn Mills on Apr 11, 2008 07:00AM (15,895 views)

Do you over-reach on your backstroke? Having a hard time keeping your hips up? Wondering how your hands should exit to initiate the recovery? Want to get the feeling of where you start your pull? Want to get a bonus effect of practicing your breaststroke underwater pull? This drill is for YOU!


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Why Do It:
This old standby is actually a pretty amazing drill, because it lets you focus on so many different things. We'll hit on a few of them, but you can add your own. And remember...choose just one focus point at a time.

How to Do It:
1. Push off on your back with both arms above your head and start flutter kicking.
2. Pull down with both arms at the same time, making sure you keep your hands under water.
3. Finish the stroke and recover both hands at the same time as well.

How to Do It Really Well (the Fine Points):
See, the drill is very easy, but there are so many fine points to it. By focusing your attention on one of the specific points, you'll feel it working.
1. If you consistently over-reach on your backstroke pull, double-arm makes this very tough to do, because you have to cross your arms during the recovery to accomplish that. This drill usually helps you get your hands in the water directly above your shoulders.
2. In order to keep your hips up with both arms recovering at the same time, you'll need to lean back into the water on your upper back, and make sure you have a constant kick.
3. You may drag your wrists out of the water because you have so much to think about, but focus on a thumb-first exit, and you'll slice both hands out at the same time. Very clean.
4. To grab the water for an effective catch, you'll have to engage your back and elbows very quickly. Focus on grabbing the water immediately with both hands.
5. While the pull will be a bit behind your head, the double action gives you a good idea of how to create power for the breaststroke underwater pull... a great little bonus.




Responses

Responded Dec 08, 2009 12:50AM

My 11 year old daughter has been struggling with her backstroke.
We watched this video while on Thanksgiving vacation.
She practiced this drill for 3 days, came home and had 3 days of regular practice.
This weekend she took 10.05 seconds off of her 50 y backstroke!!!
Thank you!!!
:)

Responded Dec 08, 2009 03:39PM

Fantastic post. Thanks, and it's always the hope that someone learns from our work. Congrats to your daughter for all her hard work.

Responded Jul 13, 2010 03:33PM

hum it didn't work for me... Saving 10s per 50y means 11s for 50m : it would be so fantastic ! Besides, this drill made me wonder : if THIS IS THE backstroke movement, what is the need to rotate so much, changing the orientation of the movement, except for reducing drag ?

Responded Feb 07, 2012 10:08PM

This actually is a great drill, and it should work for everyone because it allows you to really feel what a better catch and earlier application of power can do for your stroke. As to rotation during backstroke, most of the best backstrokers really don't rotate that much- rotation is not about reducing drag at all- it's about applying the power of the bodies core to the arm. You should rotate so that you use the power of your body to move your arm through the recovery and back into the water, in a similar fashion to how one would swing a baseball bat.

Responded Feb 07, 2012 10:18PM

Use the rotation to 'vault' from side to side and increase power of the stroke and hence, hopefully, the speed


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