- Time management/Punctuality – It
is not just about being able to manage your time with all of your different
responsibilities, it is also about being on time. “Early is on time, and on time is late, and
late is unacceptable!” -Unknown
- Goal Oriented – Understanding how to set not just BIG long term goals, but also set short term SMALLER goals that help you continue to work towards that long term goal. A good example is I (Coach Anthony) am trying to walk 1500 miles in the calendar year. Each month I set a goal of what mileage I want to be at by the end of the month in order to ensure I will succeed if not supersede my goal.
- Responsibility – Being accountable to yourself and others. When you say you are going to do something, follow through.
- Teamwork – Swimming may seem like an individual sport, but it actually requires a lot of team work. This means developing friendships, mutual inspiration and admiration, and respect amongst team mates. Great examples of teamwork would be cheering on everyone swimming in your lane as they finish a long set, providing words of encouragement throughout a long set, or challenging each other during a tough set.
- Confidence – Having belief in yourself AND the group. Believing in your coaches, leaders and team.
- Courage – The ability to “Fail Beautifully”. During points of failure is where you can learn the most about yourself. If you are not willing to take the risks, you will never know your true potential. Despite what you may think, no one succeeds at everything they do the first time.
- Communication – Being able to communicate with your teammates, coaches, parents, teachers and anyone else in your life. You need to be able to communicate your goals, schedule, and conflicts.
- Honesty – Being 100% honest with
yourself.
- Diligence – Being able to continue working towards long term and short term goals even when obstacles or setbacks happen. Working towards a goal is never a straight line. Life will get in the way. It is how you work your way through the hard times that you will begin to thrive and grow not only as an athlete but as an individual.
- Leadership – Not everyone is a vocal leader. I was not a vocal leader growing up. I would lead by example, meaning I would know the whole set, know the intervals and when we were leaving and I was going to push everyone by pushing the pace every day. Vocal leaders need to be a positive force that rallies their teammates towards their own goals. Leaders are about the “WE” not the “ME.” As cliché as it sounds “There is no I in TEAM.” Leaders look for the glory of the team, not just themselves.
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
What is Developing the WHOLE PERSON?
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
Dealing with Injuries!
Friday, April 18, 2014
Technical Suits
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Managing Expectations
Disclaimer: These are my opinions and are not to be a reflection on anyone other than myself.
Friday, December 13, 2013
A Swimmer's Diet
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
High School/Club Swimming
High School/Club Swimming
Swimming high school and club seems to present a challenge every year for those swimmers who choose to do both. Every year I deal with conflicts between high school and club swim expectations and this year (though it is not the first) I was on both sides of the conflict. For many families this is a true battleground.
When I first got into coaching I started as a high school swim coach. I had absolutely loved my time as a high school swimmer and I wanted my high school swimmers to have the same experience. My team had very few club swimmers but we had enough for me to learn what the battle as between high school and club swim. High school swimming is all about the team, your school and fun! Most schools cannot offer the type of training that can be done with your club because the lanes are congested and you have a large variance in abilities. As a result, I worked with each of the club swimmers on my team to come up with a practice schedule that worked best for their training in club and also gave them the full high school swimming experience. It was not easy for them all, but we managed to make it work. Because of the requirements of club swimming I only required my club swimmers to attend one practice a week. Now this year I am an assistant coach of a high school team so the control I have is very limited when it comes to administrative duties. This year my high school team required 3 practices/meets a week. In my opinion this can put a strain on your overall training, but the truth is it is not impossible to find a balance for both the high school experience and maintaining your club training. Lately, I hear some schools expect even more from their swimmers and have varying expectations. Some of these expectations, which I will not mention specifically, in my opinion are beyond unrealistic and are actually detrimental to the club athlete.
What it comes down to is that each swimmer needs to make a decision on what their expectations are for their overall swimming goals/expectations.
One thing I noticed this year, and one of the biggest misconception about swimming, is that if you do not swim for high school you will never get noticed by colleges. I am here to tell you that is completely untrue. The truth is college coaches are paying more attention to what swimmers are doing at Sectionals, Junior Nationals, etc. What someone does in high school weighs very little on the college recruitment process and the truth plenty of swimmers swim for colleges without ever swimming on their high school team. This does not mean the swimmers who swim in high school have no shot of getting noticed by a college, but the likelihood is very slim.
The reality is club swimming is all about the individual. Club swimmers are focused on much larger more individual goals than just swimming well for their high school team. This does not mean they should not be able to get the enjoyment out of swimming for their high school and skip the whole experience; they simply have different overall priorities. As a result, I suggest that club swimmer take the time and discuss with both their high school and club coach their schedule, expectations and goals. If reaching your goals is going to be hampered by swimming high school, which 95% of the time is not the case when both coaches have the best interest of their swimmers in mind, you really need to weigh your options. I would never suggest not swimming high school. I enjoyed it too much and think it is the experience that helped make me who I am. But I also have to emphasize that you need to go into high school swimming with a clear understanding of what your overall goals and expectations are from the sport.
Disclaimer: These are my opinions and are not to be a reflection on anyone other than myself.
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Setting Goals
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Quality vs. Quantity
Friday, August 30, 2013
The Supportive Parent
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
How to Choose the right group and coach?
Monday, July 29, 2013
What to expect during Taper?
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Why is Recovery Important?
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Why I Coach
Monday, July 8, 2013
What is Senior Swimming?!?
There are two very different mindsets when it comes to training and competing. As an Age Group Swimmer the thought is always to beat your time. You are racing the clock every meet focused on shaving minutes, seconds, or tenths off your previous time. When it comes to Senior Swimming you are more focused on implementing your training into your racing. There are a lot of meets in Senior Swimming that are just extensions of your training. This is probably one of the most difficult aspects to grasp. Parents will get upset when their swimmer does not drop time and most of the time it is because they are not educated on the process. Unlike other sports, swimming is a very individualized sport that has delayed gratification. When a swimmer goes to one of these mid-season meets they are focusing on taking the training and implementing it in a race scenario. So say the swimmer is swimming the 200 Free and during training they have been focused on attacking their turns and increasing tempo and kick third 50 that is what the coach is looking for. They may add time they may not that is not the focus. I typically have my senior swimmers focus on 2 to 3 meets a season. These 2 to 3 meets are the meets we are focused on going best times. We will have rested and tapered and are set up to swim fast.
Now comes the hard part. Most people love competing and going to meets but meets are such a small part of the sport. The majority of the time is spent training. Now you are probably wondering what the difference could be between Age Group Training and Senior Training. The answer is A LOT! There are two different types of Age Group Swimmers. For the first type, swimming is just one of their sports. It may be their primary focus, but they also participate in other sports depending on the season. These swimmers are committed but have other obligations that keep them from practice and limit their practice times. For the second group, swimming is their only sport. This group can be broken into the swimmer that comes to every practice and the swimmer who shows up occasionally. During Age Group Training they are learning the skills to advance them in the sport. Things like good under waters, proper technique (to prevent injury), reading a pace clock, etc. They may practice anywhere from 3-8 hours a week depending on age and commitment.
Senior training is all about commitment. When you get to this level most teams expect that swimming is your only sport. This is not because your coach is trying to be mean and tell you to decide between sports it is because the requirement to compete at the highest level means you need to have that level of commitment. Lots of senior groups have practices offered 10-12 times a week. If each practice is 2 hours that means they are practicing 20-24 hours a week. Depending on your coach this can vary. That does not include commute time, dry land practices and 8 hours of school a day plus homework. Don't forget to factor in that swimming is a sport that competes 12 months a year! Now that is a commitment if you ask me. I have learned over the years that successful swimmers learn how to manage their time well between their swimming commitment and school work. I will never tell you it is easy, but I will tell you it is not impossible.
Lastly, what are the parents role? This is where I see people make mistakes most often. In Age Group Swimming parents take the lead on communication with the Coach in regards to practice attendance, meet sign-ups and just about everything else. This level of interaction between coach and parent greatly diminishes when you get to Senior Swimming. Senior swimmers have the responsibility to communicate with the coach about everything! This includes practice conflicts, what meets they will attend, and many other items. I am not telling parents not to be involved in their swimmers sport, I am just saying the role the parents takes shifts. Now the parents have become the drivers (for those that are whose swimmers do not drive yet), cheerleader/supporter and anything else the swimmer needs. You need to remember this is the swimmers sport, not yours.
I know many of you can probably think of a million other aspects that are different, but these are just the three that I see are always the hardest to adjust.
Disclaimer: These are my opinions and are to not be a reflection on anyone other than myself.