Swim Drills for Learn to Swim, Intermediate Swim Clubs, and Triathletes
Mastering Backstroke & Streamline: The Ultimate Swim Training Plan
Building Swim Strength & Endurance: Training for All Levels
Developing Strength & Technique in Swim Training
This structured swim workout refines essential techniques for both beginner and intermediate swimmers. The Learn to Swim session focuses on breath control, propulsion, and stroke breakdown drills to ensure strong fundamentals. Meanwhile, the Intermediate Swim workout enhances backstroke technique, speed, and endurance with IM-based kicking, streamline-focused exercises, and powerful sprinting drills.
Mastering Backstroke & Streamline Efficiency
With a blend of in-water and dryland drills, these workouts reinforce proper head positioning, strong dolphin kicks, and coordinated stroke mechanics. Swimmers will improve their balance, breath timing, and overall water control through progressive skill-building sets.
Refining Freestyle: Swim Drills for Speed, Efficiency, and Power
Intermediate Swim Session: Enhancing Kick Strength, Streamlining, and Sprint Speed
Building Strength and Efficiency in the Water
This Intermediate Swim session focuses on refining kick strength, streamlining efficiency, and sprint speed through structured warmups, fast-paced pre-sets, and technique-driven drills. Swimmers work on freestyle and backstroke mechanics while incorporating dolphin kicks and underwater propulsion. The main set challenges swimmers with a 100-yard all-out freestyle sprint, simulating race conditions and reinforcing controlled breathing for optimal endurance and power.
Mastering Technique and Race Preparation
By integrating side kick drills, fingertip drag technique, and rotation-based training, swimmers develop a better feel for the water, improving stroke length and efficiency. Hula hoop streamlining drills help athletes refine their underwater skills, making starts and turns more fluid and effective. These focused training methods ensure swimmers build stronger mechanics, better propulsion, and race-ready confidence in the pool.
