Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the dirty little open secret of swimming. I guess they're moving in the direction of enforcement but absent technology that only top meets have, is tough. You really can't see it well standing on the deck. It's very subtle in many cases I think, making it a tough judgment call.
I've also seen kids kick illegally only in the middle of the pool where, I guess, they think they can get away with it.
If a coach is teaching your kid this at a young age I would run to another team so fast. It’s bad practice. Like driving with two feet. Will catch up with you eventually
Agree, I’ve seen kids trained to do this and as we see, many of the top breaststrokers do this. Also agree we don’t have the technology to catch it at this level but it will be interesting to see if this causes a shift in training at the upper levels that trickles down.
Trained to cheat? Or trained to kick this way and they’re doing it wrong/illegally? That’s unfortunate if the former.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the dirty little open secret of swimming. I guess they're moving in the direction of enforcement but absent technology that only top meets have, is tough. You really can't see it well standing on the deck. It's very subtle in many cases I think, making it a tough judgment call.
I've also seen kids kick illegally only in the middle of the pool where, I guess, they think they can get away with it.
Agree, I’ve seen kids trained to do this and as we see, many of the top breaststrokers do this. Also agree we don’t have the technology to catch it at this level but it will be interesting to see if this causes a shift in training at the upper levels that trickles down.
Anonymous wrote:It's the dirty little open secret of swimming. I guess they're moving in the direction of enforcement but absent technology that only top meets have, is tough. You really can't see it well standing on the deck. It's very subtle in many cases I think, making it a tough judgment call.
I've also seen kids kick illegally only in the middle of the pool where, I guess, they think they can get away with it.
Anonymous wrote:It's the dirty little open secret of swimming. I guess they're moving in the direction of enforcement but absent technology that only top meets have, is tough. You really can't see it well standing on the deck. It's very subtle in many cases I think, making it a tough judgment call.
I've also seen kids kick illegally only in the middle of the pool where, I guess, they think they can get away with it.
Anonymous wrote:As we have seen an increased tempo in breastroke, the stroke is morphing more into butterfly. We see many breastroke pulls that are more like a butterfly pulldown vs a breastroke outward scull. The kick in many cases has become fast and narrow and that can lead to a downward motion at the end of the kick when the feet snap together. If the feet make a strong downward motion at the end of the breastroke kick it is grounds for a DQ and we are seeing this more and more lately.
Anonymous wrote:A friend pointed this out to me during HS regionals-- I hadn't noticed at all before. So what's the end game? More S&T to catch it or change the rules so it's legal? Ignore it until national-level meets can't be the right answer.