Over the coming 12 weeks, I will post a series of workouts building your swim fitness as you prepare for either Challenge Wanaka (18 Feb) or Ironman NZ (04 Mar). I have been a professional triathlon coach since 2000 and am multiple Iron-distance finishers including doing both these events in 2011 (the year of the wind in Wanaka and the year of the rain in Taupo).
12 weeks out from Challenge Wanaka starts the week of Monday 28th November. For those of you doing Ironman NZ two weeks later, your sessions will commence the week of Monday 12th December.
This is the seventh week. Other weeks can be found below:
Each week will have three pool sessions for you to complete. I also encourage you to get in the open water once a fortnight to develop those skill sets. This can either be part of a triathlon or as a group open water swim. The pool-based sessions work well when completed on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday or on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.
This week’s training is continuing to develop your base fitness but also to see how you have progressed.
Session One
This session is designed to assess where you are fitness-wise and help us set some future performance goals. You can use this to gauge your performance compared to the first and fourth weeks of the programme and compared to week 10 as well.
- 1,000m Warm Up;
- 12x 50m (25m Drill/25m Swim);
- 8x 25m Pick Up 10sec RI;
- 400m Time Trial (TT);
- 10min rest including easy swimming of at least 200m;
- 200m TT;
- 400m Cool Down.
Start by swimming 1,000m for a warm-up. Keep a nice steady pace and feel free to pause occasionally to stretch or grab a quick drink. The idea of the warm-up is to get the blood flowing and muscles loosened up before some of the more intense sets later in the workout.
The set after the warm-up includes 12 repetitions of 50m. This 50m is done continuously with the first 25m done as a drill before going straight into the final 25m of regular swimming. Pause after each rep and have a short rest while you focus and mentally prepare for the next drill. Here are some drills that you can include in your programme. Complete each drill twice:
For the drill, set wear a pair of short fins. These will provide you with a small amount of momentum whilst you are focusing on what the upper body is doing. I recommend Finis Zoomers.
Take your fins off prior to commencing the next set. This set is made up of eight reps of 25m Pick Ups with a 10-second Rest Interval (RI). When swimming a Pick-Up, start off at a slow pace for your first few strokes. Then pick up to a moderate pace for the next few strokes, then a few fast strokes, then get faster and faster every few strokes as you make your way down the pool. Finish up with your last few strokes at sprint pace. After each 25m, stop and rest for 10 seconds. Use the pace clock on the wall or a wristwatch to time this precisely.
The next set is a 400m Time Trial (TT). I want you to swim this as fast as you can and not worry about saving yourself for the following sets. Record your time using your wristwatch or get someone to time you and see how quickly you can swim 400m.
After the TT, have 10 minutes of recovery. During this 10-minute period swim a minimum of 200m at a very slow pace. By continuing to keep moving your arms, will help flush blood through them removing any lactic acid or other waste products built up during the TT.
The final set before the cooldown is another TT this time over 200m. As with the last TT, I want you to swim as fast as you possibly can with what you have got left. Once again record your time for the 200m with your wristwatch or get someone else to do so.
Make sure both times are written down (or stored in the watch’s memory) so you don’t forget them. They will become important in future training sessions so that we target the appropriate intensity to make sure that you improve.
The final set is a 400m Cool Down. As with the warm-up, feel free to pause and do some stretching and grab a drink. Also, consider doing some other strokes as part of the cool down. Throw in some backstroke (Bk) or breaststroke (Br) to mix it up.
Take your 400m Time and subtract your 200m Time, then divide the result by two. Round this up to the nearest 5-second interval. This will give you your current T-Time, which we will use in some future workouts.
e.g. your times are 400m = 6:47 and 200m = 3:18
6:47 – 3:18 = 3:29
3:29 / 2 = 1:44.5
rounded to 1:45 = T-Time
Session Two
You might recognise this session from back in week 4. This session will develop your endurance primarily with aspects focussing on your technique.
- 1,000m Warm Up;
- 8x 50m (25m Drill/25m Swim);
- 4x 500m Build 1-4, 45sec RI;
- 200m Cool Down.
Start by swimming 1,000m for a warm-up. Keep a nice steady pace and feel free to pause occasionally to stretch or grab a quick drink. The idea of the warm-up is to get the blood flowing and muscles loosened up before some of the more intense sets later in the workout.
The set after the warm-up includes 8 repetitions of 50m. This 50m is done continuously with the first 25m done as a drill before going straight into the final 25m of regular swimming. Pause after each rep and have a short rest while you focus and mentally prepare for the next drill. Here are some drills that you can include in your programme:
For the drill, set wear a pair of short fins. These will provide you with a small amount of momentum whilst you are focusing on what the upper body is doing.
Take your fins off prior to commencing the next set, which is a set of four 500m repetitions. After each 500m rep pause for 45 seconds. Either use your wristwatch or the BIG pace clock at the pool to keep this rest interval to 45 seconds precisely. If you rest too long, you won’t get the physiological benefit of this session.
With each rep I want you to build your pace to get quicker over the four repetitions. You could say your first rep is steady, your second rep is fast, your third rep is faster and your fourth rep is fastest. Your times may look something like this:
Rep | Time | ||
1st | 10:55 | Build 1-4 | Steady |
2nd | 10:29 | Fast | |
3rd | 10:18 | Faster | |
4th | 10:11 | Fastest |
The final set is a 200m Cool Down. As with the warm-up, feel free to pause and do some stretching and grab a drink. Also, consider doing some other strokes as part of the cool down. Throw in some backstroke (Bk) or breaststroke (Br) to mix it up.
Session Three
This session is purely focused physiologically on enhancing your endurance. Mentally it will give you a boost by getting a good solid non-stop distance under your belt.
- 3,000m Swim
Simply swim for 3,000m continuously. Pausing briefly at the 1,000m and 2,000m mark to grab a quick drink is acceptable as long as it is nothing more than a very brief pause.
In a 50-metre pool, this is 60 lengths. In a 33 1/3 metre it is 90 lengths and in a 25-metre pool, it is 120 lengths.
If you would like further advice feel free to contact me.
I am the Head Coach & Director of Qwik Kiwi Coaching.
I specialise in assisting first-timers and recreational athletes to achieve their sporting goals. I can be contacted at coachray@coachray.nz and 021 348 729.
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If you enjoyed this workout, here is a similar session I published previously.
Saturday Swim Session: 150 KPS
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