font size A A A

Swimming Question of the Week - April 1, 2009

Posted by Barbara Hummel on Apr 01, 2009 09:49AM (2,957 views)

 How long of a taper do you need for a championship meet?  When you reply, please state how old you are.




Responses

Responded Apr 01, 2009 02:31PM

Come again???????..what is a TAPER..Juliette age 10

Responded Apr 01, 2009 05:52PM

Taper is resting from your standard workload during the season to allow your muscles time to heal and get quick and sharp. At 10... you SHOULDN'T know what a taper is, so you're fine.

Personally, since I don't train that far anymore, I usually taper (rest, or backoff my training) for just a couple days prior to a meet. I find that I lose conditioning WAY faster at 47, so it's better to go into a meet in shape and tired, than rested and flabby(er). :)

Responded Apr 01, 2009 10:05PM

what about me? I am 29 years old

Responded Apr 02, 2009 06:24AM

2-3 weeks. Am 27.

Responded Apr 02, 2009 08:53AM

one weeks. I'm 26.but some times 3 weeks. depends on the goal, I thought.

Responded Apr 02, 2009 10:03AM

Usually 1 week.I'm 41.

Responded Apr 02, 2009 02:01PM

If you mean taper as in starting to add really fast swimming, that would be 2 to 4 weeks. If you mean taper as in starting to cut back on overall yardage while still doing some really fast swimming, that would be about 1 week. Age 57.

Responded Apr 02, 2009 04:09PM

I'm 29 and it is only a couple of days (lets say the last 2 practice before the meet) when workload is cut back.....if we count in adding the fast swimming as Barbara said, then it is around 2 wks.

Responded Apr 07, 2009 11:46AM

I think it depends on every one individually for me i have to be fit to enter a meet some other people need to be so relaxed and some other people fell better when they go to the meet a littile bit tired. but for me i just need a smooth short timed taper so it is 5 days max. btw i am 18

Responded Apr 14, 2009 11:53PM

I am 70 , swim masters nationally and taper max of 1 week with last few days... only sprints (50, 100, 200) after a short warm up (300-400)

Responded Apr 15, 2009 11:19AM

Very cool AZ. I think the younger kids need more rest because they're probably doing more intense yardage. As we get older, for me, it's about maintaining a certain fitness level as consistently as possible... so less taper. I do need more warm-up though. :)


User_go Please login or signup to leave a comment.


Underwater Tag Cloud

1650 Aaron Peirsol active drag active recoveryswimming aerobic endurance age-group Amanda Beard anchoring android Android app ascending sendoffs backstroke balance beach reading bilateral breathing birthday swim blueseventy Body Shape bodyline brain training breakout breaststroke breath control breathing Brendan Hansen broken swims butterfly catch challenge set coaches coaching combat side stroke competition crossover turn Cullen Jones Cullen JonesKarlyn Pipes-Neilsen cycle rate Dave Denniston descend set distance per cycle distance training dive dolphin dolphin kick DragSox Drills dryland DVD efficiency eggbeater kick Endless Pools Eric Shanteau Eric Vendt etiquette EVF fatigue feel Finis finish fins fist drill flip turn flip turns flutter kick Fran Crippen freestyle gallop stroke goals goswimtv.com hand entry hand exit head position heart rate hybrid IM inner strength iPhone app Jason Lezak Jeff Rouse Jessica Hardy Kaitlin Sandeno Kara Lynn Joyce Karlyn Pipes-Neilsen Kevin Clements kick kids learn-to-swim long axis strokes loping Margaret Hoelzer masters medball Michael Phelps middle distance Misty Hyman mobile video monofin neural Olympics one-hour swim open turns open water Over training pace pace clock paddles paralympics parents passive drag propulsion pull pulling pulse rates pushoffs pyramid questiontaper race specific training racing recovery relay starts resisted swimming rhythm Robert Margalis Roland Schoeman Roque Santos rotation Sara McLarty science Scott Tucker sculling SEALs shoulders sighting snorkel speed work sprint Staciana Stitts Starts stations Steve Haufler straight arm recovery streaming streamline stretch cord stretching stroke count stroke rate subscription support swim across america swim camps swim fun swim technique swim training swim video swimming Swimming Golf swimming music Swimsense swimsuit taper teaching Tempo Trainer tether timing training Triathlon tuck turn Turns underwater dolpin underwater pull Vasa water poloswimming water temp weights work to rest ratio

Who is GoSwim?

We are a group of swimmers who swim really fast, and like to help others learn how to reach their competitive potential in the area of professional swimming.

Want More GoSwim?

Subscribe to our RSS feed Subscribe to our RSS feed


 
built by devtwo