Breaststroke Coordination Made Easy - Download A Free Drill, plus the only Breaststroke eBook You Will Need


How is your breaststroke timing and coordination? Download a free drill to help perfect it. Teachers - do your pupils make a mess of it? Scroll down to find my 'How To Teach Breaststroke' guide.

Hi, Mark here. I hope all is well with you.

This week, we are talking breaststroke timing, and I have a great printable timing drill for you to help you get things right.

Breaststroke timing and coordination is a continuous alternating action where one propulsive phase takes over as one ends.

Incorrect timing will make good leg kick and arm techniques cancel each other out and render them ineffective.

The timing and coordination for breaststroke can be summed up with the following sequence:

Pull - Breathe - Kick - Glide

A good way of practising the timing sequence is to perform it in slow motion. Forget trying to cover any distance at first and practice each part, one at a time. In a short time, you will find the pieces all falling into place, and you will smoothly glide along without really trying.

If remembering the sequence and getting it together is tricky, try 'kicking your hands forwards'. In other words, as your legs kick back in their circular action, your arms should be stretching forwards.

A streamlined body position at the end of the timing sequence is essential to capitalise on the propulsive phases of the stroke.

The timing can be considered in another way: when the arms are pulling in their propulsive phase, the legs are streamlined and when the legs are kicking to provide propulsion, the arms are streamlined.

Full body extension, where the legs and arms are together and streamlined, is essential for the glide phase before the start of the next stroke cycle.

The Most Common Breaststroke Timing Mistake

As breaststroke is a simultaneous stroke, it is very common to make the mistake of kicking with the legs and pulling with the arms at the same time. The result will be a very inefficient swimming stroke as the arms and legs counteract each other.

To ensure the timing and coordination of the arms and legs are correct, the swimmer must focus on performing an arm pull followed by a leg kick or on 'kicking their hands forwards'. In other words, as their legs kick around and back, their arms must extend forwards. This ensures that the arms and legs are working efficiently and are extended out together during the glide phase.

An Effective Breaststroke Timing Drill

A great drill to try out or to give your pupils to try is swimming breaststroke with a woggle under the arms and performing the timing sequence slowly. The woggle provides enough support for the pull-breathe-kick-glide sequence to be performed step-by-step. Download a free printable of the drill by clicking here or the link below.

Learning Breaststroke Just Got Easier

Discover how to improve breaststroke technique by breaking the stroke down into its separate parts. Learn and perfect those parts and then piece the whole stroke back together. Learn the leg kick, then the arm pull and discover how to integrate the breathing technique. Over 20 easy-to-understand exercises that make learning breaststroke simple and quick. Click here to find out more.

Everything you need in a straightforward book. It's detailed, comprehensive, and very clear. It's a beginner's dream tool kit for learning how to swim breaststroke. Download your copy today!

That's it for this week. Stay focused, stay in touch and stay safe.

Happy swimming!

Cheers

Mark

Swim Teach

ps - did someone forward this to you? Subscribe here.

Hi! I'm Mark, creator of Swim Teach

I've been teaching swimming for over 30 years and I built Swim Teach so that I can share all my knowledge, wisdom and experience from the thousands of swimming lessons I have had the pleasure of teaching. Take a look back through my previous newsletters and see what you missed.

Read more from Hi! I'm Mark, creator of Swim Teach
learning to float swimming lesson plan

How do I float and why do I sink? It's a question commonly asked by beginners learning how to swim. Hi, Mark here. Hope all is well with you. This week, we are talking about why we sink. Scroll down and discover the science behind floating and sinking and how it may help you understand more and even help you stay afloat when you swim. Firstly, for swimming teachers, I have a lesson plan for teaching floating and gliding. Teach Your Pupils How To Stay Afloat. The 'floating and gliding' lesson...

how to swim front crawl

"If I kick harder then I will stay afloat and swim further." ...a common misconception among beginners learning to swim. Relaxed and smooth is the key to an effective and efficient front crawl leg kick. Hi, Mark here. I hope all is well with you. In this edition of Swim Teach News, we are looking at front crawl leg kick technique and a basic exercise to help practice and fine-tune it. If you're a teacher, my resource library is packed with drills and lesson plans to help make your teaching...

how to swim front crawl ebook download

One of the most common questions I get asked by adult swimmers is 'why do I get so tired swimming front crawl? Hi, Mark here. I hope all is well with you and your loved ones. The summer holidays will soon be here and swimming in the sunshine will be in the main activity for many. Swimming is one of the best forms of exercise but it is easy to become despondent when we get tired so easily and end up giving up. This week I thought I would give you some tips and support with getting tired so...