Best Swim Since Before the Pandemic!!
>> Saturday, January 11, 2025
My swim this past week was ODD. The pool was still on a different "J-Term" schedule, so it wasn't open when I needed it to be early in the morning. So I didn't go early (which is when I've swam my last 2-3 years of workouts!).
Instead, I lifted weights REALLY well - it was one of my biggest upper body days EVER. I did 9 SOLID sets for everything for my upper body, which is something I've only done 1 or 2 times over the last decade. A quick workout for me is 4-5 sets, a "standard" workout is 6 sets, and a good workout is 7 sets. Sometimes I push myself to 8 sets on the weekend, but RARELY ever 9 sets. This was a hard 78 minutes of upper body!
I had lunch, prepped and taught class, and then swam in the late afternoon, which is NEVER when I hit the pool. It just happened to work out for me that day...
... and I had the swim of my life!
I expected it to be crappy after lifting so hard earlier in the day, but apparently enough time had passed that I didn't feel any extra fatigue in my back/chest/arms as I was pulling. I busted out a simple pyramid workout that I commonly do: 100, 200, 300, 400, 300, 200, and 100 yards:
Jan 2025:
1:25
3:01 (1:32, 1:29)
4:38 (1:35, 1:34, 1:29)
6:09 (1:31, 1:33, 1:35, 1:30)
4:36 (1:34, 1:33, 1:29)
3:00 (1:31, 1:29)
1:26
Compare those numbers to a "good swim" that I had last month:
Dec 2024:
1:29
3:09 (1:35, 1:34)
4:45 (1:38, 1:34, 1:33)
6:22 (1:37, 1:37, 1:36, 1:32)
4:44 (1:36, 1:38, 1:30)
3:06 (1:36, 1:30)
1:27
Last month, I was very happy with that 6:22 400 and then the 300 and 200 after that. But over those 7 splits, all were faster this week: 4, 8, 7, 13, 8, 6, and 1 sec.
Here are the 3 previous sets of splits from the last 3 times I did that workout before Dec:
Nov 2024:
1:30
3:10 (1:38, 1:32)
4:50 (1:38, 1:40, 1:32)
6:32 (1:40, 1:39, 1:38, 1:35)
4:50 (1:40, 1:34, 1:36)
3:10 (1:37, 1:33)
1:28
1:30
3:14 (1:40, 1:34)
4:54 (1:40, 1:38, 1:36)
6:28 (1:38, 1:37, 1:42, 1:35)
4:48 (1:39, 1:37, 1:32)
3:10 (1:35, 1:35)
1:29
Oct 2024:
1:32
3:16 (1:39, 1:37)
4:53 (1:38, 1:40, 1:35)
6:36 (1:38, 1:41, 1:41, 1:36)
4:54 (1:41, 1:40, 1:33)
3:15 (1:42, 1:33)
1:30
The point is that no recent time was CLOSE to what I did this week. Was it lifting weights before? Doing it later in the day? Being surrounded by collegiate swimmers and not other early-rising old guys like myself? (I think it had a lot to do with that last one, honestly!)
So I looked back in my training log to some pre-pandemic workouts when I was hitting the pool a lot. November 2019 is still my swimming PR at exactly 30,000 yards, whereas now I'm covering about 35,000 yards over THREE months of swimming. I did this workout twice in that PR swimming month (and I swam a lot in the months leading up to that month as well so I had GOOD swim fitness), and here were my splits:
Nov 2019:
1:26
3:04 (1:32, 1:31)
4:44 (1:35, 1:35, 1:33)
6:22 (1:34, 1:37, 1:36, 1:34)
4:42 (1:34, 1:33, 1:35)
3:01 (1:31, 1:30)
1:26
1:33
3:12 (1:34, 1:38)
4:50 (1:35, 1:37, 1:37)
6:28 (1:35, 1:37, 1:38, 1:37)
4:53 (1:36, 1:41, 1:35)
3:06 (1:32, 1:34)
1:28
EVERYTHING was faster this week, except I tied with my final 100 from the first workout. Holding on to ANY numbers from my "bigger swimming days" of pre-pandemic is insane!
So what does this tell me? I think that I can be forcing myself to swim harder. I'm not sandbagging because I dind't constantly have SUPER fast final splits. But maybe I just need to keep the effort higher throughout my workouts. And I think there was a lot to be said for trying to "keep up" with collegiate swimmers in the lanes next to me instead of random retirees getting in their swim before the pool fills up with college kids. So I don't need to be stuck on "I have to swim at THIS time" and instead work in my workouts when they fit best for that day. Maybe I'll have some speedy young adults next to me that will help me push my effort!
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