The 3 Swimmers You Can Learn Most From

During my noon-hour swim today, my mind wandered back to my age group days.

The swimmers I trained with. The swimmers I raced against. My heroes growing up. And the resulting big box of ribbons and medals collecting dust under my bed.

Over the years, I realized, I’d learned a lot from a lot of different swimmers.

Here are the big three and how you can make an effort to apply the lessons from them to help you swim faster.

The greats

We all have our heroes in the pool.

Michael Phelps. Katie Ledecky. Caeleb Dressel. Penny Oleksiak.

The Olympic-championing, gold-medal-winning, world-record-championing greats who continually redefine what is possible in the pool.

We recognize our heroes in the pool not only because they are fast, but because of the exceptional things they do in (and out) of the water.

Things like:

Hero worship is what amateurs do in the pool…

Learn from the greats and apply it to your swimming so that you can unleash the greatness within you.

The teammates and competition

Watching the fastest swimmers on the planet strut their stroke and swim golden swims can feel… distant. Far removed from where we are.

Which can make it difficult to soak up their greatness and learn from them.

This is why you should make a point to recognize the lessons you can learn from your teammates and competitors.

These lessons can often be the most profound because these are real people you swim with or compete with on the regular.

  • A teammate that shows up to every practice, rain or shine
  • A competitor who always finishes his race like a boss, head down and on a full stroke
  • A swimmer in your group, who is constantly working on her technique at practice, refining and sharpening her stroke

The gold medal-winning heroes are great for inspiration…

But the teammates and competition can show you that if they can do it, so can you.

The swimmer in the mirror

Finally, there is the swimmer who has the most to offer you in terms of teaching you what it takes to be successful…

You!

After all…

Your successes provide a long list of lessons, a rolling testament to your hard work, dedication, and abilities…

  • The commitment you showed when you didn’t miss a practice for a whole cycle of training
  • The last swim practice where you felt like giving up, but didn’t (and almost went a best time off-the-blocks at the end of the workout)
  • When you made a decision to start going to bed an hour earlier, getting more sleep and feeling more recovered each day

These lessons are CRUCIAL because once you truly learn them, you can replicate and integrate them across your swimming.

There are lessons to be found in our failures, too:

  • The time you took a race out too fast and crashed and burned on the last 50
  • The time you ate a large pizza twenty minutes before practice
  • When you set a goal so ambitious that your motivation crashed and burned after just a few days

Failures reveal weak spots but, more importantly, act as feedback, revealing opportunities for improvement.

Embrace and LEARN the lessons, good and bad, to improve your technique, be more consistent, have a better mindset, and ultimately, you build a powerful feedback loop.

By learning from your own experiences, as well as those of your teammates and heroes, you will always have a plentiful supply of opportunities to improve in the water.


Mental Training for Swimmers (FINALLY) Made Simple

Whether you are tired of choking on race day, want to finally conquer your mindset so that you can give your PB’s the beating they deserve, or want to develop a killer game plan for your mindset, Conquer the Pool is your ticket to faster swimming.

“This is the best book I’ve ever seen concerning mental training.” — Ray Benecki, Head Coach, the FISH Swim Team

Used and trusted by some of the top clubs and swimmers on the planet and written with the feedback of 200+ head coaches, Olympians, former world record holders, and NCAA champions.

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Olivier Poirier-Leroy Olivier Poirier-Leroy is the founder of YourSwimLog.com. He is an author, former national level swimmer, two-time Olympic Trials qualifier, and swim coach.

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