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5 Reasons You Should Be Working on Your Underwater Fly Kick

This listed and free range post was originally posted over at YourSwimBook.com. Join Olivier’s weekly motivational newsletter for swimmers by clicking here.   Originally published 10/16

If you’ve seen top level swimmers live, you know just how extraordinarily powerful they can kick underwater. Swimmers like Michael Phelps, Florent Manaudou, and Tom Shields perform the undulating dolphin kick so fluidly and powerfully that it seems superhuman.

Trying to mimic their grace and power can leave us feeling more like a salmon in its death throes than the dolphin for which the kick is named after.

But before you toss the notion of improving your dolphin kick out the window, and as something that is reserved for people who seem gifted with a powerhouse UDK, consider these reasons for why you should strap on some extra time during your swim workouts bettering it:

1. The underwater dolphin kick and breakout can make up as much as 60% of your race.

You don’t need to be a space scientist to understand how vital your push offs and breakouts are in a short course format, whether it is meters or yards.

When you consider that in a short course race up to 60% of your race can be done performing UDK it becomes apparent many races are being won off the walls and under the water.

Even for more taxing races such as the 200m butterfly or the 400IM we are seeing swimmers break out further and further out, and even the top sprinters in the world– Cesar Cielo, Manaudou, and Roland Schoeman to name a few– kick out to the maximum distance allowed in the fastest event on the Olympic program, the 50m freestyle.

2. Your breakouts are the moments you are going fastest in the water.

Here is an interesting way to think about your swimming: when you are diving or pushing off, you are going the fastest you ever will in the water.

From the time you push off until your next wall you are slowing down, doing everything you can to maintain that precious speed that comes from diving or exploding off the walls.

Having a powerful underwater dolphin kick means holding onto that precious velocity just a little bit longer, and when our races come down to precious hundredths or tenths of a second every little bit of speed matters.

3. It can help make up for a less than awesome swim speed.

Michael Phelps and his killer underwater dolphin kick was a prime example of this – his underwater dolphin kicking and 12-13m breakouts made it possible for him to break Ian Thorpe’s 200m freestyle world record in 2007, a mark that was considered unbeatable at the time.

Phelps’ coach, Bob Bowman, acknowledged as much, admitting that if it came down to straight swimming speed Thorpe would have had Phelps beat.

Having a powerful UDK can help close the gap with a weak or slower above-water swimming speed, whether you are a freestyle specialist or a master of the butterfly stroke.

4. It’ll help improve your overall leg fitness.

Most swimmers drag their legs behind them like a tugboat tows a barge. Every once in a while you might get a kick here and there, but for the most part, they dangle back there doing little more than perform a one-beat kick that acts more for stability and balance than propulsion.

Doing consistent bouts of work on your UDK will transfer well into your flutter kick (and your fly kick while doing butterfly, obviously), so don’t discount it as a tool to improve your overall swimming kick speed.

5. It teaches you the importance of reducing drag.

One of my favorite things to do is strap on fins and go full blown ballistic under the water. With fins on you can really hammer down on the kick and pick up some serious velocity.

But you quickly realize something that applies across everything else you do in the water: you might be able to get a lot of power with those big, sweeping kicks, but you are also stirring up a whole lot of drag.

Quick, fast and narrow kicking with low drag will always win the battle against big, hammer-down movements.

Transfer this focus on reducing drag to the rest of your swimming, and you will find yourself swimming more efficiently than ever.

The Next Step

Want to take your dolphin kick to the next level?

I put together a comprehensive 3,000+ word guide on improving your underwater dolphin kick. From flexibility, to strength training, to technique (and even some bonus sets), you will learn everything you need to know about how to dolphin kick like a boss.

It includes tips and info from USA Swimming’s Russell Mark, Canadian Sport Institute-Ontario biomechanist Ryan Atkinson, The Race Club’s Gary Hall Sr., and SwimSwam’s own butterfly kick beast, Mel Stewart.

About YourSwimBook

YourSwimBook is a log book and goal setting guide designed specifically for competitive swimmers. It includes a ten month log book, comprehensive goal setting section, monthly evaluations to be filled out with your coach, and more. Here are 8 reasons why this tool kicks butt.

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SaintJoseph
5 years ago

NO!!!! It is dangerous. Too much time underwater and you can pass out or become dead. I say if a swimmer is submerged for more than 5 seconds they ought to be DQed. Also there should be a requirement for swimmers to breath every stroke. All this breath holding stuff is crazy.
Divers are also putting them selves at risk by going deep underwater off 3 meter and tower events….it is because the pool are too deep! FINA and the NCAA should make a rule to have all pools be only 8 feet deep…that is deep enough!!!

Swammer from Wakanda
Reply to  SaintJoseph
5 years ago

If every pool is 8 feet deep, then the divers have much larger issues than holding their breath…10m would be impossible

Dylan
5 years ago

Because unless you’re Townley Haas it’s the only way to win in short course

Harry
8 years ago

Really really good discription

wave rider
9 years ago

#5 quick fast narrow kicks. This is preached over and over again. If you look at the top dolphin kickers like Phelps, Shields, Le Clos, and Lochte, their kicks are not quick and narrow. If you freeze the video you can see that they get to almost a 90 degree bend in their knees. I am an awful dolphin kicker but I have been studying to try to get better. The top dolphin kickers have a tempo of about .46-.50 per kick. Using a tempo trainer helps enormously in training. I have played around with different tempos. The most effective and fastest to 15m for me is setting the tempo trainer to .50 and trying to get as big as… Read more »

David
Reply to  wave rider
9 years ago

I have observed this as well watching a video of Lochte. Everyone preaches small kicks but if you watch him he has huge and extremely fast kicks. I can’t help but wonder if his method is faster but perhaps it’s not possible for us normal human beings to keep a high tempo while kicking so big. So maybe the small kick is faster for the general population because we would kick to slow if we tried to kick like Lochte?

I have read articles on hydrodynamics and I get how the large kick disrupts the flow and causes much more drag. Still, if it’s slower in a short sprint then why do people like Lochte have the large kicks?

Dylan
Reply to  David
8 years ago

I think it just depends what you’re comfortable with and work on. Ryan hoffer seems to take small narrow kicks and is obviously pretty good underwater.

Tim
9 years ago

This is why I love SDK! My backstroke and butterfly (my specialty strokes) have never been more than pedestrian on the surface. I’ve always had a comparatively much better dolphin kick than the stroke, so that’s where I shine.

In short course backstroke races, I’ve routinely been able to pull ahead of someone after a turn, despite going into the wall with a one or more stroke deficit. ‘Course, whoever I’m racing will almost inevitably pull ahead of me going into the next wall, but I’m happy I can at least stay in the game thanks to my SDK.

In the 100 back, I normally go 15m off the start, about 10m off the first turn, and 7-8m off the… Read more »

DDSC Coach
9 years ago

Great article…

Just a quickie, short course swimming can allow 60% of racing underwater… 15m each wall, each length.

Love seeing great (speed and distance) wall work at starts and turns.

Olivier Poirier-Leroy
Reply to  DDSC Coach
9 years ago

Woops–edited that. Me and my long course brain. And agreed on watching great turn/underwater work!

ML
Reply to  DDSC Coach
9 years ago

Almost 66% in SCY.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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