Watch four-time Olympian and multi-time Worlds medalist Kasia Wasick work on her start with The Race Club coach Gary Hall Sr. Archive photo via Fabio Cetti
Courtesy of Gary Hall Sr., 10-time World Record Holder, 3-time Olympian, 1976 Olympic Games US Flagbearer and The Race Club co-founder.
We worked with four-time Olympian Kasia Wilk Wasick on her swimming start. In our first video, we performed a series of dryland exercises and flexibility tests.
In this video we begin our pool session with Kasia first showing us her ‘old’ start. Coach Gary videos and then reviews each start with Kasia progressively working on techniques that can be improved.
Initially, Kasia’s first dives she has her weight forward that doesn’t allow for a coupling motion with the arm swing. In order to incorporate an arm swing into the dive Kasia must change her setup position on the blocks. This requires a ‘weight back’ start where the center of mass is shifted towards the back foot. This creates tension in the hands and arms and allows the swimmer to pull up on the block creating a coupling motion with the arms.
Once Kasia is comfortable with a new setup position on the blocks she begins to learn how to swing the arms around and keep the head up longer to maximize this coupling motion. In learning this start, each swimmer progresses a little bit differently that requires different drills and exercises to learn how to perform each coupling motion.
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having a great start takes 3 steps, it’s really quite simple.
Pull up youtube
Watch Caeleb Dressel’s start
Copy Caeleb Dressel’s start
Wham bam alakazam thank you ma’am. You’ve got a good start.
There are a lot of mixed opinions from various fans in the swim community about a lot of topics, but I don’t think anyone would argue the fact that Dressel has the best first 15m in the history of swimming. And if you can name someone better, please downvote me and leave your suggestion in the replies. But why learn from Wasick when you can learn from the best?
They have produced plenty of data suggesting putting weight (not a lot, but enough to “notice” paraphrasing) on the back foot = faster first 15m time. And it makes sense, since it forces the athlete to use both legs to jump off of (watch how many truly only jump off the front leg otherwise…)
All the test I’ve run on my swimmers show that when they’re on their front foot and not their back foot, the reflexes are faster and the whole point of the start is to go forward not backwards
The reflexes don’t take into account the power and angle of entry (both of which are lost immensely with only using the front leg). That’s why their numbers show putting some weight on the back foot gets the swimmer to 15m faster. The power/angle outweighs any negativity of the reflexes.
Yet, Wasick cleaned out the entire USA Swimming female sprint crew in the women’s 50 meter freestyle last month at the 2024 TYR Pro Swim Series – San Antonio.
StuartC
6 months ago
Would have been great to see the final product after the running starts. Not clear to me how one engages the hips upwards when the head is kept up high for so long?
By arching back. I suppose the Brad Tandy start is the reference
Last edited 6 months ago by alex
MIKE IN DALLAS
6 months ago
Gary Hall, SR – now there was a true Olympian!
PS: I liked the video and its nuts-n-bolts approach to the ever-increasing importance of good starting technique.
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, …
having a great start takes 3 steps, it’s really quite simple.
Wham bam alakazam thank you ma’am. You’ve got a good start.
There are a lot of mixed opinions from various fans in the swim community about a lot of topics, but I don’t think anyone would argue the fact that Dressel has the best first 15m in the history of swimming. And if you can name someone better, please downvote me and leave your suggestion in the replies. But why learn from Wasick when you can learn from the best?
The best start for a swimmer with a 41 inch vertical is not necessarily the same as the best start for a swimmer with a 14 inch vertical.
Knowing how to maximize both is what makes a coach a great coach :-).
Here’s all that matters: first one to the 15m mark.
Gary, I agree with all of it with the exception of the rocking back.
They have produced plenty of data suggesting putting weight (not a lot, but enough to “notice” paraphrasing) on the back foot = faster first 15m time. And it makes sense, since it forces the athlete to use both legs to jump off of (watch how many truly only jump off the front leg otherwise…)
All the test I’ve run on my swimmers show that when they’re on their front foot and not their back foot, the reflexes are faster and the whole point of the start is to go forward not backwards
The reflexes don’t take into account the power and angle of entry (both of which are lost immensely with only using the front leg). That’s why their numbers show putting some weight on the back foot gets the swimmer to 15m faster. The power/angle outweighs any negativity of the reflexes.
Still lost to Kate Douglass of all people
Yet, Wasick cleaned out the entire USA Swimming female sprint crew in the women’s 50 meter freestyle last month at the 2024 TYR Pro Swim Series – San Antonio.
Would have been great to see the final product after the running starts. Not clear to me how one engages the hips upwards when the head is kept up high for so long?
By arching back. I suppose the Brad Tandy start is the reference
Gary Hall, SR – now there was a true Olympian!
PS: I liked the video and its nuts-n-bolts approach to the ever-increasing importance of good starting technique.