5 Open Water Swim Tips For Triathletes
1. Try your race goggles in open water swims *before* the actual race. The visibility that you experience in the pool will be noticeably diminished in the open water. It doesn’t make sense at all for something as simple as goggles to severely affect your swim, so esnure that you’re confident with your current specs. If they leak, fog, or offer poor sighting in the open water, get a new pair. A company called Aquasphere makes a great swim mask with good face hugging capabilities and awesome visibility.
2. Swim with high elbows. The choppy open water will take your smooth swim stroke that you’ve practiced in the pool and completely swallow up your recovery and entry unless you
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3. Sight off landmarks, not buoys. With the splashing, extra bodies, and overall commotion, buoys can become very tough to see in some open water swims. Attempt to focus on larger, more visible objects, like stationary boats, bridges or houses on the shore. Try to line these up as close as possible to your swim course, and you’ll have a much easier time staying on target.
4. Swim on the perimeters. In a large triathlon with many participants in each wave, you’ll experience less frustration and be able to maintain a steadier pace if
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5. Practice swimming with groups. Many of us get used to a relaxing, solo swim in the pool or open water, then completely panic when a hundred other bodies are thrown in the water along with us. Swim at the local beach during busy times, swim at your pool during “family” swim time, join an
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Pacific Elite Fitness, at www.pacificfit.net, now offers swim stroke video analysis. Contact elite@pacificfit.net for instruction on how to shoot your video and send it in for professional video analysis. For local Spokane, Couer d’ Alene, or Post Falls athletes, underwater filming is also available. Call Ben at 208-883-7705 for more information.
Ben Greenfield runs Pacific Elite Fitness at http://www.pacificfit.net, an online portal
for personal training, triathlete
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advice. He resides in Liberty Lake, WA, where he works as director of sports
performance for Champion Sports Medicine, a training and testing lab for
athletes. Ben graduated from University of Idaho with bachelor s and master s
degrees in sports science and exercise physiology, and is certified as a
personal trainer and coach by the National Strength & Conditioning
Association. Ben also offers individualized personal training, multi-sport
coaching, training program design for athletes, lifestyle wellness and diet
advising, and corporate consulting for workplace fitness programs. To learn
more, visit http://www.pacificfit.net or e-mail Ben at [mailto:elite@pacificfit.net]elite@pacificfit.net.













