Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Notable Quotes

"The biggest gift I’ve gotten from swimming is mental toughness. The amount of mental weakness I see every day is uncomfortable.

“Swimming is a vehicle for life. Swimming makes you aware of the patterns in your own life – the good and the bad. Once you know that you can choose to evolve or regress because nothing ever stays the same.”

Dax Hill, The University of Texas (https://www.usaswimming.org/news-landing-page/2019/09/26/former-national-teamer-dax-hill-now-channeling-his-competitive-fire-as-a-coach)



Comment: I had the pleasure of meeting and chatting with Dax at the 2019 Mens NCAAs at UT. What the above quote refers to as mental toughness is about never giving up, always believing you can do whatever it is you are trying to do, and having the confidence in that belief to stay tough.

Watch this race (click on link), and imagine the mental toughness needed to stay in the race when you are more than a body length behind at the 100 (nice race announcing by good friend Sam Kendricks!).: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=103&v=jb65tkCaDSo&feature=emb_logo

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Let's talk about walls...

It's not just about speed between the walls. 

It's about speed AT the walls, too.

Courtesy AZ Quotes

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Our first CONTEST! Do you feel lucky?







Rules are really simple. Read the article linked to below, share an innovative way to apply its premise to training competitive swimmers, email me at boardsandbuoys@gmail.com, and wait.


The winner will not only be featured in an upcoming post (with a photo, if you're willing to send one), but will win a book from my extensive swimming library. You will get your choice from three titles, and I will even pay the postage.

I've already got my own ideas, but curious if anyone else out there is plagued by my pinball-type thinking process.

Here's the article.

https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-decoy-effect-how-you-are-influenced-to-choose-without-really-knowing-it?utm_source=pocket-newtab

Take your mark...   GO!

Monday, February 17, 2020

SPORTSMANSHIP: Is it Dead?

Joseph Epstein laments the decline and fall of sportsmanship in a recent article in The Wall Street Journal (shameless plug for my favorite daily paper!), "A Good Sport Is Hard to Find, Especially in the NFL" (Feb 1-2, 2020)

He asks, "How many people remember sportsmanship? I remember it and now think of it chiefly as the element missing from contemporary sports.

"It was notably practiced by the great Australian generation of Rod Laver, Ken Rosewall, Roy Emerson and John Newcombe. Harry Hopman, the Australian Davis Cup coach between 1939 an 1967, might send a player home for cursing on the court."

"Jimmy Connors and John McEnroe... wretched behavior on the court.

"Serena Williams... cursed out a lineswoman...  engaged in an extended argument with an umpire.

"[NBA] basketball... fist-pumping after slam dunks...  thunder-sticks... “Make Some Noise.” 

"In baseball, batters flip their bats and stand in the batter’s box watching their home runs sail over walls, then slowly jog round the base path, fist-pumping or flexing their muscles... steroids... signal-stealing..."

Then he remembers and recalls this:  “Make a great play,” said Ryne Sandberg, the splendid Chicago Cubs second baseman in his 2005 Hall of Fame speech, “and act like you’ve done it before . . . hit a home run, put your head down, drop the bat, run around the bases.”

Some of the great football coaches have echoed that admonition.

Many football coaches have a simple opinion on how a player should act when he arrives in the end zone to score a touchdown. Famous former coaches Darrell Royal (University of Texas), Vince Lombardi (Green Bay Packers), Paul Brown (Cleveland Browns), and Tom Landry (Dallas Cowboys) are among those who have been credited with saying, “Act like you’ve been there before.” [snopes.com]


"Sportsmanship matters because without it sports are an empty proposition—a matter of who is faster, stronger or more brutal than whom. Sportsmanship implies respect—for the game, for your opponent, for yourself. A great part of the justification for sports is as a forcing-house for building character. Accepting defeat with grace is one of sportsmanship’s character-building components; winning without braggadocio is another. A strong sense of fairness is yet a third component and discipline and perseverance a fourth and fifth. Without sportsmanship, sports are little more than grown men playing children’s games." (Mr. Epstein is the author, most recently, of “Charm: The Elusive Enchantment.”)

What about OUR sport? I love seeing a great race, and then the hands and arms extended across lane ropes to shake hands, pat on the back, or hugs between opponents that mere seconds before had been battling to the last second to best each other. That's US. What have -you- seen that best exemplifies sportsmanship in any sport?

Jamie Squire, Getty Images
 


Thursday, February 13, 2020

FOR ALL OF YOU "OLDER" COACHES


I remember starting my first high school job at the rather advanced age of 29, after a number of years of club and college coaching. It was a more stable paycheck, pool (no more renting, we had our own!), and support system. Like many of you, I did it for a LOT of years before I even thought about retirement: when, how, what it would cost me, etc. Fortunately, I had started modestly investing about the same time I started the job. If I had not, I wouldn't have been able to retire so early. So that's my first and strongest recommendation: If you are not already regularly investing for your future, it would be wise to start. Sort of like "the best time to plant a tree is 50 years ago, the next best time is now."


Glenn Ruffenach is a former reporter and editor for The Wall Street Journal (www.wsj.com), and a recent column, "The Definition of a 'Successful' Retirement", addressed a number of things that are important to think about, regardless of your age or proximity to retirement, or even if you are already retired. Excerpts below, and then a few comments and an idea.

Each of us should try to define retirement—to describe what it will look like—before we enter that door. And that definition/description, invariably, will differ from person to person. If you wish to embrace what might be called a “traditional retirement”—if you want to play golf several times a week, enjoy a glass of wine at sunset and never “work” another moment in your life—more power to you.

Or, if you wish to climb the Andes in retirement, volunteer at a hospital, open your own pizzeria or save the whales, that’s fine, too. Perhaps you will decide that you don’t want to “retire” at all. Perhaps your work is your passion, and your idea of a happy ending is to die at your desk, working late on a Friday evening.

The point: There is no “right” or “best” retirement. There is only your retirement, one that, ideally, will involve a good amount of planning on your part. (And talking with your partner. Especially your partner. That process alone, will increase your chances for a “good” retirement greatly.)

Our reporting has shown, again and again, that retirees who seem most fulfilled are those who continue to search for challenges (large and small), who immerse themselves in a range of activities, and who firmly believe that their best years are still ahead of them. 

So let's say you are financially set to retire, your pension and/or investments and Social Security will provide you with the lifestyle you are comfortable with, and you turn in the paperwork. What now?



I "retired" in 2005 after 25 years at a major Texas public school, and after a year of enjoying my newfound freedom of not getting up at 4:15AM and getting home at dark-thirty, and having "played" with a new house and some new man-toys, I got ... bored.  That dang itch was back. I missed working with young people and helping them improve their swimming, their academics, their lives

At the beginning of a second year of retirement, I had the good fortune of being asked to start a team at a new private school in the area, and built a strong program there that kept me busy for another 12 years before I felt it was time to move back to retirement. 

At the end of that summer, I was recruited by a good friend to work for a large USA club team as a coach mentor and consultant for the coaching staff, but especially for their newer coaches. It was quite fulfilling. I got to help again.

The next school year gave me the opportunity to start coaching a transitional group within that same club called Future Stars. The youngsters in my two groups were 10-under and 11-older, and the group goal was to help them make the transition from summer league level to year-round club and high school swimming.  That's where I am this current year, and it has been quite enjoyable.

I don't know if chlorine gets in our veins or what, but some of us just seem to be "lifers".

If you have retired or are thinking about it, but you're not ready for the golf course every day, or a rocker (shortcut to cemetery!), you might want to get in touch with a great friend and colleague, Patrick Henry, in Belton, Texas. Patrick has come up with an idea and business plan so great we all might be smacking our foreheads thinking "I shoulda thought of that!"

Patrick has posted on Facebook, and I'm just going to copy it here for you. If you're interested, get in touch with Patrick. Could be a heckuva retirement activity and opportunity for you!

I have retired from school district work, coaching, as of 12/31/19. I have started a business called Swim Coach Staffing Solutions. When a team loses a coach mid-season due to injury, illness, retirement, taking another job, safesport, or whatever, we can send in a temp coach to keep quality practices going (and prevent other teams from poaching the swimmers). It can be for 1, 2, 3 months depending on the time of year. Some months are not good times to find a coach. 

I will consult with the hiring body and get to understand what type of coach they are looking for. Then I bring in at least two qualified vetted candidates. They select who they want and then I negotiate their contract. 

I have partnered with the International Swim Coaches Association in this endeavor. I have been collecting resumes from coaches around the world. These are all confidentially held. 

I ask questions like where, geographically, would you like to live and coach. Would you ever consider coaching internationally? What is your dream job? Then when opportunities come up I contact them and privately ask them if this interests them. And we go from there. 

Also coaches looking for a job, we should be their first call. So any coaches, pm me your email and I will send you a link to the form. This will get you in the private secure database. 

Anyone who has coached 30+ years and would be interested in a temp job pm me. I have already had several contact me today. I need different geographic areas covered. This is a coach run operation, for coaches and teams and really for the swimmers. A way to give back and meet a huge need.

Contact Patrick directly (not me) by email at:

swimcoachstaffingsolutions@yahoo.com

or through Facebook at:

 https://www.facebook.com/patrick.henry.9822







POINTS TO CONSIDER

Legendary coach Eddie Reese, on purpose:

What you've given others is far more important than what you take with you. Teachers, coaches, doctors...we are in the ideal position to influence people and do it the right way. We are in the greatest sport in the world. It's difficult. I have been doing this a long time. I am still trying to get it right.

  
A more insightful look into Coach Reese and his methods and “secrets” can be found in the limited release, hardcover, full-color edition of 
EDDIE REESE: Coaching Swimming, Teaching Life”, 
being re-issued for sale February 1- April 30 ONLY. 

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Interesting People

From Getting Fit Meant Sink or Swim for an Ex-NFL Star, by Jen Murphy in The Wall Street Journal, November 3, 2019




Former Cleveland Browns offensive lineman Joe Thomas fueled his NFL workouts with 10,000 calories a day. Now, he would need about five days to eat that much. After retiring in March 2018, Mr. Thomas radically overhauled his diet and exercise.

During his 11-year NFL career, the 10-time Pro Bowler tipped the scales at 325 pounds. “When you’re practicing three hours a day in pads and a helmet in the heat, your muscles need fuel,” he said. “I spent years training myself to turn off my stomach-brain connection. When my stomach said full, I’d still eat two more plates of food.”

More than a decade of hits took a toll on his body. The 6-foot-6-inch Mr. Thomas has had four knee surgeries since his days playing for the University of Wisconsin. Constant joint pain and inflammation made practice excruciating during his final pro years. “My last season I made it to three training camp workouts,” he said. 

Photo: Nick Cammett/Diamond Images/Getty Images


In August 2016 the Browns installed a 25-meter lap pool in their training facility in Berea, Ohio.

Unable to run, Mr. Thomas turned to swimming to stay fit. “At first, I was like a submarine and sank straight to the bottom,” he recalled. “I spent just as much energy staying afloat as I did moving forward.”

By the start of the 2016 season in September, he was swimming 10 lengths of the pool daily. “That’s a warm-up for most swimmers, but I felt totally gassed,” he said. “It’s great cardio, and my body always felt better after I got out of the pool than before I got in.

Last summer, Mr. Thomas moved his family to Madison, Wis., and began swimming with his brother-in-law, an avid triathlete, in a high school pool. He hired a coach to improve his technique. Mr. Thomas primarily swims freestyle because wear and tear on his shoulders over the years makes other strokes difficult. A typical workout lasts 20 minutes and he tries to make it to the pool two to three times a week. “I love that swimming is something I can do late into life,” he said. “If I jogged or did CrossFit, I’d have pain and swelling for days after. That’s not what I need. Swimming is good for my heart and my joints.”

When doing long swims he wears underwater headphones and listens to house music or ’80s and ’90s rock like Metallica, AC/DC and ZZ Top


T.R. and Work Ethic 

Some interesting facts about Teddy Roosevelt are shared in a new book, “The Strenuous Life”, by Ryan Swanson. Roosevelt's “mania for sports and physical fitness earned him the nickname, “Mr. Strenuosity”, asserts Mr. Swanson. The book “...argues that T.R. inspired and bullied the lethargic citizenry into better shape and transformed organized sports.” (WSJ book reviewer Edward Kosner). 

Some facts. During the Roosevelt presidency:

+ the first Olympic Games staged in the U.S. were held in St. Louis

+ the National Collegiate Athletic Association was established to reform college football, reducing violence and enhancing fan appeal

+ the National and American baseball leagues played the first World Series

+ New York’s mammoth Public Schools Athletic League was formed, the first big youth-fitness program in America and a model for other cities. [Kosner, WSJ]

He made up for mediocre talent through enthusiasm and boundless sweat. He kept meticulous records of his exercises. “I never was a champion at anything,” he reflected. But he never gave up. [Kosner]

In Roosevelt's time, “people worried that sitting in classrooms and offices would drain Americans of the vigor that farm work and manual labor instilled. Now, the concern is that social media, cellphones, robots and artificial intelligence will turn humans into pallid drones... 

"[A recent] survey found that more than a third of American adults and 17% of children and adolescents are obese, and millions more overweight. Teddy Roosevelt would be appalled.” 

In life, as in a football game,” he liked to say, “hit the line hard.”

(Mr. Kosner, the former editor of Newsweek, New York, Esquire and the New York Daily News, is the author of a memoir, “It’s News to Me.” )


“Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat.”

Here We Go!

Welcome to the inaugural column from the Boards and Buoys swim blog.

Mini-FAQ

1. Why “Boards and Buoys”? Most of you have been around swimming pools long enough to know that kickboards are a type of support, and pull buoys are a type of assist. They can be used in lots of other ways, too (future topics). This column will share a variety of things that have been gleaned from many resources. The aim is to support and assist the coaching and swimming community.

2. Where do these "nuggets" come from? I read a lot (magazines, newspapers, journals, and books, both online and old-fashioned hardcopy), watch video (broadcast and cable TV, online videos, vlogs), and listen (radio, podcasts, conversations). Sometimes something will jump out and distinguish itself in my mind as “important” or “interesting”. I keep a legal pad next to my TV chair and another on my desk by the computer. I've learned I can “remember” something a lot better if I write it down, and avoid the temptation to delude my brain by saying to myself, “No need to write that down, it's so important I would never forget it.” And yet... [grin]

Let's get started!

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Shotguns and Rifles These two types of firearms have different uses and coverage. A shotgun spreads its projectile loads over a wider dispersal area than a rifle, but has less chance of hitting a specific target with a specific pellet. 

Our coaching methods have a similar “pattern”: We spread our instructions, directions, and coaching efforts across an entire group and hope we are reaching the majority of our athletes. A stroke coach or private lesson instructor focuses on one swimmer, one stroke, one technique at a time, and very often hits the target. A group coach does not have the luxury of time needed to address an individual swimmer except in bits and pieces during practice, especially true if there is no assistant coach who can “keep the plates spinning” with the group while the other coach works one on one with a single swimmer. 

Some of us have some leeway as far as pool time goes, and we may be able to address specific individual needs if that's possible.  We do the best we can with the situations we have, but there are times where we should consider encouraging a private stroke lesson or two.

The Baltimore Ravens star quarterback, Lamar Jackson, has received individual instruction since the summer after Jackson's freshman year at the University of Louisville from Joshua Harris, a high school English teacher. Jackson's youth football coach, Van Warren, had asked Harris if he would be willing to coach Jackson. Harris agreed, and then watched all the film of Jackson he could get, some if it dating back to high school. 

His observations noted changes in Jackson's stance and the varied placement of his shoulders and elbow when he threw. He kept a notepad full of comments others in the sports world were making about Jackson. He studied everything he could about his pupil. Harris took Jackson back to the basics, stressing fundamentals that needed resurrecting or re-learning and polishing. 

 
Photo Courtesy Wall Street Journal

The Harris-Jackson connection was good. Lamar Jackson won the Heisman Trophy the next year. The youth clinic Harris coaches at is free. 

 “The only price around here is work ethic, Harris says. (Andrew Beaton, The Wall Street Journal, January 11-12, 2020)

Private coaching to improve one's skills isn't always the magic bullet, but sometimes it can help.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

The intent here is to post a couple of items a week, things I think might help someone improve their skill set. I welcome suggestions and questions and will strive to keep this on a course that is both interesting and helpful. Thanks for dropping by!