Backstroke starts with good body position, and the body goes where the eyes look. By streamline kicking, it forces the head back and eyes look up. We want kids to remember this head position as they progress through the drills.
Backstroke starts with good body position, and the body goes where the eyes look. By streamline kicking, it forces the head back and eyes look up. We want kids to remember this head position as they progress through the drills.
Backstroke starts with good body position, and the body goes where the eyes look. While rotating the arms every few kicks, we slow down the stroke to give kids time to think about their head position while the arms move.
We want the arm recovery to be straight up, avoiding side to side swings. This is a tough drill and may need to add fins to help.
We want the arm recovery to be straight up with rotated shoulder out of the water. This is a tough drill and may need to add fins to help.
We want the arm recovery to be straight up, avoiding side to side swings. Now we add sporadic strokes, but pause at the L position to slow things down.
Now to put it all together: head position, arm position, shoulder/hip rotation.
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The backstroke pull should start from a point of rotation and follow a gentle (shallow) sideways S- pattern to increase distance per stroke. Practice one arm at a time can help.
Backstroke requires more tempo and arm speed than the other strokes. Spinner drill helps build that tempo up (if it's too slow).