Good Starts
From News for Swim Parents
Published by The American Swimming Coaches Association
5101 NW 21 Ave., Suite 200
Fort Lauderdale FL 33309
Three Variables of a Swimmer’s Performance That Parents Contribute To
By Jack Maddan, Head Coach and CEO of Hilton Head Aquatics.
As we approach the midpoint of the short course season the athletes are
realizing that they are on the path to reaching their goals or they need
to make some wholesale changes. Each season presents another mountain to
climb for each swimmer. The climb they have to make will depend on the
level of success they achieved in the previous season. Success is a
relative term and is different for each athlete and training group in
the program. For one swimmer it might be to qualify for the State meet
and for another it might be to make Olympic trials. Whatever the goal
might be, each swimmer has to be willing to do more work than they did
in the previous season. And parents can help.
Parents put a lot of time, money and commitment into the sport. You
assist in providing the best opportunity for your children to be
successful in the pool. Coaches appreciate that. There are certain
variables that you have a direct impact on that do affect the swimmers’
level of success.
One variable is practice attendance. As a parent, we are asking
you to support the coaching staff and encourage your swimmers to be at
the number of practices required by the coach. If the swimmers are not
making that requirement it is hard for them to benefit from the whole
seasonal plan. This is critical because each coach has a daily, weekly
and seasonal plan and missing out on that will hinder the overall
success. This is different with each group, but as each swimmer moves
within the program, the expectations become much greater.
Another set of variables are nutrition, rest and body changes. This is,
for some people, the most sensitive area, but it is significant and
should be addressed seriously. As parents, if you are not
providing your children with good fuel on a daily basis then over time
they will not excel in practice. This starts the moment they enter the
program. If you start with good nutritional habits it makes it
easier for them to sustain over the course of the season and to
establish a healthy lifestyle in the long term.
It is also imperative that each swimmer is getting adequate rest. When a
swimmer is burning the candle at both ends this is where injuries and
illness set in. When we have a day off, all swimmers should be wise
about the decisions made so their bodies can recover properly.
The physiological factors that take place in athletes can impede or
accelerate their progress. When a swimmer is growing, depending on how
much they are growing, this can be a good or bad thing. Many swimmers
struggle physically and mentally during this time. The growth can
make them stronger in the water or can cause them to be awkward because
of growing too quickly. This is usually more typical in boys between the
ages of 13-16. For the girls, going through puberty affects
body composition and proportions and can really mess up stroke
techniques especially in butterfly and breaststroke. , especially
on the girl’s side. In addition, girls go from an 11-14 year old
with a lean body that recovers very quickly to a young woman’s body that
takes longer to recover between workouts. This is where plateaus
sometimes take place and can last up to several years. Parental support
in a positive manner is a key component in helping them to wade through
these waters. There are two specific things a parent can do.
First, never allow a young swimmer to be identified as a stroke
specialist – Be cautious in saying things like, “You’re my perfect
little butterflyer,” or “You’ll be swimming the breaststroke in the 2020
Olympics.” Secondly, focus comments on continual, long term
improvement in all strokes.
One more variable: parental support of the swimmer and coach. This
should be the easiest one to control, but it is not always the case.
Parents have only one role at a swim meet: support the swimmer and the
coach to achieve the athlete’s goals. I think this is important to
remember because sometimes the athlete and parent have different goals.
These are the comments a coach would most appreciate a parent to say to
their child before and after a swim: Before the swim - “Good luck
and have fun.” After the swim -- “Good Job,” and “What did your
coach say?” and “I’m proud of you,” or sometimes, “I am sure you will do
better next time.”
If your dialogue is different then this, then you are not supporting the
coach and swimmer relationship. The most detrimental thing you can do
for your child is compare them to another swimmer, coach them before or
after a swim, or give them negative feedback after a race.
So what I recommend is to make sure that you are communicating with your
son or daughter on how they are doing in practice on a daily basis.
Periodically check in with their coach and ask him or her how you child
is doing, so there are no surprises when it comes to competition time.
Remember, swimming is a sport where we look at long term progress.
Some athletes have to work for 6 months to drop one second in an event.
If you can really be aware what the contributing variables are for
success (and remember that means having some patience to reach the
process), then I stand behind the belief that your children will be
better prepared for anything that comes their way in life.





