Which Events Should Your Child Swim?
From News for Swim Parents
Published by The American Swimming Coaches Association
5101 NW 21 Ave., Suite 200
Fort Lauderdale FL 33309
Issue: My 12 year old will be aging up before the end of the
season and she needs every opportunity to make AAA times in her best
events before then. The coach, however, seems to have different
ideas about the meets we attend and the events she swims. I do not
like the way the coach selects my child's meet and event schedule.
Response: Rule number one for any concern regarding decisions made
by the coach is to communicate directly with the coach at your earliest
opportunity. The coach may mention one or more of the following
considerations:
1. Age group swimmers should have an opportunity to experience all
the official events for their age group. In fact, many coaches
would make a case for having intermediate to advanced age group swimmers
also swim 200's of back, breast, and fly, as well as the 400 IM and
distance freestyles. BUT, there needs to be a balance found
between the time and expense of driving to too many meets versus the
larger objectives of a good age group program. See numbers 2, 3,
and 4 below.
2. Achievement should be viewed as career long and not dependent on a
mid-season peak in coordination with a last meet effort before aging up.
A major push at end of an age group often leads to a letdown than can
occur when the child ages up. This discourages the steady and
consistent progress that most coaches encourage in age group swimming.
Coaches plan careers around seasonal planning, not around birthdays.
The primary focus should be on preparing swimmers for the senior team
and a secondary focus would be on end of season meets.
3. A combined and unified team effort for end of the season meets
is more important than allowing individual swimmers to "peak" for
mid-season meets in order to achieve time standards or rankings.
4. The coach is the technical expert of the team and the one with
the best perspective for event selection. Event selection often
times deliberately includes the swimmer’s weakest events as a challenge,
as an evaluation tool, as a change of focus, and/or as preparation for
future events. Frankly, parents and age group swimmers will
not often choose events that offer difficult challenges, change the
points of focus, or prepare the swimmer in a tactical way for future
events. This is a technical matter and best left to the technical
expert – the coach.
Here are a few examples: Distance oriented swimmers may be asked
to swim sprint events in order to work on their speed. (If the
swimmer’s best time in the 100 meter free is 1:13 and they are trying to
break 5 minutes in the 400 meter swim then they need the ability to go
in 1:13 to 1:14 in the 400 and swimming the 100 gives them a chance to
work on their “going out speed.”)
A swimmer who has been a good butterflyer for the last couple of years
and has begun to be identified as a “flyer” by herself and friends and
possibly parents, but then finds herself having difficulty improving in
the fly events – perhaps due to changes in her body as she matures --
can find new motivation in the other events if given a chance to focus
on something different.
One of the great core values of swimming is learning to meet difficult
challenges with determination for success. A good coach may
deliberately schedule every 11 and 12 year old for the 200 meter
butterfly in an upcoming meet and then prepare them for it physically
and mentally in practice so that they may face the challenge with some
courage. It’s a great confidence builder.
…And building confidence comes not only from doing what one is good at,
but from doing the uncomfortable and difficult.





