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Swimming
Technique January - February 2003
Feature Article
TRAINING
MICHAEL PHELPS
American Flyer
One component of Michael Phelps'
phenomenal success is his
"made-for-swimming"
physique. But the main component is
the carefully-crafted training
program that his coach, Bob Bowman,
has created for him. Here, Coach
Bowman_the 2001 ASCA Coach of the
Year_explains his training
philosophy and provides sample
workouts.
By
Bob Bowman with Michael J. Stott
I
think it was pretty clear from the
beginning that Michael Phelps was a
special swimmer. When he joined us
at North Baltimore Aquatic Club as a
7-year-old, he was a
baseball/soccer/lacrosse athlete.
His
first year, he just did a 60-minute,
once-a-week stroke clinic with our
aquatics director, Cathy Lears. His
training and intensity escalated
from there to where, by the time he
was 10 and setting NAG records, he
was better than many of the older
swimmers.
Obviously,
we had to do some rapid lane
promotions.
To
those who knew the Phelps aquatic
heritage, his prowess was no
surprise. His oldest sister, Hilary,
was a national-level swimmer. His
second sister, Whitney, was also a
200 flyer. She made the 1994 World
Championship team that competed in
Rome, and she still holds the 11-12
NAG record in the 100 yard fly.
So,
in many ways, swimming excellence
has been a family trait. And while
it is also tempting to think of
Michael only in terms of the fly and
IM, a review of his record reveals a
litany of national rankings in the
free and back as well.
Supportive
parents have aided his climb
immensely. They had been through the
drill with the older daughters.
Then
there's Michael's physique: at 6-4,
he is mostly torso with a large
chest and long arms. It's a body
great for swimming. He is very
flexible throughout the shoulders,
upper body and especially in the
ankles.
Michael
is much more disciplined than he was
in his earlier days. He was, and is
still, a pretty strong-willed kid.
Back then, he didn't understand he
might have to do some things he
didn't want to do, like train, sit
still, pay attention and not talk.
He was very energetic as a young
boy.
These
days, he's modified his
behavior_either voluntarily or
involuntarily. I think part of that
modification started when I pulled
him out of the pool and told him,
"You've got a stroke that is
going to set a world record some
day, and you are going to do it in
practice."
Keenly
Competitive
Michael has an athletic mentality
second to none. He is keenly
competitive, and that's what drives
him. In competition, he is
incredibly focused and able to
relax. The higher the level of
competition, the better he is.
That's something you just don't see
very often.
What
he needs to work on is the same
thing he had to work on as a child:
to strengthen the connection in his
mind between what happens on a daily
basis and how that affects what's
going to happen when he gets in the
big meet. He's better now and better
than 90 percent of the population,
but he still has those days_about
once every six weeks_when he's
tired, and it's a struggle for me to
get him to do things and maintain
the same intensity in workout that
he gives in the big meets.
In
2002, he had an excellent summer,
setting a world record in the 400
meter IM, taking four events at the
Phillips 66 Summer Nationals,
notching American records in the 200
IM and 100 fly and swimming the
fastest fly leg ever in a 4 x 100
world record medley relay victory.
In
addition to water work, we
religiously incorporated a
"Mike Barrowman medicine ball
routine" into his dryland
routine, and we did a three-week
stay at altitude in Colorado
Springs. He's followed his long
course success with the best fall
he's ever had_by far.
Typically,
for the last three or four years,
Michael has had very good summers.
Then there have been down periods in
the fall where we've had to work
hard to crank him back up to a good
mental mode. That has not been the
case this year.
This
fall and winter, Michael has worked
hard on the backstroke. In fact,
he's gotten really good. Recently,
he finished a 15 x 200 yard back set
with a 1:45. Not too bad! And his
breaststroke, while still not
flashy, is greatly improved.
We
continue to develop Michael as a
complete swimmer. That means some
emphasis on the distance freestyle.
On Halloween, he whipped off a 5,000
free for time in a 46:34. That's
under a 9:20 per 1,000 average. I
was impressed with that. In fact, it
is probably the most impressive
thing he's done, and it might be one
of the most impressive things he
ever does. That's the kind of thing
I'm not sure you can ever replicate,
but it's neat to give him some
confidence, particularly since he
has to swim against some of the
super distance guys.
This
is the third year we have approached
the training cycle from a yearly
perspective. It's not our style at
NBAC to talk about the results of
success. We are always interested in
the process. Michael didn't
understand the scope of it until his
breakout spring nationals
performance in Seattle in 2000 when
he went from a 2:04.68 to 1:59-flat
and set a 15-16 NAG record in the
200 meter fly. After that, the
secret was out.
Setting
Goals
These days, Michael sets goals for
himself. Our eyes are on one medium
and one long-range goal: World
Championships in July in Barcelona
and 2004 Olympic Trials and Games.
In Spain, he will swim a full
program that mimics the Olympic
schedule, except that there the 400
IM will be on the last day rather
than the first. That's a full plate:
six days of prelims, semis and
finals in the 100-200 fly, 200-400
IM, 800 free relay, 400 medley relay
and, hopefully, a berth on the 4 x
100 free relay.
To
get ready for that, we have
concocted a training program that
began with a fairly high-mileage
fall, a 70-80,000 mixture of yards
and meters. There was also 30-45
minutes of dryland six days a week.
September through December, we
focused on structural adaptation.
With that, we are looking to
stimulate major physiological growth
that will make him go faster. At
this stage, we don't emphasize fine
tuning. Instead, we have spent a lot
of time on endurance work, improving
technical issues and gaining
strength_putting money in the bank.
We'll
continue that regimen through spring
nationals. From April through May,
we'll focus on functional
adaptation, working on coordination
plus speed- and racing-specific
elements for the World
Championships.
With
all his success, it is easy to
overlook that Michael is only a
17-year-old, especially given that
he is in his second year as a
professional and drives a Cadillac
Escalade. But, he's earned it, and
he's in the process of maturing and
securing his financial future. This
spring, he'll graduate from Towson
High School. In the fall, he'll be
attending classes at Loyola College
in Baltimore and continue to train
with us at North Baltimore.
Check
the accompanying charts for some
typical early-, mid- and late-season
workouts Michael has done during the
2001-2002 short and long course
seasons.
Bob
Bowman is the senior coach at the
North Baltimore Aquatic Club in
Maryland and has trained Michael
Phelps for the last six years.
Michael J. Stott is a contributing
editor to Swimming Technique, SWIM
and Swimming World magazines.
Microcycle
Chart
SUMMER
MICROCYCLE
Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Sat. Sun.
AM POWER ENDURANCE QUALITY TECHNICAL ENDURANCE MIXED TECHNICAL
MD-6000 MD-8000 MD-7000 MD-7000 MD-8000 MD-7000 All-6000
Dist-7000 Dist-9000 Dist-8000 Dist-8000 Dist-9000 Dist-8000 DL-Barrowman
PM QUALITY TECHNICAL POWER TECHNICAL
MD-7000 MD-7000 MD-6000 MD-7000
Dist-8000 Dist-8000 Dist-7000 Dist-8000
DL-Barrowman DL-Barrowman DL-Barrowman DL-Barrowman
SCHOOL
YEAR MICROCYCLE
Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Sat. Sun.
AM POWER TECHNICAL POWER MIXED TECHNICAL
MD-4500 MD-4000 MD-4000 MD-9000 All-6000
Dist-6000 Dist-6000 Dist-6000 Dist-10000 DL-Circuit
PM QUALITY ENDURANCE QUALITY ENDURANCE TECHNICAL
MD-7000 MD-8000 MD-7000 MD-8000 All-7000
Dist-8000 Dist-9000 Dist-8000 Dist-9000
DL-Med. Ball DL-Circuit DL-Abs/Flex DL-Med. Ball DL-Abs
MD = Middle Distance
Dist = Distance
DL = Dryland
Sample Workouts
Friday, Dec. 28, 2001
3:30 p.m. (SCY)
(After 9,000 SCY a.m. endurance IM workout)
WARM-UP
6 x (50 free, 50 side kick, 50 fly drill, 50 pull buoy [5th], 50 IM)
20 x 100 on 1:15 (25 fly-25 free-25 free-25 fly)
500 stroke (50 kick, 50 drill)
MAIN SET
2,000 timed kick (stroke)
Michael Phelps (MP) = free on board
23:02 (5:48.9 - 5:47.5 - 5:46.0 - 5:39.6)
4 x 100 IM drill continuous
PULLING SET (pull buoy, band)
10 x 200 on 3:00
Odd = free (moderate)
Even = fly (fast)
MP = 2:01 - 2:00 - 1:59 - 1:57.5 - 1:56.4
SPEED SET
24 x 25 fly on :30 (1-ez [drill], 1-no breath, 1-sprint)
TOTAL: 9,000 yards (18,000 daily total)
POST-PRACTICE
500 abdominals and stretching
* * *
Monday, Feb. 25, 2002
3:30 p.m. (SCY)
(After 4,500 SCY a.m. practice_moderate)
WARM-UP
800 mixer on 10:30
4 x 150 kick on 2:30 (50 stroke-50 free-50 stroke)
400 pull buoy on 5:00 (breathe 3-5-7-9 by 100)
200 stroke drill on 3:00
10 x 50 on :45 (2-25 kick/25 drill, 2-25 free/25 stroke, 1-stroke)
MAIN SET (challenge 50s, main stroke)
Michael did fly:
4 x 50 on 1:30 (25.4 - 25.6 - 25.0 - 24.8) (alt groups with 1500 mixed drills)
1 x 50 on 1:20 (24.8)
1 x 50 on 1:10 (24.8)
1 x 50 on 1:00 (24.5)
1 x 50 on :50 (24.4)
1 x 50 on :40 (24.1)
1 x 50 on :30 (23.8)
LONG SWIM-DOWN
100-200-300 pull buoy (lungbuster by quarters)
400 choice kick
300-200-100 IM drills
TOTAL: 6,100 yards (10,600 daily total)
POST-PRACTICE DRYLAND
Wall sit, 2 minutes
3 x 8 pull-ups (assisted if needed)
2 x 15 dips (no weight)
Push-ups
10 elbows in + 5 clap
10 elbows out + 5 clap
10 opposite + 5 clap
10 reverse opp. + 5 clap
Ab roller 2 x 15
3 x ball squats 10
3 x squat jumps 10
Stretching!!!
* * *
Thursday, March 7, 2002
3:30 p.m. (SCY)
(8 days from first swim at sectionals)
(No a.m. workout)
WARM-UP
800 (75 free-25 IM order) on 10:30
6 x 100 stroke kick on 1:40
400 pull buoy on 5:00 (lungbuster by 100)
200 IM drill on 3:00
8 x 50 on :45 (25 free-25 stroke)
MAIN SET
15 x 100 on 2:00 (1-kick, 1-drill, 1-swim)
MP did backstroke:
Kick: avg. 1:10
Drill: avg. 1:10
Swim: 54.0 (26.8 - 27.2)
53.1 (26.6 - 26.4)
51.6 (25.9 - 25.7)
50.7 (25.3 - 25.4)
49.1 (24.4 - 24.5)
WARM-DOWN
4 x 200 pull buoy, paddles, band on 2:30 (lungbuster by 50)
200 IM drill
START PRACTICE (15 minutes)
300 swim-down
TOTAL: 5,300 yards
* * *
Thursday, Sept. 13, 2002
3:30 p.m. (SCM)
WARM-UP
8 x 150 on 2:30
Odd = free (50 breathe opposite side, 50 right arm, 50 left arm)
Even = 50 free (breathe 5th), 25 fly
8 x 100 stroke kick
2 on 1:45
4 on 1:40
2 on 1:35
8 x 50 on :50, 2 of each stroke
TECHNICAL SET
8 x 200 on 3:30 breast (50 point kick, 50 kick-kick-pull, 50 3 high-3 long, 50 swim)
(Focus on positioning)
PULLING SET (pull buoy, paddles, band)
400 lungbuster (breathe 3-5-7-9 by 100)
4 x 200 on 2:40 (breathe 25 right side/25 left side)
4 x 200 on 2:30 (hard effort descend)
400 lungbuster (long stroke)
KICKING
1500 free kick (100 moderate, 50 FAST!)
100 loosen
TOTAL: 8,000 meters
POST-PRACTICE
30 minutes of running and 15 minutes of stretching
* * *
Saturday, Nov. 10, 2002
7:30 a.m. (SCM)
WARM-UP
3 x (200 free on 2:50/200 IM kick on 3:30/200 pull buoy on 2:50/200 IM drill on 3:15)
MAIN SET
MP Results:
1 x 200 free on 2:40
4 x 200 IM on 2:45 2:28 - 2:25 - 2:23 - 2:21
1 x 400 free on 5:20
3 x 200 IM on 2:40 2:19 - 2:15 - 2:13
1 x 600 free on 8:00
2 x 200 IM on 2:35 2:12 - 2:09
1 x 800 free on 10:40
1 x 200 IM on 2:30 2:04.4 (27.5 - 31.6 - 36.6 - 28.7)
100 loosen
PULLING SET (pull buoy, paddles, band)
1500 (descend 500s 1-3)
SPEED/TECHNICAL SET
32 x 25 on :30 (2 kick, 2 drill, 4 swim), 8 of each stroke
200 swim-down
TOTAL: 9,000 meters
POST-PRACTICE DRYLAND
Medicine ball (repeat 3 times)
Chest pass 10
Behind head pass 10
Right to right pass 10
Left to left pass 10
Between front pass 10
Squat pass 10
Dyna disc 3 x 30 seconds balancing (each leg)
Foam rolls 3 x 30 seconds
Ab roller 3 x 25
Stretching!!!
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