We have reached the point of the season I like to refer to as "The Grind". Its a grind because we are coming down off of a high in competition (Pittsburgh Christmas Invitational and NJ State Meet) and training (Winter Break). The end of the season is now within sight but still a bit off on the horizon. We now face two months of training through conflicts and practice changes (see the calendar for this information) as well as several swim meets for which most swimmers will not rest at all. Some may say: what's the point?
The most important thing anyone can take from attending meets unrested is learning how to race tired. Imagine if you can do a best time tired...how much faster are you going to swim primed and ready for that meet? We need to go into each and every meet and each and every race at these meets ready to swim with a vengeance and, more importantly, a focused sense of urgency.
Swimming with a sense of urgency is a key ingredient to peak performance for a swimmer, perhaps the most important. There are many swimmers who are great in practice but when it comes to a meet something is missing. I want all swimmers on this team swimming each and every race like it is their last race ever...how would you want to go out? Hopefully you want to finish with a best time and, most importantly, a performance you can look back on and be proud of for years to come.
There are stories we hear every once in a while of people performing incredible feats of strength in times of dire circumstances; like the person who reaches down and lifts a car off of someone's legs to help save their life in a car accident. Its not that the person suddenly gained super-human strength...its that the urgency of the moment and the adrenaline coursing through their veins drove them to perform that feat of strength. The truth of these situations is that the ability to perform this feat was always in this person, it just took an extreme sense of urgency to bring it out of them.
Each and every single swimmer on this team has the ability to swim out of their mind...beyond what they believe they can do. Dan and I proved this at a Gold 2 practice in November when we allowed each group member to pick one of their events and race it in practice...if they did their lifetime best time they were allowed to get out of practice. That night the group went 20 for 22 in best times. TWENTY! The swimmers had a sense of urgency and were able to use that drive to bring the absolute best out of them. Everyone has this in them...we need to see it on a regular basis NOW!
Coming next, Part 2.
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