Your swimming technique SUCKS (and how to fix it)

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 2. 05. 2024
  • If you live in Sweden and are looking for a swim coach, check out Maria's coaching services😊👉 coachvitazka.com/ (tell her I sent you!)
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    #swimming #freestyleswimming #swimmingtips
    Chapters:
    00:00 Intro
    00:26 How to film yourself swimming
    01:05 Example of good swimming technique
    02:20 How to do a swimming video analysis
    05:09 Common swimming mistakes
    05:38 Drills to improve catch
    06:18 Drills to improve body position
    06:40 Drills to improve arm recovery

Komentáƙe • 70

  • @MychalBackhaus
    @MychalBackhaus Pƙed rokem +34

    Jonne bro, your channel is so amazing, that it makes me want to do all of your challenges and to be great like you, eventually, I’ll try to climb Mount Everest.

    • @BlossomyPen6275
      @BlossomyPen6275 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

      So it on a stair master or something it’s much safer and better for Mount Everest.

  • @daiko6019
    @daiko6019 Pƙed rokem

    Glad you still do videos man your edits and ideas are phenomenal

  • @cgin18
    @cgin18 Pƙed rokem +3

    Really enjoy all your content, thought and production quality. Keep it up!

  • @33Jenesis
    @33Jenesis Pƙed rokem +23

    When I do everything right, I feel light and smooth free styling. Currently this doesn’t happen often nor consistently. When something or several things don’t feel right, my form, speed, breath, or alignment suffers. As a newbie I am very self aware and critical in order to tweak or correct what bothers me. These drills will be helpful to be added to practice drills.

    • @steeleronfire7030
      @steeleronfire7030 Pƙed rokem +5

      Same with me. I am an intermediate swimmer - I started about 1 year ago and I have made insane progress, huge leaps forward in progress at first and then over time I have plateau'd with my improvements because I have already taken all the low hanging fruit if you will. I know how to do 'everything right' now in theory and whenever I do hit that 'perfect stroke' I can feel a tremendous difference in how easily and smoothly I glide through the water with what feels like 0 effort. The focus now is to master how to hit that perfect stroke consistently.

  • @user-rz8uv1py2z
    @user-rz8uv1py2z Pƙed rokem +5

    Well done Jonne! You really nailed the points on the most common issues that I see in beginner to intermediate swimmers.
    I look forward to seeing your progress toward the Ice Mile!

  • @babetdoornbos
    @babetdoornbos Pƙed rokem +1

    Your timing is perfect. I'm just learning how to have a better swimming technique. THANK YOU

  • @joshmcnulty5950
    @joshmcnulty5950 Pƙed rokem

    Excellent video. Incredible content, easy watch and always of value. Thank you

  • @JTD33
    @JTD33 Pƙed rokem +59

    I had a pretty similar head position to yours and found that by looking more down instead of forward I was able to raise my lower body closer to the surface. It also helps breathing since it enables you to breath without lifting your face out of the water so much.
    Would have been cool if you did some kind of a time trial (400/800/1000m?) before and after working on your form.

    • @tommim4353
      @tommim4353 Pƙed rokem +1

      i've had same with just focusing on the gaze, did help

    • @mikhaillastname8719
      @mikhaillastname8719 Pƙed rokem +1

      i second that all starts with your head position. it helps you raise your lower body and makes it easier to reach optimal position when breathing.

    • @Rory626
      @Rory626 Pƙed rokem

      The breathing part is bang on. Your mouth is closer to your chin than your forehead. Head straight, eyes looking straight down, and rotate your head to the side to breath. Dig your temple into the water. Mouth comes straight out for the breath

  • @TheMitch112190
    @TheMitch112190 Pƙed rokem +2

    Need videos more often! I really enjoy your editing. It's unlike anyone else's!

  • @jeremy-bernard
    @jeremy-bernard Pƙed rokem +1

    Awesome videos, once more! Really entertaining and instructive đŸ‘đŸ»

  • @fabrizziofernandez6540
    @fabrizziofernandez6540 Pƙed rokem +1

    Amazing vid as always !! And amazing edit !!

  • @centralparkjoe1290
    @centralparkjoe1290 Pƙed rokem +1

    Outstanding! I learned more from this video then any lesson or tutorial!đŸ€™đŸ’Ș

  • @philippebelanger228
    @philippebelanger228 Pƙed rokem

    Amazing video! Thanks for clearly showing the theory

  • @aceleryful
    @aceleryful Pƙed rokem

    Superb video, thanks! Extremely short and to the point. I'm getting myself a "swim smooth" right now!

  • @guadaluperuvalcaba5582
    @guadaluperuvalcaba5582 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    Very nice video, very visual, very informative. Thank you

  • @jacobpetroelje85
    @jacobpetroelje85 Pƙed rokem +1

    very good video! I have a suggestion for the example of good swimming technique portion. Maybe add footnote that extends on what you are explaining. For example I don’t know what a 6-beat kick is so it would be helpful to have an explanation written out so I can pause the video and find out

  • @renesampers5225
    @renesampers5225 Pƙed rokem +2

    yesterday I thought of extending my endurance workouts and start swimming to improve my endurance and ultimately running, but thought how and where I could find instructions on good swimming techniques. Well, Jonne never disappoints đŸ€đŸ”„

  • @batlin
    @batlin Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    Great analysis and tips. I was also "falling" on my left arm glide phase when breathing on the right, and a swim coach suggested I might be starting to rotate my head too early. I delayed it a little bit, only turning when my right hand was about to exit the water, and it helped a little although I'm still quite inefficient.

  • @hamadalkhalifa2323
    @hamadalkhalifa2323 Pƙed rokem

    Amazing video. Thanks.

  • @atejaney8322
    @atejaney8322 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    You're the only one who showed and refer a book on swimming. Good!

  • @oliverburns1867
    @oliverburns1867 Pƙed rokem +1

    Love your channel bro

  • @itsdivertido9020
    @itsdivertido9020 Pƙed rokem

    Man, I miss Joone, on the days he doesn't upload. seriously! I can watch the unlazy way every day, awesome video as always. keep up the good work man

  • @stevengtv
    @stevengtv Pƙed rokem

    I’m loving the swimming videos!!

  • @megancooper6130
    @megancooper6130 Pƙed rokem

    That paddle drill is awesome! Thank you for this video

  • @seamuscavanaugh5933
    @seamuscavanaugh5933 Pƙed rokem +4

    keeping your elbows higher on the recovery will also help you. A drill we used to do at my club was to drag the fingertips along the surface of the water on recovery, and focus on keeping the upper arm in line with the shoulders. This may help you to rotate more. look at videos of Open Water swimmer Florian Wellbrock

  • @sebon11
    @sebon11 Pƙed rokem

    Great video!

  • @angelosarrocchi
    @angelosarrocchi Pƙed rokem

    Great intro to the video

  • @dank2112
    @dank2112 Pƙed rokem +11

    A non swimmer teaching swimming, kinda
    I have to admit that your technique is better than I'd expected (also I'm a competitive swimmer) and if you're looking for a challenge once you get good freestyle form, learn the butterfly

    • @gasly1018
      @gasly1018 Pƙed rokem

      The butterfly is my nemesis. How often I've hit my thumb against the lines during training, ughhh hurts even thinking about it

    • @dank2112
      @dank2112 Pƙed rokem

      @@gasly1018 I have the same thing except I have long hands, arm span being 6'7" and hit the lane lines at practices and meets... Even during the 200 fly đŸ„Č

    • @1dameister1
      @1dameister1 Pƙed rokem

      Is it correct then what he's saying? Or it's very theoretical and doesn't really work like that in practice.

  • @Incognito-or2ot
    @Incognito-or2ot Pƙed rokem

    Cool video!

  • @atletaflores
    @atletaflores Pƙed rokem

    Such a funny and demostrative video. Unbelievable analysis.

  • @jblizzard962
    @jblizzard962 Pƙed rokem

    Can you compete in the Swedish ice swimming competition. That an idea for an video.

  • @calculatedrisktaker
    @calculatedrisktaker Pƙed rokem

    What name of book?

  • @egidijuscekanauskas3795
    @egidijuscekanauskas3795 Pƙed rokem +1

    Questions, how did you become so good with camera, editing, and all that stuff, is it just practice or is there an actual course or something like that on how to?

  • @jaxon2904
    @jaxon2904 Pƙed rokem +1

    top teir editing

  • @romina141086
    @romina141086 Pƙed rokem +1

    I don®t even know how to swim and I®m watching this video... Only because it®s Jonne! 😄

  • @MegaBabygal1
    @MegaBabygal1 Pƙed rokem

    I can't swim and this video is exploding my mind. How shall i ever learn this 😭😭😭😭. In other news....how can i buy unlazy merch please?

  • @TheAdamant94
    @TheAdamant94 Pƙed 20 dny

    That graph at 4:02 is literally just the Pepsi logo

  • @P_Izenberg
    @P_Izenberg Pƙed rokem

    this was helpful

  • @pabloMM01
    @pabloMM01 Pƙed rokem

    I never understand if the stroke rate / time per 100Ms should be measured in a sprint, or in slower 400 meters / 1500 meters distances. Anyone knows?

    • @ryanduggan6738
      @ryanduggan6738 Pƙed rokem +1

      You will have different measurements for each event. For example, I train 1:10 pace on a 1:20 interval, which is close to my 1500 pace.

  • @Deprived.drifter
    @Deprived.drifter Pƙed rokem

    I have a lot to learn

  • @danielhirschmann6447
    @danielhirschmann6447 Pƙed rokem +1

    @03:56 not sponsored #pepsi

  • @tocororo2
    @tocororo2 Pƙed rokem

    Is a powerful 2-beat kick OK? I feel it’s so much more natural than 6 kick.

    • @ryanduggan6738
      @ryanduggan6738 Pƙed rokem +1

      It’s ok for longer distance swimming, you can see olympians using it in the longer events. However the 2 beat kick is very hard to do if you don’t have good technique. If it feels better for what you’re doing, it probably is.

  • @hamzakeifo
    @hamzakeifo Pƙed rokem

    Whaat! A Swedish swimming pool

  • @andriipurskyi23
    @andriipurskyi23 Pƙed rokem

    Have one leg shorter so have a roll and need to focus to swim with technique

  • @johnnytrn
    @johnnytrn Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

    4:00 the pepsi graph

  • @TamaEnergy
    @TamaEnergy Pƙed rokem +1

    i would dream of 140 pace howwww

  • @OttiIie
    @OttiIie Pƙed rokem +4

    FIRST 🎉 xoxo your biggest fan

  • @olimpiart
    @olimpiart Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    Is this where the pepsi logo comes from? 3:47

  • @robohippy
    @robohippy Pƙed rokem

    I have never understood the concept of 'the kick should come from the hips and not the knee'. Best guess, since this is repeated by pretty much every coach out there, is that they don't want you to be doing the scissor kick that is used in the life guard side stroke, which does provide lots of thrust, but also lots of drag. As near as I can tell, the front side/down kick in freestyle anchors on the pulling arm, which actually rotates before the hips, and then the front side kick happens. The action is a 'crack the whip' type action. In freestyle and back stroke, it is a spiraling action, in the fly, it is a body wave action. Have to check out more of your videos. My favorite swim stroke is the old over arm side stroke, in part because no one else swims it. Only record in existence is 1:02.5 for 100 yards, set in 1895, some 127 years ago. Much faster than breast stroke and back stroke, and maybe able to keep up with the fly...

    • @swimfan752
      @swimfan752 Pƙed rokem

      If you’re kicking from the knee You’re creating drag. People teach to kick from the hip to keep the leg straight and keep a somewhat streamline position. It also incorporates more of the leg. Your hip flexors should be working in flutter kick

    • @robohippy
      @robohippy Pƙed rokem +1

      @@swimfan752 Well, without a little knee, you will lose most of the 'crack the whip' action that leads to a more powerful kick. It is identical to a football/soccer kick, but not a huge length of the field kick. Foot plant, hip rotation with knee flex, leg follows through. Yes, if the knee comes too far down into the slip stream, you create more drag, which cuts into your propulsion. This is part of why we don't use a totally straight leg for the front side/down kick. There is a subtle difference between the backstroke flutter kick, and the freestyle flutter kick, and I would guess that this is part of why the dolphin kick if you are on your back is a tiny bit faster than if you are on your front. You have to flex at the hip slightly in freestyle to get the lower leg at an angle so you can get some thrust out of your kick. In an extreme example, if you think of the scissor kick used in life guard side stroke, way too much drag created, but lots of thrust. So, for the back stroke, if you try to use the identical flutter kick that you use in freestyle, your knees come up out of the water. You end up flexing more at the knee with backstroke than you do with freestyle. Side note, the lower leg is far more streamlined than your knee and thigh. Another 'funny' thing about differences between freestyle and back stroke flutter kick, and swimming on my side I see everything, many will do the flutter kick with about a 30 degree ankle flex, with 0 degrees being a gymnastic type toe point. These same people have a much better toe point when swimming back stroke. No clue as to why, other than maybe it is "90% mental, and 10% in their heads". The crack the whip is also used in the dolphin kick, but it is linear/body wave action, and flutter kick is rotational spiral action, not linear.

  • @kosmaty71
    @kosmaty71 Pƙed rokem

    1:30 Where is good swimming technique ?

  • @TheGhost385
    @TheGhost385 Pƙed rokem

    Are we all gonna ignore the fact that 1:40 is an outstanding easy pace for his technique? Just imagine how much better can he get

  • @ked4
    @ked4 Pƙed rokem

    I never really passed swimming lessons as a kid, and as a result, never swim.

  • @SteveDahlskog
    @SteveDahlskog Pƙed rokem

    Don’t be that self critical. I think you look pretty strong in the water. You a truly dedicated to this! Amazing!
    Relax your neck and find a neutral head position. Try to not look that far ahead.
    Relax your shoulders to remove that last crossing over (trying to stay on the “train tracks” with your shoulders). Perhaps a more relaxed hand during recovery might help as well. You could begin the pull phase with a more bent elbow to be even stronger in the pull.

  • @Queenfisher444
    @Queenfisher444 Pƙed rokem

    That book you’re referencing is incredibly dated fam. This is not an efficient way to swim freestyle.
    A few things -
    1. Start by learning breath every stroke catch-up freestyle.
    2. Once you can do this comfortably learn to move your head earlier. Your eyes should always be directly to the bottom when your elbow goes over your head (breathing or not).
    The other tips the Swedish coach gave will have little or no effect until you fix your breathing Rythm and achieve a better line through your head.

    • @Queenfisher444
      @Queenfisher444 Pƙed rokem

      czcams.com/video/4InLAsnmKhY/video.html
      Here is what you should be aiming for.
      This form is 1+1 freestyle, if you can’t swim this technique you will be guaranteed to make mistakes in the more advanced rythms (offset {Phelps, popovici} or aggressive fast breath {titmus, dressel}.

  • @user-rz8uv1py2z
    @user-rz8uv1py2z Pƙed rokem

    Well done Jonne! You really nailed the points on the most common issues that I see in beginner to intermediate swimmers.
    I look forward to seeing your progress toward the Ice Mile!