Analysis of male and female Olympic swimmers in the 100-meter events

Stroke rate, length, final time, age, and height were assessed across the four 100 m events' heats at the Olympic Games. It was found that: 1.the higher the stroke rate, the shorter the stroke length; 2.successful swimmers had longer stroke lengths; 3.stroke rate was not related to body size but stroke length was; 4.taller swimmers had longer stroke lengths; 5.age was only important in the women's events being negatively correlated with final time in three of the four events (breaststroke not being related); and 6.males across the four events were 10.6% faster, 11.5% older, 7.3% taller, and had 9.7% longer stroke lengths but had only 1% greater stroke rate. Implication: Stroke length and rate were used in various combinations by many swimmers to achieve good performance times. It would seem that stroke length should be a priority for instructional emphasis.
© Copyright 1990 Journal of Applied Biomechanics. Human Kinetics. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:endurance sports
Published in:Journal of Applied Biomechanics
Language:English
Published: 1990
Online Access:https://journals.humankinetics.com/view/journals/jab/6/2/article-p187.xml
Volume:6
Issue:2
Pages:187-197
Document types:article
Level:advanced