Improve your fitness level, achieve your swimming goals, and maximize your workouts with the help of four-time Olympic gold medalist Janet Evans Whether you have been swimming laps for years, want to get back into the water, or have a competitive streak for masters meets or triathlons, Janet Evans' Total Swimming has you covered. A total of 60 workouts and 12 progressive programs allow you to tailor your swim sessions by distance, intensity, and goal. The gold-medal information also details proper stroke technique, advantages of various gear, concepts such as interval sets and training phases, and making each workout more productive by stretching, building core strength, warming up, and cooling down. So dive into Janet Evans' Total Swimming and begin training with one of swimming's all-time legends.
If you train at least 1.5 hours/day, this book is for you. Most of the book is on workouts.
Delivers
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
I took up swimming recently, and went through a stack of swimming books - this one offers the best overview (equipment, routine, strokes) - and workout schedule of any book I read, with specific advice on a number of topics -from what sort of swimsuit to get to advanced workouts. The book feels both personal - like you're getting advice directly from people who suceeded - without tying you down to one approach that might not be right for you - swimming is very nuanced and personal. I have found the books published by human kinetics to be sports reference books out there.
A compjlete course
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
This is a great book for someone who already knows how to swim but wants to be a better swimmer. Maybe this book will make you a great swimmer. Her explanations are very down to earth so they are actually useful. I'm sure most swimmers don't have a PhD in hydrodynamics so why do some books write like that? This avoids those traps. She does a fantastic job at breaking down the strokes and what drills to use to improve parts of each stroke. She is also quite honest with the time and dedication it takes to be the best. You'll know if you're really trying! Also refreshing are these little fact boxes that discuss a side point to the text. You feel like you're standing next to Evans and overhearing her coversation. Good stuff.
A great swimming book
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
I find Evans book a very good and practical one. It doesn't go into the details of swimming propulsion, lift forces, drag forces, vortex propulsion and all the other stuff, that quite frankly never helped me much. From the basics or swimming essentials all the way to the programs, it is an extremely good book and a great read.If you don't have a coach, this book is a MUST. I really like the "Programs". You can see and feel they are written in great detail and expertise ...well by Janet Evans!!! Thank you Janet. I highly recommend this book to any swimmer.
Solid effort, good references, great workouts and project management oriented
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
The book is a solid effort and a good reference manual for a newer swimmer such as a triathlete or a beginning masters swimmer. The book is divided into three sections, Swim Essentials, Workouts and Programs. The first section is primarily swim basics, equipment, technique and turns. The programs section is very "project management" oriented which is great for someone swimming on their own for a triathlon or supplement to a coached workout. The workouts section is segmented into varying degrees of difficulty and it was this section I was interested in. (But enough about my problems.) What impressed me most was Evans sticking a stake into heart of the 'low stroke count equals faster swimmer theory' with Janet Evans eloquently stating the following: "The focus on swim training is often on lowering stroke count to increase speed, and that tactic is solid as long as efficiency is not lost. My stroke count was quite high--about 40 strokes per 50 meters compared with 25 for the larger swimmers--but my strong pull and push underwater and rapid tempo combined to create an efficient stroke that earned me a gold medal against larger swimmers in that 400-meter freestyle race." -- Janet Evans If you are looking for a book that contains the "dark arts of swimming" with data never before expressed, it is not quite that but rather a reference book, a fitness guide, and on how to progress as a swimmer from slow lane to fast lane.
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