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Dressel vs. Dressel vs. Dressel vs. Dressel In 100 Free

Maybe it was inspired by Avengers: Endgame, where future Captain America fought past Captain America and future Iron Man gave past Iron Man a brief heart attack. Whatever the inspiration, we’re taking it to the next time-bending level this month, pitting Caeleb Dressel against himself… four times.

In a way, it’s a continuation of our discussion earlier this summer about the effects of distance per stroke (DPS) and stroke rate on overall speed. (You can view that post here.) That analysis showed that in the short course pool (whether meters or yards) athletes appear to favor increasing their stroke rate rather than their DPS. In long course meters, however, DPS had a lot more effect on the fastest times than it did in short course.

This month’s analysis focuses in on long course, with finals 100 free swims from Dressel at the major meets of the past four years:

  • 2016 Rio Olympics: 48.02
  • 2017 World Championships: 47.17
  • 2018 Pan Pacific Championships: 48.22
  • 2019 World Championships: 46.96

First, a few notes:

  • The races we annotated for all of these were his finals in these events.
  • He did slightly faster times in his prelims/semis at some of the competitions, but we didn’t annotate those. It doesn’t change the order of results in any case.

2016 to 2017 Jump

The biggest time jump for Dressel was obviously his improvement between the Rio Olympics in 2016 and the 2017 World Championships. He effectively went from a support swimmer on the U.S. Olympic roster to its star at the World Champs. The biggest change in his 100 free between those swims? A slight uptick in his tempo (1.1 seconds per cycle to 1.07 seconds per cycle) and a drop of one stroke (from 33 in 2016 to 32 in 2017).

Likely a factor in the latter, Dressel also spent about a half-second longer underwater in 2017 – that allowed him to take one less stroke while still increasing his overall stroke rate. His distance per stroke actually went slightly backwards despite the major time drop.

2018 to 2019 Similarities

2018 was a bit of an anomaly year for Dressel, with a motorcycle accident injury sapping his training and results. His time went more than a full second backwards from 2017 Worlds to 2018 Pan Pacs. But what’s intriguing is that while Dressel’s 2018 swim was the slowest of these four and his 2019 swim the fastest, they’re remarkably similar in their individual metrics.

As with his big improvement in 2017, the 2018 version of Dressel continued to pare down his overall stroke count, this time cutting two full strokes to get to 30. His stroke rate got a bit slower, too, to 1.16 seconds per cycle (compared to 1.07 in 2017). In return, though, Dressel saw a huge increase in his DPS, from 1.20 to 1.29. He also kept improving his underwaters.

His time was vastly different in 2019, but the metrics almost identical:

2018 2019
Time 48.22 46.96
Stroke Count 30 29
Stroke Rate (sec/cycle) 1.16 1.18
DPS (m/stroke) 1.29 1.32
Turn Time 0.75 0.79
Underwater Time 4.16 4.16

It’s a credit to Dressel and coach Gregg Troy that they were able to see they’d achieved a winning formula in 2018, even if the time really didn’t back it up. It clearly wasn’t the race plan that held Dressel back in 2018, it was his own physical limitations while fighting injury.

The Winning Formula

So what was it that Dressel did so well in 2019 compared to his previous swims? In comparison to his 2017 World Championships swim, the difference in tactics is very clear:

2017 2019
Time 47.17 46.96
Stroke Count 32 29
Stroke Rate (sec/cycle) 1.07 1.18
DPS (m/stroke) 1.2 1.32
Turn Time 0.63 0.79
Underwater Time 4.07 4.16

In many ways, swimming is a sport of tradeoffs – early speed means less energy for the final lap. Bigger underwaters mean less oxygen at other points of the race. Dressel made two major tradeoffs from 2017 to 2019:

  • A slower turn (by a fairly significant 0.16 seconds) to load up for more time underwater
  • A slower stroke tempo (again by a significant 0.11 seconds per cycle) in exchange for significantly improved distance per stroke (by a whopping 0.12 meters per stroke)

Also significant is that those tradeoffs only resulted in a faster time when Dressel was full healthy – perhaps it was the missed training in 2018 that kept him from being able to handle the longer underwaters. It’s also possible (maybe probable) that Dressel was still feeling the effects of the injury in 2018, keeping him from increasing his stroke rate as he had the year before. If that’s the case, one could posit that it was actually an injury-riddled down year that eventually ‘unlocked’ the winning formula for the swimmer who one year later would become the fastest man in the world.

 

Learn more about how you can improve different areas of your swim such as stroke technique, turns, and more, in this comprehensive guide on How to Swim Faster.

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Yup
4 years ago

MA reads this and weeps

THEO
4 years ago

one day we will see him break SCM records in 100 IM, 100FR, 100 fly for sure. Would also be cool to see what he could do in 200IM, 200FR, 200FLY, 100BR.

Jjk
Reply to  THEO
4 years ago

I don’t know about that. 100im is too good for Dreassel. Remember that Morozov destroys dressel in scm breastroke. And Morozov also has better bacstroke. But for those other wrs I agree that he can break those

Rafael
Reply to  Jjk
4 years ago

200 Fly also seems a little off.. as Le Clos time is amazing but I think Milak could take it to a 1:46 with a perfect race.

100 Breast is only debatable because Peaty has terrible walls and turns, but Kamming or others could probably destroy this record..

200 IM seem a little impossible also if Seto do this race for real..

The others I think he can do

sven
Reply to  Jjk
4 years ago

I think Dressel has the potential to beat Vlad’s WR in the 100 IM, but I don’t think that’s “for sure” like Theo says. Vlad is one of the greatest short course swimmers of all time, and his record will not go down easy.

Dressel was faster in the yards 100 breast than Vlad (Vlad did breast on USCs 400 medley a couple times at NCAAs and even with a relay start he didn’t go 50.0), so in a head-to-head, fully tapered situation I think the switch to meters might be, at best, a small advantage to Vlad.

That said, with the addition of the 100 IM to the ISL, chances of seeing Dressel swim it fully tapered at some… Read more »

UCswim
Reply to  Jjk
4 years ago

Doesn’t Dressel have the 2nd fastest 100 yard breast???

Coach Mike 1952
Reply to  UCswim
4 years ago

Second fastest performer, I believe, & 3rd fastest time behind two 49’s by Ian Finnerty.

Coach Mike 1952
Reply to  Coach Mike 1952
4 years ago

Finnerty 49.69 (2018 NCAA’s) & 49.85 (2019 NCAA’s), only man ever under 50. Dressel 50.03, Cordes 50.04, etc. Please also see recent article: https://staging2.swimswam.com/cals-reece-whitley-becomes-10th-fastest-man-ever-with-50-8-100-breast/ for the rundown of performers, not times as well.

M d e
Reply to  UCswim
4 years ago

Sure, but he isn’t great at actually swimming breaststroke, his start and turns are just ridiculous. The extra couple metres kills him (relative to legitimate world class breaststrokers) as seen by him getting smoked at ISL over 50.

Coach Mike 1952
Reply to  UCswim
4 years ago

Actually not, see the two linked posts immediately below

Coach Mike 1952
Reply to  UCswim
4 years ago

Actually not, please see two linked posts immediately below.

CSWIM
Reply to  THEO
4 years ago

A fully prepared Manadou would take some beating in the 100 IM

RenéDescartes
4 years ago

Dressel vs a hurricane named Dressel

erik
Reply to  RenéDescartes
4 years ago

Ditka.

RenéDescartes
Reply to  RenéDescartes
4 years ago

Can’t believe 4 people didn’t like this tweet.

Lane 8
4 years ago

This article seems strangely familiar

Corona
4 years ago

Let’s just have holograms of Dressel racing this year instead of Olympics

DBSwims
Reply to  Corona
4 years ago

Entire holographic 100 free Olympic finals:
Dressel 2016
Chalmers 2016
Dressel 2017
Chalmers 2017 (I actually dont think tapered one of this exists)
Dressel 2018
Chalmers 2018
Dressel 2019
Chalmers 2019

Ragnar
Reply to  DBSwims
4 years ago

Yeah he had the surgery that year

Jimbo
4 years ago

I think Dressel wins vs Dressel

JCO
4 years ago

Who else is disappointed we never got to see Dressel do the 200 yard free fully tapered and shaved at NCAAs at least as a relay lead off?

Ol' Longhorn
Reply to  JCO
4 years ago

How bout 200 scy fly? We got a whiff of his 200 IM.

Pvdh
Reply to  Ol' Longhorn
4 years ago

Vs townley 1v1 in the 500

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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