The University of Delaware is one of at least 3 NCAA schools that welcomed their swim teams back to campus this week for voluntary conditioning workouts.
For swimming programs, the line between “sport-specific” training and “conditioning” is a little blurred, given that the majority of sport-specific training in swimming is conditioning based, but the general guidance is that coaches may only be on deck or in the weight room to ensure the safety of participants and are not supposed to be actively coaching.
The University of Delaware kicked off their return to the pool on Wednesday, June 10 in their 50 meter outdoor pool, set up as short course meters. The team trained in 2 groups of 90 minutes each, which head coach Pablo Marmolejo says they will continue until they can have more than 2 swimmers per lane.
The first day kicked off with a 15 minute discussion of safety protocols and how to take care of each other outside of practice times before jumping into a light 3,350 meter in-water workout followed by 30 minutes of dryland.
On day 2, they ramped up to 4,100 meters, and on day 3, Friday, they did 4,400 meters.
The Delaware men finished 5th out of 5 teams and the Delaware women finished 5th out of 7 teams at the 2020 CAA Championships.
The State of Delaware allowed pools to reopen on June 1 with guidance that outdoor pools may use up to 30% of total capacity based on fire capacity (indoors) or square footage (outdoors) of pool area. During lap swim time, pools have limited to 2 swimmers per lane, if lanes are a minimum of 6 feet wide, though the state is moving into Phase 2 on Monday which allows up to 4 swimmers per lane.
University of Delaware First 2 Workouts Back, all in SCM (25m)
Wednesday Workout
3,350 total meters
Warmup
- 12 x 75 @ 1:20 (Odds: 50swim/25kickonback; Evens: 50swim/25drill)
3:00 rest
Kick Set
4x through:
- 4 x 25 @:30 (Odds: free, Evens: fly 10m fast/15m easy)
- 3 x 50 @1:00 Kick on back (25 free/25 fly)
4:00 rest
Main Set 1
2x through:
- 2 x 25 @:30 kick on side free
- 2 x 50 @1:00 25 scull/25 single arm free
- 2 x 75 @1:30 25 scull/25 catchup/25 OK Drill
- 2 x 50 @1:05 free with 3 breaths
- 2 x 25 @:40 15 swim fast/10 kick on back easy
2:00 rest
Cool Down
- 1 x 100 @1:40 IM drill
- 2 x 75 @1:40 Kick on Side – face up
- 1 x 300 @6:00 backstroke (4 underwater kicks off walls)
Dryland:
- 30 minutes dryland
Thursday Workout
4,100 total meters
Warmup
- 400 @6:00: 75 free (breathe every 3)/25 back with 4 underwater kicks
- 400 @6:00: 50 free (breathe every 5)/50 free with fists
- 300 @5:00: 75 Kick on side/75 drill free
- 300 @5:00: By 25, scull/drill/swim (alternating 75s by free and back)
3:00 rest
Kick Set
2x through:
- 1 x 100 @2:00: Kick on Back free or fly
- 1 x 100 @1:50: 75 kick on back free or fly/25 free swim
- 1 x 100 @1:40 50 kick on back free or fly/50 free swim
- 1 x 100 @1:30 25 kick on back free or fly/75 free swim
1 x 50 @4:00 easy
Main Set 1
- 3 x 50 @1:05: 15/20/25 fast, rest easy
- 3 x 100 @1:40: first and last 15 fast, rest easy
- 3 x 50 @1:05: 25/20/15 fast, rest easy
- :30 rest
- 4 x 25 @:35: Backstroke @90% effort
- 1 x 200 @4:20: 25 kick on back arms on side/25 back
- 4 x 25 @:35: Backstroke @100% effort
- 1 x 200 @4:20: 25 kick on back (arms at side) / 25 back
- 4 x 25 @:35: Backstroke @100% effort
3:00 rest
Cool Down
- 4 x 75 @1:10: 50 free/25 OK drill
- 4 x 25 @:35: 15 underwater kick fast/10 Backstroke Easy
- 4 x 75 @1:15: 50 breaststroke with flutter kick/25 free with 2 breaths
- 6 x 25 @:40: odds fast, evens scull (no kick)
Drylands
- 30:00 dryland
Masters…
Delaware mascot is the “Fighting Blue Hen”. HOW SEXIST!!! I will never support any school which is so politically incorrect. They should call their Mascot the “Fighting Blue Asexual Bird!!!”
Let’s call them the Lady Blue Roosters
Too sexist – Why not the Blue Feathered Creatures
Too violent also; lets call then “peacefully debating rainbow gender fluid gallus gallus domesticates”
Dear NCAA, B1G: Why is no one else allowed back in the pool?
As far as the NCAA is concerned everyone in D1 is allowed back in the pool. I haven’t seen a Big Ten policy, though I haven’t heard of any Big Ten teams back in the water either.
Honestly, for a lot of swimmers, depending on where they live, if they can do an actual coached practice with their home club, it might be a better situation than being on campus and doing a “voluntary conditioning” workout at their campus pool.
Indiana is back in their pool.
By pool you mean transfer pool…
Transfer pool…
The outside pool
Learn to train on their own? Many college athletes do it and have done so even before this year.
Kind of hard without a pool.