Int J Sports Med 2010; 31(12): 875-881
DOI: 10.1055/s-0030-1265149
Training & Testing

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Hip Velocity and Arm Coordination in Front Crawl Swimming

C. Schnitzler1 , L. Seifert2 , M. Alberty3 , D. Chollet4
  • 1Faculty of Sport Science from Rouen, Laboratory CETAPS UPRES EA 3832, University of Rouen, Faculty of Sports Sciences, France, Mont Saint Aignan, France
  • 2Faculty of Sport Sciences, CETAPS UPRES EA 3832, Mont Saint Aignan, France
  • 3Laboratoire d’Etudes de la Motricite Humaine, Universite Lille 2, Faculte des Sciences du Sport, Ronchin, France
  • 4Université de Rouen, CETAPS Laboratory EA3832, Mont Saint Aignan, France
Further Information

Publication History

accepted after revision August 07, 2010

Publication Date:
11 November 2010 (online)

Preview

Abstract

The hip intracyclic velocity variability and the index of coordination in front crawl swimming were examined in relation to performance level. 22 swimmers were assigned to either an elite or a recreational swimming group and performed 4 swim trials at different paces relative to their individual maximum velocity. A velocity meter system was set to determine intracyclic velocity variability and video analysis allowed the determination of the index of coordination. Mean intracyclic velocity variability was lower in the elite swimmers than the recreational swimmers (14.39±1.97 vs. 17.80±4.23%, p<0.05), and remained stable with swim pace (i. e., the relative velocity) for the elite group, whereas it increased for the recreational group (p<0.05). The elite swimmers were characterized by a lower mean index of coordination than the recreational swimmers (−9.6±7.1 vs. −6.9±5.0%, p<0.05), but it increased with swim velocity in the elite group and showed only a tendency in the recreational group (p=0.07). These findings suggest that low intracyclic velocity variability and its stability over a range of swimming paces, which result from optimized inter-arm coordination, are characteristic of skilled performance. Thus, the examination of intracyclic velocity variability and index of coordination variability with different swim paces could provide new insight into skilled performance in swimming.

References

Correspondence

Dr. Christophe Schnitzler

Faculty of Sport Science from

Rouen

Laboratory CETAPS UPRES

EA 3832:

University of Rouen

Faculty of Sports Sciences

France, Boulevar Siegfried

Mont saint

Aignan 76821

France

Phone: +33/299/14 17 60

Fax: +33/299/14 17 70

Email: cschnitzler@ac-strasbourg.fr