At the end of August each of the past five years I get to
spend three days at University of Michigan with Jim Richardson, the head
woman’s swimming coach planning the dryland training for the upcoming season.
This is always one of the highlights of the year for me. Jim is a great coach
who challenges me to think and innovate. He has done a great job of integrating
the dryland training with the in the water training and the results show it.
His swimmers swim fast when it counts. This is my sixth year working with Jim, it
has been a constant learning experience. The program has evolved significantly from
the first year. The swimmers have bought into the program and believe it helps
them which is a big factor. This is a program that is not for the faint of
heart. It requires a lot of planning and constant integration with the swimming
cycles. I feel very fortunate to be able to work with such a class coach and a
class program.
Steve Troutman
I’d be very interested in seeing an example of what said dryland training looks like. Obviously it would be a snapshot in time of a much larger, moving picture… but I’d still be interested.
Thanks!
Squat king
I would be as well, it sounds fascinating.