Olympic Swimmers Need Equipment?

Every sport has a unique technology to produce world class athletes. When it comes to swimming, most people envision laps in the pool, but now days swimming has gone high tech. Olympic swimmers use various types of equipment  to win the gold.

Dry Land Swimming Machines

Dry land swim machines promise to teach proper technique and give a workout no matter where you are. These machines are great for Olympic swimmers who need some practice time away from the pool.

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Swim Suits

One of the most useful pieces of equipment is worn right on the athlete. These swim suits are infused with technology that increases buoyancy, helps the swimmer swim faster and corrects posture. Many Olympians have broken records using this swim wear though it has not been without controversy.

Camera Buggy Systems

The “replay” feature in many sports allow athletes to review their performance and learn first hand what they need to improve. With this in mind 3 cameras record front,side and rear views of the swimmer allowing him or her to correct form as they swim. This technology is perfect for swim training and immediate analysis.

Stretch Cord and Tether Belt

The stretch cord is valuable for training strength and velocity which are important components of competitive swimming and swimmers towed with the tether belt become more at home in the water. These two simple pieces of equipment could help any swimmer improve technique. Competitive swimming is not just about the pool anymore. Athletes still spend most of their time in the water but they have also adopted other tools to aid them in their quest for Olympic greatness.

History of Swimming

BEIJING - AUGUST 16:  (L-R) Michael Phelps of ...
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People have been swimming for a long time. Stone Age drawings of people swimming have even been found in caves. The Bible has also shown references to people swimming.

Organized swimming clubs began in the 1800s and 1900s. This was where people would join clubs and compete against each other. Competitive swimming also grew around this time, and was first introduced into the Olympic Games in Athens in 1896.

In the 20th century, swimming became even more popular with indoor pools now being built. Continuing on to today, swimming is the second most popular activity in the United States. People go to beaches, clubs, lakes and even recreation centers in order to take a splash in the water.

Swimming classes are taught to millions of people all over the world, and people are now teaching their children early how to swim. Many schools and colleges have swimming clubs and compete against each other for titles and championships.

Millions of people each year also watch swimming during the Olympics. Synchronized swimming has also become very popular. That is where a group of swimmers get together and perform a routine that can often blow the audience away.

If you are thinking of taking up swimming, you need to first learn how to swim. Check out swimming classes at your local recreation center or community college. There are swimming classes fit for all ages, so choose one that is right for you and don’t be embarrassed about not being able to swim. Everyone has to learn sometime.

After you efficiently learn to swim, you can then join groups and meet people that have the same interests as you. By joining a swim club or a team and possibly competing, you are getting great exercise as well as having fun doing something you love.

A Brief History of Swimming: The Turn of the 20th Century

LONDON - NOVEMBER 24:  Jacques Rogge, Presiden...
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The first modern Olympic games in 1896 in Athens included four swimming events, all freestyle, open only to men. Alfred Hajos of Hungary won the first swimming gold medal in the modern Olympics for his time of 1:22.20 in the 100-meter freestyle.

At the next Olympic Games in Paris in 1900, women were still excluded from swimming events. Baron Pierre de Coubertin, a French scholar and sportsman who developed the modern Olympic Games, held the belief (common in Victorian times) that women were too frail for athletic competition. The swimming events at the Paris Olympics included three unusual experiments: an obstacle course for swimmers, a test of underwater swimming endurance, and a 4,000-meter event—about 2.4 miles, or 80 lengths of a 50-meter pool, the longest swimming event in competition thus far. (British swimmer John Arthur Jarvis won the event, clocking in at just under one hour.) None of these events was included in future Olympic Games.

Australian swimmer Richmond Cavill (known as “Playboy Dick”) used his own improved version of the “Trudgeon” crawl in the 1902 International Championships in England. His improvement: the flutter kick. He set a world record in the 100 yards, leaving in his wake all Trudgeon-style swimmers. His technique, labeled the “Australian crawl,” rapidly gained popularity. In 1950 the term “Australian crawl” was shortened to “crawl,” and then became known as the “front crawl.”

In 1907 the Australian swimmer and vaudeville performer Annette Kellerman brought to the New York Hippodrome Theater her “water ballet” act, which she performed in a glass tank. She is now credited with inventing the sport of synchronized swimming. Her snug-fitting one-piece bathing suit caused a scandal, and she was arrested on a Boston beach for “indecent exposure.” (At that time women were expected to wear a layered outfit consisting of a dress, bloomers and leggings when swimming.) She thereafter became an advocate for a woman’s right to wear a one-piece bathing suit, and she introduced her own line of women’s one-piece swimwear, which became known as the “Annette Kellerman,” now seen as a pioneering step toward modern swimwear for women.

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