Int J Sports Med 2010; 31(1): 16-21
DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1241208
Training & Testing

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Kinematical Profiling of the Front Crawl Start

J. Vantorre1 , L. Seifert1 , R. J. Fernandes2 , J.P. V. Boas3 , D. Chollet4
  • 1Faculty of Sport Sciences, CETAPS UPRES EA 3832, MONT SAINT AIGNAN, France
  • 2University of Porto, Faculty of Sport, Swimming, Porto, Portugal
  • 3Faculty of Sport, Porto University, Biomechanics Lab., Porto, Portugal
  • 4Université de Rouen, CETAPS Laboratory EA3832, Mont Saint Aignan, France
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Publikationsverlauf

accepted after revision September 06, 2009

Publikationsdatum:
22. Dezember 2009 (online)

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Abstract

This study analysed the start phases of 15 elite front crawl swimmers, all specialists of sprint events. The first aim was to determine which phases were correlated with the 15-m start time. The features common to the sample of swimmers were then established and individual profiles were clustered. The subjects performed two 25-m trials at the 50-m race-pace using their preferential start technique (grab start). The kinematical analysis assessed the durations of the block, flight, entry, glide, leg kicking and full swimming phases to the 15-m mark. Stroking parameters and the index of arm coordination (IdC) were analysed for the swimming part (10–20 m) of the 25-m. Through the swimming part IdC increased while stroke length and velocity decreased (p<0.05). The relative durations of the aerial (block, flight), entry and underwater phases were correlated with start time. Inter-subject variability was observed, which suggests that various motor solutions were used for the start. Notably, four clusters led to a short 15-m start time: the leg kicking style, mixed “leg kicking/swimming” style, long glide style and short glide style.