Saturday, May 9, 2015

An Overview Of Swim Team Coaching

By Joanna Walsh


Do you enjoy swimming and love the fun that comes with being deep inside the water? If your answer is yes, you have a starting point to make it in coaching swimmers. However, fantasy in swimming does not translate to being a good coach, hence you need to pay attention to the following lessons from a swim team coaching from the City of West Chester.

Coaching calls for you to be excellent if not an accomplished swimmer. Going back to class may not be an option for you, but it is worth it in order to put yourself up to date with swimming techniques. In any sport players believe they are as good as their coach so work on demonstrating this by acquiring the required skills. Practice makes perfect they say so if you have been out of swimming for a while some of the skills you possessed may have turned brunt by now. You should consider sharpening them by enrolling into a class.

While coaching swimmers, you will spend a substantial amount of your time watching swimmers do the swimming. This does not mean that you remain idle, but it calls for you to scout for skills and talents demonstrated by your swimmers. For example, it is time to note that player doing so well with one technique and aide them improve on the same. Failure to receive feedback is the beginning of your downfall. One very fundamental source of reliable feedback is from members of your team. Capitalize on an open communication so that they can be free to express their opinion on how you are performing as a coach.

Feedback is crucial so you need to establish a mechanism of getting some. Your greatest source of information on how you are faring are your swimmers. Always be open and encourage honest discussions. Being strict will stifle down any attempt by swimmers to open up about your coaching career. Winning trophies is the ultimate goal for any competition but failure to win is not the end. As a swim coach you need to make this be known to your swimmers. However, avoid using it as a scapegoat to loosing so it is good to always focus on winning, but be accommodating of any failure that come your way.

As a coach you may be tempted to think of yourself as the best. In fact you are in need of many lessons so be ready to take some not only from fellow coaches but also from your swimmers. In any form of coaching, experience is not measured by the number of years spent in the game, but the number of lessons taken from the game.

Just like in class work where hard work does not guarantee good grades also it does not guarantee success in swimming. There is something admirable in working hard, but when combined with talent the good results can be expected. To excel in coaching swimmers you must identify those who are talented and instill in them the need to work hard on their talent.

It is common for coaches to separate themselves from the game. One way of doing this is by setting stringent level of discipline to be followed by the players and not the coaches. Rules are fundamental in instilling discipline in any setting, but these rules are better followed if those who enact them follow them as well. As their leader you need to possess the highest level of discipline possible.

Lastly, as the coach always remember that you are just an assistant to each and every swimmer. This calls for you to act as one and help the inner real coach within the swimmers to reveal themselves.




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