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For Swim Parents;
“The
Big Deal About SwimSuits”
by John
Leonard, Executive Director, American Swimming Coaches Association.
Over the
past 18 months, the swimming world has been a frenzy of controversy over the
emergence of technology in swimsuits. At
the recent World Championships in Rome, the constant and overwhelming refrain
about suits, echoed the volume and intensity of the last time we were in Rome
for a World Championships, when the topic was doping....drugs distorting our
sport...in 1994. Fifteen years later, the
emotional topic was the new high tech suits that have swept through the sport
from the World Championship level down to the local park district championships
in the summer league. The parallels were impossible to miss.
FINA (the
international governing body of swimming), in an unprecedented move at its
Congress in Rome, banned the use of all “non-textile” materials from suits
beginning in 2010, and limited the coverage of the body to “knees to navel for
men” and “knees to shoulder straps” for women. 168
nations voted in favor of the restrictions, against a mere 6 in opposition (who
apparently did not understand the word “textile”.)
This in the face of strong opposition to
the move by the sitting President and Executive Director of the FINA
organization. Amazing and never seen
before. The USA delegation initiated
the restrictions and led the opposition. Why
such a strong reaction in opposition to the existing plastic and rubber suits?
A parent new to the sport, from a middle class background, might well
say “hey, why not? Technology marches on! Equipment gets better. Why not let
my son/daughter wear one of the fancy new suits and swim faster?”
Its a valid question that requires a
thoughtful answer. Here it is.
The answer revolves around two
words, with of course, a considerable amount of “side data” that adds to the
intensity of the discussion and the strength of the resolution to end the
problem worldwide.
Those two words are “Maximizing” and
“Enhancing”.
Quality lane lines “maximize” the opportunity of
the athlete to swim fast, with minimum turbulence in the lane. (you should have
seen the waves in the pool back in the 60’s and 70’s.)
Good goggles
allow the athlete to see the turns, see their competitors, and comfortably
compete -- to say nothing of allowing them to train hard for hours which was
impossible in the chlorine pool without goggles and in the old days, yardage and
performance was a fraction of what it is today.
Goggles Maximize the opportunity of the athlete to work hard.
Evolution in coaching techniques in training and biomechanics allow the athletes
to Maximize their ability to benefit from their time in the sport.
Swimsuits, up until approximately the year 2000, and certainly until early 2008,
were designed to maximize the opportunity of the athletes to go fast.
The manufacturers designed suits to “get out of the way of the water”.
Less suit, less friction with the water, less drag, tighter fit, and better
materials MAXIMIZED the ability of the athlete to perform to their highest
earned level.
Beginning in 2008, manufacturers took advantage (and must
be applauded for doing so, within the existing rules, which were close to
non-existent) of the idea of designing suits to ENHANCE the ability of the
athlete to swim faster. A line had been
crossed. Designed suits incorporated plastics, rubberized material and new
design criteria, to enhance the ability of the athlete to be buoyant in the
suits (riding higher makes you faster), wrapped more tightly (compressing the “jiggly
parts” makes you MUCH faster) and shed water from the plastics and rubber
materials much more effectively, thereby reducing the drag of the suits
remarkably.
Since February 2008, 158 world records have been set by
elite athletes. Their ability to perform has moved from being “maximized” by
their swimsuits, to being “enhanced” by their swimsuits.
This rate of improvement is absolutely
farcical in the historical context of over 100 years of our sport.
At the world championships, new world
records were receiving polite applause akin to the “golf clap” for a good shot,
rather than the historical roars of appreciation that a swimming crowd used to
provide when a human barrier went down, as it infrequently did, by great
athletes at the peak of their power.
How does this translate down to the
local pool?
Pretty simple. The
manufacturers don’t make any money by selling suits to the elite athlete.
They give the suits away to them.
They count on age group swimmers watching
the “big guys” and wanting the same suits and equipment.
And lo and
behold, the same miraculous benefits accrue to 12 year old Sam and Samantha when
they put on the “magic suits” in their local championships.
The time drops are miraculous, the smiles
are, literally, “priceless” and child, mom and dad are all happy.
“Wait a second.
That suit just ripped.
Wow. How
did that happen? How much did it cost?
Wow! You paid $500 for a suit that Sam just put his foot through, rendering it a
$500 broken garbage bag? Uh-oh., well, honey, get him another one.
We can’t have Joe Jones’s son Pete beat him in the 200 free tomorrow.”
Teeth Grit.
“This
is a kids sport? We now have $1000 in
suits so far”.
And of course, all those magic benefits only last 7-15
swims, so good for maybe 2-3 meets, unless it’s a championship and your child
swims 6 events and makes finals in all events, in which case its $500 a meet.
“Let’s see, $500 a meet, we go to
2 meets a month, 10 months of the year....Honey, it’s gonna cost us $10,000 Just
for Samantha’s suits this year!”
Well, the solution is
simple....just wear the suits for the championship meet and wear your regular
suit the rest of the time. OK. Good.
But, Samantha’s 58.5 100 free with
the magic suit on, just became a 1:02 100 free with the old suit on.
Smiles gone.
Gone. From
Samantha, from Mom. From Dad. Oh well.
And of course, there are some other objections as well.
First,
the magic suit deal is like paying for your child to have instant improvement.
Is that what you want your child to learn
from the sport? Or do you want them to
learn to persevere, EARN improvement with hard work, attention to detail, paying
attention to the coach and, shall we say it again...”Working Hard?”
Or do you want them to learn that you can
always “pay your way” with cash to what you want?
“Earn it, or buy it.”
Which do you want to teach?
Answer carefully, parents.
Second, the suit does not
affect everyone the same.
The thin, fit swimmer will benefit marginally by
it. The
overweight swimmer will swim like a young seal in it.
Spending
the same $500 on two children will yield radically different results.
Not
a fair competition at all.
Is
that what anyone wants?
Third, and it seems
unnecessary to say this, but if you just buy 3 suits a year, that’s $1500 or
MORE. (Today, purchasing one of the great
European suits online from the US will cost you $900...with no guarantee of fit,
durability or return-ability, and about 30% of them RIP on the first attempt to
put them on...no refund, folks.) Do we
really want age group and high school swimmers to have to spend that kind of
money to BUY success rather than work for it? It
doesn’t make our sport a middle class sport, it makes it a sport for wealthy
families.
Are you pooh-poohing that? Wait
till your son or daughter gets beat the first time by someone whose mommie or
daddie could afford a more expensive piece of plastic and rubber than you can.
The bitter taste in your mouth is not
fun. Not much in the way of “sport”
there.
So, in answer to the local official who asked, “Why are “they”
[FINA officials] wasting time with worrying about THAT? Don’t they have better
things to do?”
The answer is “NO.”
The suit debacle is the most important
thing that any of us can attend to. It preserves the heart and soul of our
sport....which is reverence and appreciation for the hard work, attention to
detail, courage and teamwork required to be a fine competitive swimmer and to
learn to succeed with those life-skills instead of with your Daddy’s wallet.
The Congress (not the Ruling Bureau) of FINA took the rules into their own
hands after the Bureau had time and again failed to establish the rules
necessary to keep our sport vital, credible and important.
Bravo for them.
All the
Best, John Leonard
jleonard@swimmingcoach.org
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