By Wayne Goldsmith
THREE KEY CONCEPTS:
Writing the workout is only step one—coaching the choice is everything
Swimmers must take ownership of their training standards, not just complete distances
Excellence is chosen moment by moment, stroke by stroke
Here's the brutal truth: your training program doesn't make swimmers fast. How swimmers choose to execute your training program makes them fast.
You can write the most brilliant workout in the world—perfect intervals, ideal progressions, scientifically designed sets. But if swimmers approach it with a "just get through it" mentality, you're wasting everyone's time.
The magic happens when swimmers shift from completing workouts to owning workouts.
Every stroke presents a choice. Execute with precision or settle for sloppy. Maintain technique under fatigue or let it fall apart. Stay mentally engaged or drift into autopilot.
Champions understand this. They don't just swim 20 x 100 freestyle—they choose to swim 20 x 100 with perfect streamlines, controlled breathing, and unwavering focus on their catch.
As coaches, our job isn't finished when we write the session on the whiteboard. That's when our real work begins—teaching swimmers to think critically about how they approach each set.
Ask better questions: "How are you going to attack this set?" "What's your technical focus?" "What does success look like beyond just making the time?"
Triathletes, this applies to you too. Your pool sessions aren't just about fitness—they're about developing the mental discipline to maintain form when your body wants to quit.
Stop measuring success by meters completed. Start measuring success by standards maintained.
When swimmers take ownership of their training quality, everything changes. They become partners in their development, not passive recipients of your program.
SUMMARY:
Transform swimmers from lap counters into standard setters. Coach the choice, not just the workout. When athletes own their training quality, they unlock their true potential.
THREE PRACTICAL EXERCISES:
Choice Check-In: Before each set, ask swimmers to verbally commit to one specific standard they'll maintain (technique, effort, focus)
Quality Scale: After tough sets, have swimmers rate their execution quality 1-10—build awareness of their performance standards
Ownership Questions: Replace "Did you make the time?" with "How did you choose to execute that set?" Shift focus from completion to execution
VIDEOS RECORDED AT BEAUTIFUL EVANS HEAD AQUATIC CENTRE, NSW, AUSTRALIA with the kind courtesy of RICHMOND VALLEY AQUATICS.
https://richmondvalleyaquatics.com.au/
Copyright Wayne Goldsmith - All rights reserved.