What does ASA Swimming stand for?
What does ASA Swimming stand for?
ASA Swimming Assistant (Teaching) Swim England Swimming Assistant (Teaching)
What are good swimming times?
Average time to swim a mile
| Swimming Type | Average Mile Swim Time |
|---|---|
| Mile swim in a pool | 25-27 minutes |
| Mile swim open water | 30,02 minutes |
| Mile swim in the ocean | 33-35 minutes |
| Mile swim breaststroke | 45-50 minutes |
What are the different levels of swimming?
Build on skills from Level 2 and develop strokes through additional guided practice in deeper water.
- Submerge and retrieve objects.
- Treading water using the scissors kick.
- Coordinate the front crawl and back crawl.
- Survival float.
- Flutter, scissor, dolphin and breaststroke kicks on front.
What is a good pace for 100m swim?
Interval Basics In general, average lap swimmers in a 100 m pool comfortably complete a 100 m swim in two minutes. A swimmer who has an easy interval time of two minutes would consider a 100 m time of one minute 30 seconds very good.
What is the fastest 100m swim time?
46.91
Men
| Event | Time | Meet |
|---|---|---|
| 100m freestyle | 46.91 | World Championships |
| 200m freestyle | 1:42.00 | World Championships |
| 400m freestyle | 3:40.07 | World Championships |
| 800m freestyle | 7:32.12 | World Championships |
What is a Level 5 swimmer?
Level 5 – Stroke Refinement – Ages: 9-10+ Swimmers should already be able to: swim freestyle, breaststroke and backstroke 25 yards, scissors kick, whip kick, treading water, and dive.
How many stages is ASA swimming?
The programme centres on three stages: Young Swimmers (Foundation; 12 months to 4 years), Learn to Swim (FUNdamentals; 4 years to 8 years) and Club Swimmers (Aquatic Skills; approx 8 years and older). The programme encompasses the ASA (Amateur Swimming Association) Learn to Swim Pathway.
What is a good stroke rate for swimming?
The top distance pool swimmers will have a stroke rate around 50/min. The top open water swimmers will have a stroke rate of 85-100/min. A higher stroke rate is considered a shoulder-driven (vs hip-driven) swimming technique usually used for shorter distances and quick starts.