We live in the era of athlete data, and undoubtedly critical advancements in technology have made sports around the world better for everyone. Unfortunately, in swimming, although we have been reasonably good at integrating technologies for racing, we are much slower at adapting to new technologies for training. If no one dares to race without a tech suit, why do we train old school?
The reality is that integrating data in training is more complicated than putting a tech swimsuit on. It takes time, effort and much education to shift from traditional to data-driven training.
Sports technologies like TritonWear measure performance and transform how athletes train, compete and manage their careers. The problem now is not the access to data but quite the contrary; it's the explosion of athlete data and not knowing what to do with them.
This article gives you the blueprint to go from being new in utilizing data to being a pro, enabling you to make data-powered changes in your training.
If you're wondering what FIT or Focused Iterative Training is, it is a simple, repeatable process that helps speed up athlete development, and it includes three easy steps you will go through several times:
Every touchpoint below involves going through a FIT cycle each time, learning and understanding more about the relationship between data, training sets and performance.
To help educate coaches and swimmers to interpret data, we have mapped the journey through the first several Focused Iterative Training (FIT) cycles. They encompass all the steps coaches and swimmers we work with have gone through on the path to data-driven training.
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This first FIT cycle is about getting acquainted with your Triton unit, the app, data and scores. It takes a bit longer than future FIT cycles will, taking anywhere from 4-6 weeks to complete. This is because it's the cycle you will spend the most time in learning mode, understanding the intricacies between data and training.
Adjust: You will start questioning and changing your thought process and planning approach.
'' Try to plan this first FIT phase around a meet. The meet will serve as an excellent opportunity to set benchmarks for your data and help give you a starting point. You will also realize the value of training data, how they relate to racing and where you want to go next. ''
At the beginning of this second round of iterations, you may feel uncertain about what you know and how you plan training sets to target data during practice. Things may not have clicked for you just yet, but they will. It's essential to stay the course and keep at it. Soon you will feel the ball of data yarn in your mind unravelling and find precision and confidence in what you are doing.
As mentioned earlier, the problem now is not getting access to data but what to do with it. Can you change 20 different things at a time during practice? No! Then how and what can you do to narrow it down?
In this third round of iterations, planning with data will feel like second nature. The most significant transformation here is that you will show up to work with purpose. You will train and be mindful of technique, speed, and efficiency, rather than just hitting pace times.
You will shift from abstract to more concrete, grounded conversations around your skills. You will start feeling confident in your ability to make changes and perform in the pool. You'll be aware that everything is measured, so you'll become more accountable for your performance, which is 60% of the battle.
The Triton unit will become part of the daily gear and as mandatory as grabbing your goggles. Wearing the unit for every practice further helps you with load monitoring and data accuracy.
That is the beauty of machine learning; it evolves as you evolve, and the more data it gathers, the more accurate the swimming profile it builds for you. Besides, successful behavioural changes in the water require substantial commitment, time and effort.
To see fundamental changes in your swimming, you'll need to focus on being better every day, not just your best during test sets.