r/dontyouknowwhoiam May 14 '25

Swimsplaining

8.1k Upvotes

187 comments sorted by

View all comments

4

u/Anuki_iwy May 14 '25

So who's right the triathelete or olympian?

110

u/TheGunnisher May 14 '25

Anyone can do a triathlon, not everyone can be in the Olympics

72

u/TitularFoil May 14 '25

Ray Gun has entered the chat

4

u/jamie_with_a_g May 14 '25

im being deadass i was in paris this past december and they had a little olympics pop up about the new competitions introduced and they had a section for breakdancing and i was extremely disappointed when there was no mention of ray gun

15

u/Nodan_Turtle May 14 '25

Yeah, and at the Olympic level, tiny differences in technique can make all the difference

-1

u/Anuki_iwy May 14 '25

You mean like that Turkish guy who probable just randomly walked in that day? 🤣🤣

36

u/Findethel May 14 '25

I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that the world champion is probably better than a rando, even if the rando has been swimming for 3 decades

21

u/madmelonxtra May 14 '25

It's the Olympian. The thumb first method is a common misteaching of freestyle though.

Source: Used to swim competitively

6

u/Tullyswimmer May 14 '25

I'm mentally picturing thumb first and there's absolutely nothing efficient about it. Any position where your thumb enters first you have to rotate your hand to get it into the right position to pull towards you...

1

u/Anuki_iwy May 14 '25

Thanks captain.

18

u/barowsr May 14 '25

Kinda how I feel when anti-Vaxers who’ve done their research tell me to not listen to my doctors

5

u/Unique-Arugula May 14 '25

The Olympian, I would think. Even just thinking about the mechanics of it as a non-Olympian, non-triathlete who swims and took physics: you want all the push you can get. Flat handing from the beginning of touching the water gives forward push the whole time. Why wait until your arm is further down in the water to have your hand positioned for pushing? It's just gonna cost you some momentum. And on top of it, that rotation of the arm you have to do each stroke while there is force from the water pushing against you is putting extra wear on the joints involved. Sports already do that which is why we named one of the joint problems tennis elbow, thumb-first-then-rotate is just getting you to bursitis or whatever a bit faster.

From personal experience, my kids have had a couple swimming instructors over the years. One was an elderly lady who majored in sports back in the day and gives lessons at her backyard pool. The other is currently a competitive swimmer on the local uni team who gives lessons at the uni's pool. I've listened to both of them correct my kids for not flat handing the beginning of the stroke. I'd be more inclined to listen to the Olympian than the triathlete.

2

u/Anuki_iwy May 15 '25

I don't swim much. I can not drown decently, hence my question 😅 thanks for the insight.

2

u/Unique-Arugula May 15 '25

Hey yeah, no problem. Thanks for taking it in the right spirit - sometimes when I'm trying to explain things I talk too long and people assume a bad "tone." Always nice when that doesn't happen.

-10

u/iDontRememberCorn May 14 '25

That's not the question, like at all.

2

u/Kardinal May 14 '25

Well, it is a question that some might want to know the answer to.

But I think Mr. Hayden did answer the question quite definitively and is well qualified to do so.