Swim to Run, Run to Swim: If Navy Seals can do it, why not you?

In one of my previous posts, I discussed how adding another sport as an alternative to swimming is beneficial, not only for your health, but also for improving your swimming. To make the point even stronger, listen to what Aaron has to say about the cross-training of running and swimming.

This is a guest post by Aaron O'Connor who runs, writes, and is an amateur fitness trainer in Washington state in USA.

Enter Aaron O'Connor:
Maintaining a healthy lifestyle goes far beyond daily exercise. It is a routine, a culture that demands a balanced diet and psychological stabilization in addition to physical workouts. Unfortunately, many people today overwork and damage their muscles by working out too frequently or by doing a repetitive task at work without taking a break. A well-studied way to prevent this from happening is to alternate your routines, especially when it comes to cardiovascular exercises like swimming and running. In fact, running can actually improve your swimming dramatically.

The best treadmill reviews will tell you that running isn’t something you should take lightly. It requires a proper technique and the proper footwear to get the most out of your exercise. While running is definitely considered a total-body workout, it strengthens leg power above all else and leg power happens to be absolutely essential to a great swimming experience.

Many people believe that swimming demands only a strong upper body, but a person with Schwarzenegger biceps (Note from Swimator Blog: see the Arnie Swim Type) wouldn’t get anywhere in the water if he/she didn’t have a powerful and efficient kick. Swimming requires a successful combination of two actions: pulling and kicking. The pulling action strengthens your chest and back muscles, while your hips, groin and legs provide kinetic, propulsive power in the water. It makes sense, then, that having stronger legs is linked to more efficient swimming.

Some experts consider the coupling of swimming and running to be one of the most effective cross-training exercises for athletes. Both routines are cardiovascular exercises that improve endurance, recovery and core strength. For runners, swimming actually takes pressure off overworked joints, especially those in the knees, while strengthening total muscle mass. For swimmers on the other hand, running adds muscles to the legs while balancing the act of running with a strong upper body workout. Done cyclically, these two exercises completely work almost all of the major muscles in your body.

Runners and swimmers have a very similar body type when it comes to muscles: lean, but with no bulk. In a book called "Swimming Fastest", Ernest W. Maglischo advocates including running exercise in a workout routine in order to improve swimming, arguing that endurance is greatly lengthened by adding running to a workout regimen. He states that running will train circulatory and respiratory systems to "improve cardiac output, stroke volume, tidal volume and pulmonary diffusing capacity." This ultimately improves oxygen delivery during swimming, according to Maglischo. (Note from Swimator Blog: In laymen terms, running makes your heart more efficient and effective at what it does best, pumping blood throughout your body to keep the oxygen supply at a good level).

Maglischo also states that running improves muscle adaptation in the legs with "increased capillarization, better blood shunting and increased size of the mitochondria." All of these improvements generally lead to better circulation, greater, more efficient breathing and have a dramatic impact on the overall experience of swimming.

In general, workouts in the gym that include running improve swim times. Power training increases speed in swimming by building resistance and running improves endurance, which a wide array of observation from professional coaches supports.

The Navy Seal workout routine, which is an acclaimed system for generating top-notch performance in these military professionals, is built upon the principle that strong swimmers are stronger runners. During the first week of this program, trainees are expected to run six miles a week, with 15 minutes of continuous swimming each day. In addition to this activity, trainees are also expected to do sets of push-ups to strengthen their core, as well as pull-ups to generate a balanced upper-body workout. Does it surprise you that during the first week the amount of swimming done overall seems comparable to the amount of running? Navy Seals physical trainers obviously realize the benefits of this cross training.

By the ninth week of the Navy Seals training program, trainees are swimming for 35 continuous minutes every day and running sixteen miles per week. This is an extraordinary amount of physical activity in a span of just seven days, and yet the body is able to endure these rigorous workouts because the prior routines focused on developing all muscle groups. Ultimately it’s hard to ignore the macroscopic benefits that running and land training have on our ability to move in the water. If you’re interested in examining how the running and physical exercises portion out over nine weeks and beyond, you can look through a more detailed layout of the Navy Seals workout regimen.

Likewise, an average person who doesn’t want to be a Navy Seal can take valuable insight away from this acclaimed exercise regimen. Scale these activities down to levels that work for you, there’s no doubt that over time you will recognize how much running improves your swimming and vice versa.

As more people continue to realize the importance of cross-training in running and swimming, more comprehensive information will become available to the public to make informed decisions on what routines are right for them. In general, if you have access to a physical trainer then it’s recommended that you consult them for advice on how to create workouts that are right for your physical build and goals. Always put your safety first.

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