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Dryland Training for Swimmers: Strength, Power & Injury Prevention

Complete dryland training guide for competitive swimmers. Learn how strength training, plyometrics, and mobility work improve stroke power, start performance, and shoulder health.

PG
PoinT GO Research Team
||12 min read
Dryland Training for Swimmers: Strength, Power & Injury Prevention

Dryland training — any strength, conditioning, or mobility work performed outside of the pool — is an increasingly essential component of competitive swimming programs. Historically, swimming coaches relied on pool volume to develop all fitness components. The modern approach recognizes that swimming is insufficient to develop the maximal strength, explosive power, and structural resilience that separates elite swimmers from the merely fit.

Research over the past 15 years has clearly demonstrated that properly programmed dryland training improves stroke power, start performance, turn velocity, and stroke mechanics — while also dramatically reducing the injury rates that have long plagued competitive swimmers. Shoulder injuries affect 40-80% of competitive swimmers at some point in their careers; effective dryland programming is the most powerful intervention available for prevention. Related: Broad Jump Test: Standing Long Jump Protocol & Norms

Benefits of Dryland Training

Performance Benefits

  • Increased stroke power: Greater pulling strength allows higher force per stroke, increasing distance per stroke
  • Improved starts: Block starts require explosive lower body power — specifically the same triple extension as jumping. Research shows that CMJ height correlates significantly with 15m start performance (r=0.71-0.82).
  • Faster turns: Flip turns and open turns require explosive leg drive off the wall — directly trainable with plyometrics and squat strength
  • Maintained performance with reduced pool volume: Allows coaches to reduce total yards while maintaining performance — critical for managing overuse injury risk

Injury Prevention Benefits

Swimmer's shoulder (subacromial impingement and rotator cuff injury) is the most common swimming injury. Root causes include: rotator cuff weakness relative to the deltoid (muscle imbalance), insufficient posterior chain strength, and inadequate scapular stability. Targeted dryland training addresses all three.

Athlete Development Benefits

Dryland training builds broader athletic capacities — coordination, proprioception, strength — that support long-term development and extend athletic careers. Swimmers who never develop out-of-water athletic abilities have a narrower performance ceiling and higher injury susceptibility over a multi-year career. See also: Countermovement Jump (CMJ): Technique, Measurement & Norms

Strength Training for Swimmers

Priority Movements

Vertical Pull (Lat Pulldown / Chin-Up)

The lat pulldown pattern is the most specific strength movement for freestyle and butterfly propulsion. The lats and teres major are the primary stroke propulsors. Target: 3x6-8 at 75-80% 1RM. Chin-ups are preferred for advanced swimmers as they also develop grip and arm strength.

Horizontal Row

Cable rows, seated rows, and bent-over rows develop the rhomboids, middle traps, and rear deltoids — critical for scapular stability and posterior shoulder balance. The imbalance between overdeveloped internal rotators (from high-volume swimming) and underdeveloped external rotators is the primary driver of shoulder injuries.

Squat / Hip Hinge

Front squats and goblet squats develop the leg power needed for starts and turns. The front squat is particularly useful as it requires upright torso — a position that does not compress the shoulder. Target: 3x5 at 75-80% 1RM.

Pushing Movements (with caution)

Bench press and overhead press should be used conservatively in high-volume training periods. During taper, both are appropriate. Prioritize proper scapular mechanics over load. Learn more: How to Train Explosive Power: Methods, Programming & Science

Load Parameters

  • Strength phase: 75-85% 1RM, 4-6 reps, 4 sets, 2-3 min rest
  • Hypertrophy: 60-75%, 8-12 reps, 3 sets
  • Power: 40-60%, maximal velocity, 3-4 reps, 3-4 sets

Track Jump Power for Start Performance

PoinT GO enables competitive swimmers to monitor CMJ height — which correlates directly with block start performance. Track explosive power development through the training season to optimize dryland programming and predict start time improvements before getting in the water.

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Power Development for Starts & Turns

Block Start Mechanics

The swimming block start involves three phases: reaction, block time (ground contact), and flight/entry. The block time phase (roughly 0.6-0.8 seconds) is where strength and power have the most influence. Greater rate of force development (RFD) allows more impulse to be generated in the fixed time available on the block.

Plyometric Exercises for Starts

  • Squat jumps: Most directly simulate the start position and push mechanics. 4x5 at maximum height intent.
  • CMJ: Develops reactive lower body power. 5x3 maximal effort.
  • Broad jump: Trains horizontal power component of the start. 3x5.
  • Single-leg hops: Develops unilateral power for relay exchanges. 3x5 each.

Turn Power

Flip turns require explosive leg drive off the wall. Training: wall jump sprints (back against wall, explosive leg press away), squat jumps against a wall, and medicine ball wall throws all develop the specific power needed for fast turns.

Resistance Band Training

Resistance band work (both water and land) allows swimmers to train the specific movement patterns of their strokes with added resistance. Particularly useful: standing freestyle pull simulation with bands, rotational pulls mimicking the butterfly pull pattern, and kick resistance work.

Shoulder Health & Injury Prevention

The Swimmer's Shoulder Problem

High-volume swimming (20,000+ meters/week) develops extreme internal rotator strength (subscapularis, pectorals, lats) through the propulsive phases of freestyle, butterfly, and backstroke. The external rotators (infraspinatus, teres minor, posterior deltoid) receive comparatively little direct loading. This imbalance places the rotator cuff at risk as shoulder loads accumulate over a season.

Corrective Exercises (Priority)

  • External rotation with band: 3x15 each arm. Keep elbow at 90°, rotate outward against resistance. This is the single most important preventive exercise for swimmer shoulders.
  • Face pulls: 3x15. Develops rear deltoids and external rotators simultaneously.
  • Y-T-W raises (prone): 3x10 each. Develops lower and middle trapezius — critical for scapular upward rotation during overhead movements.
  • Side-lying external rotation: 3x15. Directly targets infraspinatus and teres minor.

Scapular Stability

  • Scapular push-ups: 3x15
  • Serratus anterior wall slides: 3x10
  • Cable pull-aparts: 3x15

Programming Recommendations

Perform shoulder health work at the beginning of every dryland session — not as an afterthought at the end. Prioritize volume ratios: for every set of pulling exercises, include one set of external rotation work. Never neglect these exercises during high-volume training periods — this is precisely when they are most needed.

Mobility & Flexibility

Ankle Mobility

Ankle plantar flexion range of motion directly affects kick efficiency and streamline position. Assess: sitting with legs extended, can you point your toes beyond 90° (neutral)? Elite swimmers typically have 50-60° of plantar flexion. Daily ankle circles, band-assisted plantar flexion, and kneeling ankle stretches improve this over 6-8 weeks.

Thoracic Spine Mobility

Thoracic rotation and extension are critical for freestyle rotation and butterfly undulation. Restrictions here force the shoulder joint to compensate — a common contributor to shoulder impingement. Include: thoracic foam rolling (2 minutes), quadruped thoracic rotation (10 each), cat-cow (10 reps).

Hip Mobility

Tight hip flexors from sitting limit streamline position and kick depth in freestyle. Include: kneeling hip flexor stretch (2 min each), Thomas stretch, pigeon pose.

Shoulder Mobility

Adequate internal rotation is needed for the recovery phase of freestyle without impingement. Stretch: cross-body shoulder stretch (2 min each), sleeper stretch (2 min each). Be cautious with aggressive shoulder stretching — more is not always better for swimmers who already have hypermobile shoulders.

Sample Dryland Programs

In-Season Program (2x/week, 45 min)

Session A (Lower Body + Core)

  1. CMJ: 3x5 (maximal height) — power
  2. Front squat: 3x6 at 70% — strength
  3. Single-leg RDL: 3x8 each — hamstring/glute
  4. Nordic curl: 3x6 — hamstring eccentric
  5. Plank variations: 3x30 seconds — core stability

Session B (Upper Body + Shoulder Health)

  1. Chin-ups: 4x6 at bodyweight or weighted — lat strength
  2. Cable row: 3x10 — scapular retractors
  3. External rotation with band: 3x15 each — rotator cuff
  4. Face pulls: 3x15 — posterior shoulder
  5. Y-T-W (prone): 2x10 each — lower trap
  6. Push-up or bench press (light): 3x10 — antagonist balance

Off-Season Program (3x/week, 60 min)

Add one additional session focused on power development:

Session C (Power) 이와 관련하여 Swim Start Power Training: Dominate the Block도 함께 읽어보시면 더 많은 도움이 됩니다. 더 자세한 내용은 Swim Start Power Training: Dominate the Block에서 확인할 수 있습니다.

  1. Power clean: 4x3 at 70-80% — whole-body power
  2. Broad jump: 3x5 — horizontal power
  3. Squat jump (30% BW): 4x5 — vertical power
  4. Medicine ball scoop throw: 3x8 — explosive hip extension
  5. Rotational med ball throw: 3x6 each — trunk power

Frequently Asked Questions

QHow much dryland training should competitive swimmers do?

During the in-season, 2 dryland sessions per week of 45-60 minutes maintains and develops strength without compromising pool training adaptations. During the off-season, 3-4 sessions per week allows greater strength and power development. Total dryland volume should complement, not compete with, pool training — communicate between coaching staff to manage total load.

QDoes lifting weights make swimmers slower in the water?

No — this is a common but outdated concern. Research consistently shows that properly programmed strength training improves swimming performance rather than hindering it. The key is timing: avoid heavy lower body strength training within 24 hours of a speed-focused pool session. During taper, reduce dryland volume but maintain frequency.

QWhat is the most important dryland exercise for swimmers?

For performance, chin-ups and lat pulldowns are most specific to freestyle and butterfly propulsion. For injury prevention, external rotation exercises are most critical — they address the primary muscular imbalance (internal vs. external rotation strength) that drives shoulder injuries in swimmers.

QShould age-group swimmers do dryland training?

Yes, with age-appropriate modifications. Ages 10-13: bodyweight movements, mobility work, and basic coordination exercises. Ages 14-16: introduce light resistance training with technique focus. Ages 17+: progressive strength training is appropriate and highly recommended. Shoulder health exercises are important at all ages given the high shoulder loads of competitive swimming.

QHow does dryland training improve swim starts?

Block starts require explosive lower body power during the brief block phase (0.6-0.8 seconds). CMJ height correlates strongly with 15m start performance. Squat training, plyometrics (CMJ, squat jumps), and power cleans develop the rate of force development needed to generate maximum impulse in the limited block contact time. Dryland power training is one of the highest-leverage interventions for improving start times.

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