The
tale of the taper
Send a link to a friend
[July 23, 2016]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - Boxers have the tale
of the tape, Olympic swimmers have the tale of the taper.
Their path to peak performance is a tale of fortitude, stamina,
sheer hard work -- and also body shaving to transform the hairy men
in briefs into smooth-skinned warriors of the pool.
As Michael Phelps, the 18 times Olympic gold medalist preparing to
make another splash in Rio, wrote in his 2008 book 'No Limits':
"When the facial hair goes away, that's how you know I'm getting
serious'.
Tapering is the process, also common to distance athletes, where
weeks and months of hard training are allowed to tail off to give
the body more time to rest before the burst of competition.
With swimmers often entered for multiple distances and disciplines,
no one size fits all and getting it right is no easy task. It is a
time of careful calculations.
"When you taper swimmers, it's like a haircut," says Phelps's coach
and mentor Bob Bowman. "You never know if it's any good until it's
too late."
At the European championships in London in May, some competitors had
been through national trials and were back into hard training while
others were tapered for Olympic qualifiers.
That meant Britain's 200 meters freestyle world champion James Guy,
a medal hope for Rio, raced in the 400m heats with a beard and
beach-style briefs when those around him wore thigh-length suits.
"I used it as a bit of fuel," he said. "I didn't want to jeopardize
three weeks of fitness for this meet. I wanted to train through and
race hard."
Unlike Phelps and the U.S. squad, whose qualifiers ended only in
July, Britain's Olympic trials were in April and their swimmers then
went straight into hard training.
Chris Walker-Hebborn, who will compete in the 100m backstroke in
Rio, set out his schedule.
"Three weeks from the day I'm supposed to race I slowly start
tapering down my meterage," the Briton told Reuters at an event
organized by Adidas.
[to top of second column] |
Michael Phelps of the U.S. is seen underwater as he swims in the
men's 200m butterfly final during the London 2012 Olympic Games at
the Aquatics Centre July 31, 2012. REUTERS/Michael Dalder/File photo
"Let's say I (normally) do 50k a week. Then the first week in would
be 40k, the second week would be 30k and the last week would be just
under 20k.
"The intensity drops down, the volume drops down and it just gives
your body that chance to go through the adaptation of hard training
and to rejuvenate and you are just a lot fresher come race day."
Team mates aiming at longer distances might have a shorter taper
because of the fitness required, but there can also be mini-tapers
and double-tapers.
Finally, there is the shaving -- a clip down with two days to go and
the full works a day before.
"As soon as you hit the water and you've had that first shave down,
it's a completely different feeling. You feel just completely
different in the water," said Walker-Hebborn.
"And then you pair that with the fact that you're fully rested,
you're ready to go, you shave, all those feelings sort of come
together. Suit on, you just sit completely differently in the water.
"It sort of helps remind your brain that this is the time to go,
this is where it starts."
(Editing by Greg Stutchbury)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|