자유형 분석
Freestyle Analysis
주요 게시물
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자유형 분석 게시물
MICHELLE SMITH’S FULL STROKE AT 15m INTO THE CRAWL STROKE LEG OF HER 200m INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY GOLD MEDAL RACE
Each frame is .1 second apart.
Notable Features
Frame #1: The right arm enters when the pulling left arm is widest from the mid-line. The left leg kicks to counter-balance the vertical force component created by the right arm. ...
JANET EVAN’S FULL STROKE AT 625 m OF HER 800 m GOLD MEDAL SWIM AT THE BARCELONA OLYMPIC GAMES 1992
Each frame is .1 second apart. The swimmer breathes at the end of each right arm pull.
Notable Features
Frame #1: This picture illustrates a feature of most top crawl-stroke swimmers. The right arm entry is made at full ...
EVGENYI SADOVYI’S FULL STROKE AT 120 m OF HIS GOLD MEDAL 400 m SWIM AT THE BARCELONA OLYMPIC GAMES 1992
Each frame is 0.1 seconds apart. There is no breath in the cycle illustrated. The quality of the original film was particularly poor.
Notable Features
Frame #1: The right hand has just exited the water. The left arm is ...
COACHING ERROR REVISITED — MICHAEL KLIM’S CRAWL STROKE
Michael Klim once was one of the world's premier crawl-stroke swimmers. In a semi-final at the Sydney Olympic Games, he briefly held the world record for 100m freestyle having recorded a time of 48.18 seconds. As was analyzed and ...
SUSAN O’NEILL AT 35 m OF HER GOLD MEDAL 200m FREESTYLE RACE AT THE 2000 OLYMPIC GAMES IN SYDNEY
This stroke analysis includes a moving sequence in real time, a moving sequence where each frame is displayed for .5 of a second, and still frames.
The following image sequence is in real time. It will play through 10 times and then ...
PIETER VAN DEN HOOGENBOND AT 35m OF HIS 200m GOLD MEDAL RACE AT THE 2000 OLYMPIC GAMES IN SYDNEY
Each frame is .1 second apart. In this race, Pieter van den Hoogenbond equaled the world record he had established in the semi-final with a time of 1:45.35. In claiming the gold medal, he beat Ian Thorpe of Australia. In this first ...