Testing Yourself in a 33m or 33yrd Pool Option A
Swimming, October 24, 2024
This session is a great tool to determine your current level of fitness and use it as a benchmark for the planning of future training sessions if you are using a 33⅓ yard or metre pool. I use a variation of it every four to six weeks with my athletes.
For swimmers who are after a workout between 1,000 & 2,000 metres.
These sessions will determine a T-Time (Target-Time) that you can then utilise in future training sessions to manage intensity.
I've written these sessions for a 33⅓ metre pool, but a lot of the older style pools are 33⅓ yards long (100 feet), simply interchange the metres for yards and do the session.

- 400m Warm Up;
- 4x 67m (33m Drill/33m Swim);
- 4x 33m Pick Up 10sec RI;
- 400m Time Trial (TT);
- 10min rest including easy swimming of at least 133m;
- 200m TT;
- 200m Cool Down (1,733m)
Start the workout with a warm-up covering of 400m. During the warm-up feel free to stop and stretch as needed. It doesn't need to be a continuous swim.
Next up is a drill set of eight repetitions of 67m Drill/Swim, where you do a drill for the first 33m of the repetition and then normal swimming for the next 33m swimming. Feel free to use fins whilst doing the drill/swim set. Do the drills below once:
I wrote an article about swimming drills previously. Click here to read and watch it.
http://www.coachray.nz/2016/12/15/coach-rays-top-3-swimming-drills-get-swimming-smooth/
After the set of drills take the fins off.
Next up is a Pick-Up set. This set simply means that you pick up the pace as you swim through each repetition. Start each rep nice and slow for a few strokes, then swim a few strokes at a moderate pace, then a few at a fast pace, a few faster, then getting faster still, finishing the rep at a maximum sprint as you lunge for the wall. Complete four reps of 33m. After each repetition have a Rest Interval (RI) of 10 seconds.
Regardless of which option you are doing, the next set is a 400m Time Trial. Swim as fast as you can completing the distance at a nice steady pace. Record your time.
Over the next ten minutes swim a minimum of 100m. Do this at a very gentle pace as its purpose is to keep the arms moving to clear lactic acid out of them.
The final set is a 200m Time Trial. As per the 400m Time Trial, swim as fast as you can at a nice consistent pace, recording your time.
Complete the workout with a 200m Cool Down. Feel free to pause and stretch when needed and/or include stretching as part of each break until the distance is covered.
The concept of T-Time has been developed by a number of authors with a number of different names utilised (the most popular would be Swim Smooth's CSS or Critical Swim Speed). There are various versions of the test (i.e. 1,000m TT, swimming 200m & 100m TTs, 3x 300m or 3x 100m) that all approximate the same thing. My preferred method is the 400m & 200m TT.
The results are critical to ensure that they are recorded correctly and accurately. Make sure you have a stopwatch of some description that you can easily operate in the water whilst swimming or have someone poolside record your times for you.
To determine your T-Time, subtract your 200m time from your 400m time and divide by 2.
T-Time = (400m Time - 200m Time ) / 2
Here is a real-time example:
T-Time = (7:19 - 3:31) / 2
= (3:48) / 2
= 1:54
If you would like further advice feel free to contact me.
I am the Head Coach & Director of Qwik Kiwi Coaching.
I specialise in assisting first-timers and recreational athletes to achieve their sporting goals. I can be contacted at coachray@coachray.nz and 021 348 729.
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Originally Published: https://www.coachray.nz/2019/02/02/saturday-swim-session-testing-yourself-in-a-33m-or-33yrd-pool/