SWAT’S STAR TIMES March, 2006
Visit our
Website at www.swatelpaso.com
TEAM
SWAT is a swim team that empowers young people to
excel in life through dedication, discipline, and teamwork while having fun.
Parent Information:
The
following articles were taken from USA Swimming Web Site for your information. If you want to learn more about this or other
topics you can visit their web site at www.usaswimming.org.
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Keep Things Balanced (3/2006)
Some children become so involved in
athletics that they neglect studies, families and social responsibilities. Both
you and your child need to remember that swimming is only part of life.
Sometimes children overemphasize sport because their parents do. Ask
yourself if you’re giving unbalanced attention to your child’s “swimming
career.” If so, slack off and show interest in other areas of your
child’s life. Otherwise you risk giving your child the impression that
swimming is the most important thing in life. If you are overly involved in the
team or overly concerned with the outcome of your child’s races you are not
modeling the balance that your child needs to learn. Other signs that things
are out of balance:
(This
article on nutrition was taken from the
Lesson 4 - Fueling Your
Stroke, Buying and Burning Gas
Six 200’s descending on five minutes. Twenty-five 50’s on
:58. Whatever your “favorite,” every set during
every workout and dryland session requires energy.
Nutrients are the “chemicals” that supply the body with
energy. Carbohydrate, protein and fat supply energy in the form of calories.
These are your “Energy-Yielding Nutrients.” Vitamins, Minerals and Water don’t
supply energy in the form of calories, but their presence is required in order
for the body to access the energy provided by carbohydrate, protein and fat.
During exercise, the body gets its energy primarily from
carbohydrate and fat. It likes to save protein for other things (building and
repairing muscle tissue, hormones and red blood cells, and supporting the
immune system). The only time the body uses protein as an energy source during
exercise is when carbohydrate and fat are not present in sufficient quantities.
This happens when the total caloric intake is too low over a period of months,
and or the bout of exercise is so long that the body’s accessible sources of
carbohydrate and protein become exhausted. Neither of these scenarios is
desirable for swimmers.
Think about money. When you have lots of it, you don’t mind
paying full price for things. But when money is scarce, or there is just too
much you have to buy, you look for bargains. You’re not being cheap, just
thrifty. Simplified to some extent, your body knows how to shop.
Now instead of dollars, think of your currency as oxygen.
When swimming is “easy,” say during warm-up or your easiest sets, there is
plenty of oxygen available to support the exercise. The body perceives itself
as “rich” and doesn’t mind splurging on fat (1 gram of fat costs 9 oxygens). In fact,
it automatically does so because it knows it might need carbohydrate at a later
time.
When exercise is hard (we’re talking tough sets,
definitely your hardest sets), oxygen is not plentiful. In fact, the
body needs every bit it can get to support the exercise, but even that
is often not enough, and the body is forced to derive energy in ways that do
not require oxygen (i.e. anaerobic metabolism). In this situation, the
body perceives itself as very “poor” and becomes very thrifty with its
“purchase” if fuel. Since carbohydrate costs less than fat (1 gram of
carbohydrate costs 4 oxygens), the body chooses to
rely primarily on carbohydrate for its energy.
Keep in mind that this entire fuel burning process is never
a case of “all or none.” In other words, the body is always using some
combination of carbohydrate and fat, but the intensity of the exercise
dictates which fuel source will be the dominant one. When swimmering is easiest, fat is the primary fuel source. When
swimming is toughest, carbohydrate is the primary fuel source. When swimming is
about 50% of maximum effort, carbohydrate and fat contribute about equally.
Let’s face it – the majority of workouts are hard. Above 50% for certain. If you consider the typical swim
workout, it’s pretty safe to say that the primary fuel source for swimmers
IS carbohydrate.
UPCOMING
EVENTS:
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2006 BD EOS ABC & IMX ChallengeSwim Meet, Tigua
Pool (11200
Parent Meeting for the Long Course Season in April.
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Please register online or contact Jose
Alcoreza, dues to be paid by registration deadline on all events.
FROM THE BOARD:
Congratulations to all SWAT swimmers
for an Outsanding Performance at Border Champs SWAT
Received 3rd
Place Overall and also to the following
swimmers that will be going to
Itzel Blancas (100 Fly, 50 Back, 2 Relays),
Tara Lore (200, 100, 50 breast),
Ixchel Torres (50
& 100 back, 50 & 100 breast, & 2 Relays), Idaly
Rios (50 & 100 back, 100 Fly, and 2 Relays), Paola Lauritzen
(50 & 100 Breast, and 2 Relays).
WAY TO GO GIRLS!
GOOD LUCK.
More Information:
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Competitive swimming programs provide many
benefits to young athletes including self‑discipline, good
sportsmanship, and time management skills. Competition allows the swimmer to
experience success and to learn how to treat success and failure as two sides
of the same coin, while becoming healthy and physically fit. As a parent,
your major responsibility is to provide a stable, loving and supportive
environment. This positive environment will encourage your child to continue.
Show your interest by ensuring your child's attendance at practices, by
coming to swimming meets and volunteering for your club at swim meets, or by
participating in fundraising, etc.
Parents
contribute to the success experienced by the child and the team. Parents
serve as role models and their children emulate their attitudes. Be aware of
this and strive to be positive role models. Most importantly, show good
sportsmanship at all times toward coaches, officials, opponents and
teammates. Remember that you are teaching your child at all times. |
More
Information:
Extinguishing
Burnout/10 Steps to Stay a Happy Swimmer
Tips for Parents How can a parent tell if his or her swimmer is
vulnerable to burnout? Any or all of the following signs should tell you
that you need to sit down and talk with your child and his or her coach.
*
Constant tiredness
* Behavior problems
* Not functioning
well in school or at home
* Weight loss
and/or changes in eating habits
* Frequent injuries
* The swimmer's insistence that swimming is a higher priority than family time
or schoolwork
"The most important thing the parent of a swimmer can do is
to tell the child over and over to have fun," says Keith Bell, Ph.D.,
author of The Parent's Guide to the Proper Psychological Care & Feeding of
the Competitive Swimmer (Keel Publications, 2000). "Your role
is to love and accept your child unconditionally, to support him or her in
every way, and to let your child own his swimming.
Swimmers who get those things from their parents won't
burnout."
Burnout/10 Steps to Stay a Happy Swimmer by Martha Capwell Fox Back
and forth, you slog listlessly down the lane. The black line on the
bottom looks endless. Your arms feel like lead, your legs like petrified wood.
Your mind is blank, and your heart is heavy. You're not having fun. Everybody
has a bad day in the pool now and then. Not only is it nothing to worry
about, but a day when every stroke is a struggle can actually help lift your
swimming to the next level –if you push yourself through it. But if every
day is a bad pool day, if you have to drag yourself to practice (or your mom or
dad do), if you just can't get into a workout and your enthusiasm and
excitement have fizzled out, it's time to think about what you're doing, both
in and out of the water. And why. You could be headed
for burnout. But before you're so sick of swimming you feel like quitting, take
these steps: Bed Check –
Americans are stingy with their sleep, and active teens and preteens actually
need more than eight hours a night. Not sleeping enough can wreck both
your progress in the pool and your enthusiasm for swimming. It can be tough to
fit in swimming, school, studying and some fun into a day, but don't trade
sleep time for TV watching, computer games or on-line puttering. Rest Stop--
Overtraining is a major cause of burnout. You've got to give your body time to
recover from workouts, so don't do more pool or dryland
exercise than your coach advises. Take at least one day a week away from the
water altogether, and don't use the time to exercise! Speak Up -- If your coach or the
calendar says it's time to move up to the next level, but you don't think you
can handle it, say so. "I think it's essential that young swimmers feel in
control of what they're doing," says Laura Cox, a coach with the Alamo
Area Aquatic Association in
Social Events (Birthdays) HAPPY BIRTHDAY! Bazar, Kevin (3-04), Lozano, Nora (3-07), Rodriguez, Lynette (3-07), Quiñones, Pamela (3-08), Amaya,
Jose (3-14), Geddes, Patrick (3-19), Mendoza, Szilarda
(3-22), Bazar, Ana (3-24), Espinoza,
Fernando (3-24), Cook, Morgan (3-25).
SWAT Board
of Directors
President: Manuel Quiñones / maquinon3@aol.com
Vice-Pres: Rosalba Bazar / rosalbabazar@sbcglobal.net
Secretary: Angelica Castrejon / acastrejon@elp.rr.com
Treasurer & Officials Chair: Tom Lore / tlore@handgards.com
Fundraising: Laura Nicli / laurapnicli@elp.rr.com
Entries Chair ,
Team Roster, & USS Registration: Jose Alcoreza / alcoreza@att.net
Team Equipment & Border Rep: Kerry Lore / klore@epelectric.com
Safety Chair: Jim Holcomb / jholcomb@utep.edu
Newsletter: Hugo Blancas / hugoblancas@hotmail.com
Events: Armando Licon / ALICON2@elp.rr.com