By Andrew Sheaff

Published: Tuesday, 09 August 2022 at 12:00 am


Many triathletes struggle with their arm pulls in the water. While a back-and-forth S-shaped pulling pattern used to be the model technique, pulling straight back is now considered the best way to swim fast freestyle.

It’s actually a simpler skill, yet many triathletes struggle to make it happen, even if they’re trying to fix it! It seems like that no matter what they try to do, their hands keep sliding back and forth.

Unfortunately, using more focus and more discipline isn’t really going to solve the problem. That’s because it’s not a pulling problem, it’s a balance problem.

When you’re swimming, you’re suspended in a fluid without anything solid to grasp onto. There’s no point of stability. If you can’t find stability in the water, you’re going to do whatever you can find that stability.

That includes using your arms to find stability, even if you want to use them to pull! When your arms are sliding back and forth, they’re acting to keep you stable in the water.

If you want to pull straight and pull effectively, you must learn how to find stability without using your arms.

How to pull straight and effectively though the water

1. Get stable

The first step to straightening out your arm pull is to learn to find stability in the water. There are two components to this skill.

The first is that you must be able to feel your lungs supporting you in the water. Your lungs are your ultimate source of stability, and you need to be able to feel them first. This exercise below is great for feeling this support.