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6-Week Technique Plan: Underwater Arm Pull (Swimming Coach)

Do you feel like your pull hardly generates any propulsion? Are you not able to grip the water properly and instead pulling past it?

12 min read

6-Week Technique Plan: Underwater Arm Pull (Swimming Coach) is a 6-week swimming plan. This article combines the actual plan description with a example week from the stored workout entries.

PhaseBase · The emphasis is durable base fitness, clean technique, and a rhythm you can repeat for several weeks.
Volume2 h-3 h per week, averaging 2.5 h.
Main stimuluseasy aerobic work across 18 training plan entries.

What this plan is built for

Do you feel like your pull hardly generates any propulsion? Are you not able to grip the water properly and instead pulling past it? This technique plan aims to improve the underwater arm pull so that you can transfer more pressure into the water. This plan is aimed at all performance levels and can be supplemented with other content (after the technique units!). For more plans like this and swimming content, check out deinschimmcoach.de!

Training Zones Heart Rate Zones Duration Example Intensity

Recovery (Recom) > 120 5 – 60 min 200m easy 3 – 4 RPE*

Training logic and load

The emphasis is durable base fitness, clean technique, and a rhythm you can repeat for several weeks. The important part is not upgrading easy days into hidden hard days. The workout data shows which sessions are structured and which ones are intentionally simple.

The plan contains 18 scheduled entries across 6 weeks. The sequence matters as much as the total hours: hard, technical, or long workouts only work when the surrounding days allow you to absorb them.

Example week: Week 3

This week is not a generic template. It is built from the actual training plan entries, and the workout charts use the stored workout data.

Mon2x4x50 total immersion, 3x200 with snorkel
swimming · 5 min

200 m | 100 m | 4x variable on / 0 min easy | 8x variable on / 0 min easy + 5 more steps

Task 200m warm-up swim 100m Individual Medley (Single-arm Butterfly) 4x50m: 25m Wriggen + 25m Arms: Windshield Wipers, 20'' rest 2x4x50m Technical drill + Short fins, 20'' rest 4x50m: 25m Unco Drill + 25m Easy: With short fins (https://yout

TueRest day / active recovery
off

No scheduled workout in this real plan week. Use the day to absorb the load and arrive fresh for the next session.

Wed10x50 Contrast, 2x4x100 Implementation
swimming · 6 min

200 m | 200 m | 10x variable on / 0 min easy | 4x variable on / 0 min easy + 4 more steps

Workout 200m warm-up swim 200m alternating arms/legs 10x50m: 25m technique drill and 25m easy swimming, 20'' rest 1.

ThuRest day / active recovery
off

No scheduled workout in this real plan week. Use the day to absorb the load and arrive fresh for the next session.

Fri6x50 sculling, 9x100 progressive
swimming · 4 min

200 m | 6x variable on / 0 min easy | 6x variable on / 0 min easy | 4x variable on / 0 min easy + 3 more steps

Task 200 meters for warm-up 6x50 meters: 25 meters sculling + 25 meters arms with pull buoy.

SatRest day / active recovery
off

No scheduled workout in this real plan week. Use the day to absorb the load and arrive fresh for the next session.

SunRest day / active recovery
off

No scheduled workout in this real plan week. Use the day to absorb the load and arrive fresh for the next session.

How to read the workout charts

The chart is based on the workout data: longer segments take more width, higher intensities sit higher, and harder work is marked with stronger colors. For swim or distance-based segments, the graphic represents the planned sequence rather than GPS data.

Practical execution

What to watch

  • Execute the key days precisely instead of making the easy sessions faster.
  • Use the plan description as context: equipment, fueling, mobility, and realistic threshold values are part of the training.
  • When life or fatigue adds pressure, trim secondary work first and keep the most important session stable.

Training effect

Executed well, the plan improves your ability to absorb the intended stimulus repeatedly. Depending on sport and phase, that means more aerobic stability, better pace durability, stronger technique under fatigue, or more confidence at target effort.