How I Train: Ivan Puskovitch

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Excellent article and valuable food for thought.

Peter Johnston 09 Mai, 2024

Great article. The comment about legs are an oxygen drain is spot on. As a former power lifter (focused on legs) now triathlete, I find that I get very winded when I continuously kick hard.

Christopher King 08 Mai, 2024

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Ivan is an American open water swimmer who will be competing in the men’s 10 km at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games. He is the fifth American male in history to qualify for the Olympics in open water swimming. 

After I finished, I probably went about 10 minutes without knowing if I had made it or not. And frankly, in those 10 minutes, I didn't care because I was so proud of the prep work and being there with my coach and the effort and execution I had given. 

We finally got the news,I was like, oh, my God, it actually happened. It was this massive emotional release, you know, I gave my coach this absolutely insane hug. I just broke down. It just was just such an emotionally turbulent moment with just pride, happiness, and  gratitude.  

That was a really special moment. There's a picture of it and a video of it–I'm going to carry those with me the rest of my life.  

I did not want to walk away from Doha regretting that I didn't give like one more percent because I was hurting or, or I didn't take a risk during the race that I think could have panned out in hindsight.

I was preparing for Doha just as much mentally as I was physically. It's two hours–it's a long race. It's a lot of time to think, it's chaotic, and you have a lot of competitors around you.  

I really do believe that your biggest enemy in distance swimming is yourself. It's a lot of time to really keep yourself in a positive headspace. There’s a lot of time to really dwell on things not hurting or not going according to plan, rather than adjusting on the fly, controlling the controllables and making do with the situation. 

So, it’s not, I have to swim 10 kilometers for two hours against 78 people. I'm present. It's one stroke at a time, one meter at a time. I'm racing one person at a time next to me. 

I'm a huge puller. When you're doing long distance swimming, it's much more upper body dominant rather than lower body dominant. I call the legs “oxygen drains.” They're just such massive muscles that if you're using them a lot, you're going to just blow so much oxygen and that’s the most vital resource. 

The pull buoy is great because it really limits any leg movement. It forces you to focus on keeping your shoulders engaged and gets you used to feeling your hips maintained at the top of the surface of the water without having to keep your legs engaged.  

We'll move it down in the legs. I'll even put the buoy down on my ankles and that is very challenging because not only do you need to have a lot of lower body endurance to hold it together and not let it slip out, but it creates this canoe-like body position if you let your hips sink. So, it's a great way to practice overcompensating for high buoyancy at the shoulders and the feet, but low buoyancy at the hips and it just lets you gather some really good core strength. 

Core strength is the name of the game.When you get tired, your legs start sinking. Good core strength means you are really well equipped to keep your hips up when it’s time to race in open water.

Happy swimmers are fast swimmers. When you're in love with the sport, you're going to thrive. That's been the case for a lot of my peers, a lot of my friends, and that's been the case for me. 

( 2 ) Comments

Excellent article and valuable food for thought.

Peter Johnston

Great article. The comment about legs are an oxygen drain is spot on. As a former power lifter (focused on legs) now triathlete, I find that I get very winded when I continuously kick hard.

Christopher King

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