Ringing in the New Year!
Transcription
Ringing in the New Year!
WINTER 2014 West Coast Aquatics Ringing in the New Year! What Is Inside: Super Swimmers New Year’s is a time to remember, both our triumphs and missteps, our promises made and broken. The times we opened ourselves up to great adventures or closed ourselves down for fear of getting hurt. Because that's what the New Year is all about -- getting another chance. A chance to forgive, to do better, to do more, to give more, to love more. And stop worrying about what if and start embracing what would be. Senior Bronze Age Group Silver Pre-Competitive Age Group Gold Happy New Year to everyone ! We have so much to celebrate from 2013 and so much to look forward to in 2014. WEST has accomplished so much this past year. We finished a remodel that so many programs are envious of, we worked to together as team to make the transitional time successful. Our swimmers became stronger and swarm further and faster. Our program received recognition from the city of San Jose and the Pacific swimming for our outstanding program. WE has kids qualify for every level include JO’s, Far Westerns, Sectionals and the national level. We graduated an outstanding class of swimmers who are now swimming well in college and making us proud as strong student-athletes. The Senior program had many strong swims at the Husky invitational by, Andrea Morrone, Jeremy Haynes, Jaysiee Haynes, Brandon Nguyen, Christopher Ruiyantoro and Priyanka Signh. Ian Ordes swam well and represented WEST at Junior Nationals this past December in Greensboro, NC. Lessons Pictures After returning from our December meets and our brief holiday break, the seniors got right back to business and hit the holiday training very hard. Both of the Gold groups and Senior Silver joined together to participate in our annual holiday training. During this time we did a lot team building activities as well as tough sets, which are special and only done during this time of year. Some of these sets include 100 x 100’s in celebration of New Year’s and the annual WEST gauntlet. During the beginning of this New Year we have set our New Year’s resolutions for swimming and look forward to seeing what the New Year will bring. Coach Danica PAGE 2 Age Group Silver 2014 has started off with a bang! With one meet already under our belt, Age Group Silver swimmers have already picked up a few more Junior Olympic and Far Western qualifying time standards. A new year has brought new swimmers to our group increasing Age Group Silver's roster to 20! Attendance is at an all time high with great consistency every day of the week. Let's keep this up throughout the year! Competition within the group is also at an all time high. Swimmers are racing everyday in practice and learning to compete at the next level. My goal this year is to harness the competitiveness I am seeing in practice and translate that to the swim meets. We have a great lineup of meets for our spring season including a travel trip to Phoenix, AZ which many of Age Group Silver's swimmers will be attending. Keep up the hard work and let's have an awesome 2014! Go WEST! Coach Ryan Pre-competitive and Lessons This year is the first time West has offered Winter Swim Lessons! We are having a great time working with these small classes! Thanks to our committed West families this has been a mutually beneficial experience. Offering Lessons in the winter has created a feeder for PreComp during this time as well. Since swimmers are continuing to join PreComp, we have been able to continue offering M-F Pre-Comp which we also have not been able to do in the past. We will con- WEST COAST AQUATICS tinue to offer once a week classes for Lessons through April. Please see Coach Kristin if you are interested in joining a class. I wish to congratulate Samuel Phan, Sarang Ambalakaat, Theodore Vo, Allister Lee, Caitlyn Quach and Malavika Romarao who have all very recently moved to Super Swimmers from PreComp. These swimmers all worked very hard to improve their strokes and increase their endurance in order to qualify for the Swim Team. I am so happy to see the newest swimmers enthusiasm for our sport, and commitment to swim in the winter. WINTER PAGE 2014 3 Super Swimmers and Senior Bronze Super Swimmer Swamp Monsters have gotten off to a great start! We started the year with some best times. Congratulations to Dylan H. Nguyen, Jocelyn Nguyen, and Sean Chen for dropping time this past weekend at the Zones D.1 Meet. I am very proud of them. I also want to say congratulations to all the super swimmers who moved up to age group bronze: Andrew Do, Danny Van, Kyle Fang, Vicki Pham, and Vivian Pham. We’re looking forward to the Morgan Hill meet on February 8th & 9th, where a lot of our swimmers are going to be competing in their very first meet! Can’t wait! J The Senior Bronze swimmers have been working hard in and out of the water. Balancing schoolwork and extracurricular activities is never easy, but I’m glad to see them committed to both. Congratulations to Christine Yang for getting her best times in the 100 fly, 50 & 100 free, and 200IM at the CSA meet. And congratulations to all the swimmers who swam at the Zones meet this past weekend. Some of our swimmers got best times! We’re looking forward to the Morgan Hill Meet coming up on February 8th & 9th. I can’t wait to see how our swimmers improve! Also, good luck to all those taking their ACTs and SAT tests this semester! Introducing Coach Lauren - Age Group Gold I was born and raised in South San Jose. I went to Pioneer High School where I swam and played water polo. I attended UC Santa Cruz for college where I got my BA in Global Shakespearean Theater. I swam from the time I was 5 all the way through college for what was once known as San Jose Aquatics and is now called QuickSilver Swimming. After college, I coached for QuickSilver for 6 years, and taught Physical Education at Pioneer High School for 5.5 years. I took one year off from coaching, but am excited to be coming back and joining WEST. Go WEST! Coach Lauren 8 Ways for Making This Your Best Year Yet! Olivier Poirier-Leroy is a former national level swimmer based out of Victoria, BC. In feeding his passion for swimming, he has developed YourSwimBook, a powerful log book and goal setting guide made specifically for swimmers. Join 1,800 of your fellow swimmers and coaches and sign up for the YourSwimBook newsletter (free) and get weekly motivational tips. It’s a New Year, and you know what that means, right? You don’t? Not even you, you person sitting with the glowing screen ten inches from your face? Well, that got awkward. Here’s a hint… A New Year means New Years resolutions, also known as “Forced, Exorbitant and Ridiculous Promises You Make to Yourself Only to Feel Like a Demoralized Bag of Chumpiness When They Don’t Come to Pass.” Yeah, those things. 2. Unsuck at something. Instead of making resolutions, how about we not-so-subtly change the name up to “goals” or “things” or “stuffs.” While I am not going to give you advice about your specific swimming goals, here are some ideas that will help you get towards your swimming “stuffs” faster this year— We all have parts of our swimming that we resist doing because we feel like we aren’t as good at it. Whether it is butterfly, breaststroke kick, streamlining when you are tired, decide to tackle that suckiness with everything you got this year. There are fewer things more rewarding than mastering (or at least significantly improving) something you previously felt inferior at. 1. Warm-up like a boss every day. When you get your core warmed up, and your joints and muscles loosened up there really is no better feeling. One word of caution here, you will feel so amazing when you dive into the water, having been pre-pre-warmed up, that your body will wanna fly. Oh, and warming up tends to lead to less injuries, which is a nice little side bonus. 3. Challenge yourself on the regular. One of the best parts about swimming and sport is the ever-growing change of what we believe ourselves to be capable of. “10×100 on 1:10? No way.” And yet it’s barely two weeks later and you are doing them on 1:05. This growing process gives you the warm and fuzzies (Cont.) 8 Ways for Making This Your Best Year Yet! in your belly, and I am not talking about the warm and fuzzies you get the next day after eating 500 grams of lunch meat at 2:14am in a sleep-hunger stupor. (I know I am not alone on this one… right?) 4. Share your goals, err, ”stuffs” with your coach. performance athletes face to illness when training overtime. It can be challenging with all the commitments athletes have with school, swimming and what little of a social existence they have to properly take care of themselves. Generally swimmers begin cutting corners with things like sleep and diet when stressed or over -trained, putting them in a prime position to get sickie. Stay ahead of the sniffles by clocking in for a solid night of rest each night and fueling yourself properly. Phelps wouldn’t have gotten where he was without Bowman, so don’t feel that you need to keep your goals to yourself. Our goals can be a weighty burden, so unload yourself a little bit and expound on your ambitions for the year with your coach. (Who 6. Break down what it is going is there to, like, help you out to take for you to swim faster with these types of things.) this year. 5. Be proactive about staying What are you specifically going healthy. to have to do to achieve your You’ve probably noticed this be- goal? Writing down “work fore… After a sequence of tough hard” is a step in the right diworkouts you feel a faint tickle rection, but ultimately, what in the back of your throat while does that mean? It’s way too vague and open to endless your nose begins to go for a number of interpretations. little jog. After a solid night of rest, however, you are back to normal, having narrowly dodged Split down your goal into meaningful, actionable chunks. the cold/flu/SARS. “I need to improve my start by If you’re hunch was that you XYZ seconds. Here is what I am were on the breach of getting going to do to accomplish this: sick because you’re training your posterior off, you are cor- Do 10 timed dives at the end of practice on Monday and rect. Megan Fischer-Colbrie wrote a good blog post over at Wednesday, improve my Bridge Athletic, which outlines jumping ability by XYZ, etc.” the increased susceptibility high 7. Be an awesome teammate. I feel the need to point out that being a rad teammate isn’t about being overly peppy and cheery all the time. In fact, you will find forcing that type of attitude will have the opposite desired effect. Make your support authentic, without being overbearing. A simple, “Let’s do this” is more effective than ten minutes of “You can do it, Bob! You can do it, Tiff! Come on guys only nine more sets…” 8. Share your knowledge with the youngsters. No matter where you are at with your swimming, there is someone that looks up to you. Unless you’re a baby. At which point you have other pressing things to deal with. Like drunkenly stumbling around while parents coo at you. What? Anyways. The point is… There will always be kids that look up to you regardless of where you are in the swimming circle-of-life, so use your knowledge and experience and share it! KUDOS TO THE FOLLOWING: Jaysiee Haynes was chosen to attend the 2014 Pacific Swim Distance Training Camp at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs as an athlete and Coach Danica was chosen as a coach. Congrats and best of luck!