Catch-up freestyle teaches hand coordination. The swimmer must touch one hand to the other before beginning the next stroke, forcing a deliberate rhythm.

Equipment needed: 1 pool, no kickboard.

Setup: Swimmers line up at one end of the pool.

How to run it:

  1. Swimmer does freestyle, but the trailing hand must “catch up” to the lead hand before starting the next stroke.
  2. This means the arms are fully extended, then the swimmer takes a stroke and the hands meet before the next stroke begins.
  3. Swim one 25-yard length at controlled pace, focusing on rhythm.
  4. Rest at the wall.
  5. Repeat 4 times.

What to look for:

The catch-up forces a disciplined arm extension. If a swimmer is rushing and overlapping their hands, the drill isn’t working. The catch-up should feel smooth and controlled. The kick should be steady underneath, not frantic. If a swimmer is struggling to make the catch-up, they might be accelerating the stroke too much early.

Variation: Add speed. Once the catch-up feels natural, have swimmers try it at a slightly faster pace, maintaining the rhythm.