Swimming for Surfers: The Real Secret Sauce

Swimming is the quiet engine behind calm paddle-outs, clean positioning, and confident hold-downs. Train it right, and every surf session feels lighter and longer.


Why It Matters


Core Skills That Transfer to the Board

1) Front-Quadrant Timing

Keep one arm extended until the other starts its catch — smooth overlap, no dead spots. On the board, it feels like constant drive instead of pausing with both arms by your sides.

2) Two-Beat Kick

One light kick per arm catch. It’s for rhythm and balance, not power. Quiet ankles, short range, steady timing.

3) Streamline and Balance

Stay long and level: head neutral, hips high. On a surfboard, lift the sternum slightly to keep the board planing instead of plowing.

4) Relaxed Power and Early Catch (EVF)

Enter clean, set the forearm vertical early, and press water straight back. Keep the shoulders loose; let your body rotation connect the core to the pull.

5) Effort Control (RPE Management)

Cruise around RPE 3–5. Spike briefly to 7–8 when sprinting for waves, then downshift fast with long exhales and smooth strokes.


Simple Drills You Can Use Anywhere


Training Tips for Surfers


Metrics That Actually Help

Useful

Contextual

Misleading


Perspectives Worth Exploring

Both are useful — keep whatever keeps your HR low and stroke clean.


Translation to Surfing


Next Steps