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  • We've taken six of the world's top athletes to find out what it takes to make it true Olympians

  • As we push their bodies to the max

  • When we look at Sprint swimmers what we're looking for is a very high

  • anaerobic capacity an ability to cope with high intensity exercise add on top of that with swimming though swimming is

  • incredibly technical

  • When you're not technically proficient you are uncanonical so it's marrying together the anaerobic capacity

  • The strength and the power with optimal technique

  • At the Olympic Games Rio 2016 19 year-old abbe Weitzel won

  • gold for the USA in the 4 by 100 meter medley relay and a silver in the 4 by 100 meter freestyle relay

  • Swimming the fastest split in her team

  • We've brought Abby to the prestigious st.

  • Mary's University in London a world leading sport science facility which counts Sir Mo Farah

  • four-time Olympic gold medalist among its former students

  • I believe I have an actual talent for swimming that I was born with and I believe that I was meant to swim

  • Just because I have a great feel for the water

  • Abby is one of the most powerful swimmers in the world

  • But our team of scientists are going to take her out of her comfort zone in the pool to truly test the anatomy that lies

  • behind the Olympic medals and record times of one of Team USA's star performers

  • the typical body shape of a sprint swimmer is tall and long because

  • Speed in swimming is about stroke rate times by stroke length combine that with high strength and high power output

  • And that will increase the speed of arm turnover

  • we're analyzing Abby's body composition her relative muscularity and fat percentage as

  • Well is taking a series of measurements across her whole form training and technique are vital ingredients for any Olympic level athlete

  • But having the right Samantha type or physical characteristics is the key foundation to build on from medal success

  • Looking at your height and also your limb length. We can see that you're probably most suited to sprint distance sport

  • I actually have a short torso and very long limbs

  • compared to other swimmers who mostly have longer torsos and

  • Shorter limbs that kind of backs up what we found with our results there

  • It gives you that mechanical advantage in the fall which is reaching for that finish line

  • Extra advantage one interesting factor that we see is when we're measuring the leavers

  • Particularly the arms because what we know is that the long arms?

  • Create long stroke lengths and stroke length is a key determinant of sprint speed performance, and if we look at Abby Abby has got

  • Exceptionally long arms and those long arms allow her to create a long stroke length allow it to create speed

  • As we expect the upper body is crucial to swimming performance because it's the area where the greatest amount of propulsive force is generated

  • So this test will give us a good indication to Abbas upper body power output

  • you have the ball against your chest and you're gonna throw it as explosively as possible and this gives us an idea of your

  • Upper body power so I imagine this would be quite relevant to you as a swimmer

  • Yes, definitely upper body strength especially for the pole and freestyle and any stroke actually so we work on that a lot

  • Okay, well in that case would expect you to

  • Freestyle or the front crawl stroke and swimming puts nearly 50 different muscle groups to work

  • But it's the upper body, which is the real powerhouse?

  • Providing two-thirds of the propulsive energy in every stroke compared to the leg muscles

  • Can be as powerful as you can release their ball and try and get the most distance you can't the seated medicine ball

  • Throw has been one of the standard assessment tests for all new draft ease to the major professional sports leagues in the u.s.

  • Like the NHL this test just like front crawl swim itself pushes the scapular stabilizers

  • Pectorals wrist flexors and triceps the same muscle groups that Abby utilizes in every energy-sapping stroke in the pool

  • They are be last one so keep your back against the seat pad and then just throw it as far as you can

  • That was close to your first one. Yeah, exactly the same, so you mean called your best good work

  • Abbie's performance in the test rivals that of many elite female athletes from basketball and volleyball

  • And her ability to unleash enormous explosive power is a key factor in her swimming success

  • Abby was able to propel the six kilogram mass over four meters

  • Which really does demonstrate the huge power output that she has in her upper body I do believe that my physical

  • skills do come with the upper body that is

  • But I've always been better at

  • The lung function test is a really important test for all athletes

  • But particularly for Sprint swimmers because what it's going to tell us is the size of Abby's lungs

  • now critically the larger the lung the greater the surface area to up to take oxygen and

  • Importantly for a sprint based athlete is to get rid of carbon dioxide

  • In a 100-meter freestyle relay Lake a swimmer against forty percent of their energy needs from the aerobic system almost ten times

  • the amount that attracts printer uses in a four by 100 relay

  • So Farabi a powerful efficient lung function is a vital weapon in her anatomies armories

  • How we keep going keep going keep going keep going empty the lungs as much as you can good same again

  • Good keep going keep going keep going push push push push push push push until you've got Noella good

  • Ok I'll be these are your results from the test you just did and for example your forced vital capacity

  • That's the amount of air that you can expel that is a hundred and thirty percent of

  • Predicted these are indicative of an elite level athlete and some of the highest results. I've recorded

  • Thank you the lung function test results for a B really are exceptional and it's the forced vital capacity

  • That we're taking a look at and that figure is five point seven four liters

  • And that is one hundred and thirty percent of what we expect to see for someone of her size and her gender

  • In other words thirty percent bigger than normal

  • truly massive

  • I

  • Started swimming because of my sister she swam in high school, and so I started swimming I didn't start swimming competitively

  • Until I was about 13, I still say I'm complete rookie in the sport like gaining my experience, but I'm there's so much to learn

  • Rio was an amazing experience?

  • The United States of America I remember walking out for my first race which was the relay on night 1 my first

  • Olympic race was an Olympic final. It was pretty crazy

  • But I didn't let that affect me as much because I wasn't nervous at all which was really weird to me

  • But it was just so surreal

  • You have the crowd the rest our team in the stands

  • And it's just like the vibe that you get when you walk out, and it's just like I'm here like this. It's just awesome

  • The Scot jump test the reaction time test and the counter movement loaded jump test a

  • Critical measures of power output, which is crucial to the start in Sprint swimming?

  • Abi's ability to respond to the starting signal as quickly as possible is

  • Absolutely fundamental to the outcome for Sprint swimmers just like they're on track

  • counterparts the fast twitch fibers of the lower body muscle groups really come into their own in the start sequence and a fast and explosive

  • Getaway can be the difference between an Olympic medal or just missing out

  • So we're trying to assess how explosive you are off the block and also trying to gauge your reaction time

  • So is that something that you know you work on yes, we work on it a lot

  • And I've gotten a lot better at it, so I feel like I'm I'm pretty decent at it. Okay. Well. We'll see how you go

  • To assess a B start speed

  • We are measuring her movement times the gap between the starting beat and the moment resistance is applied to the force plate

  • In sprint swimming the starting sequence also consists of two further phases the flight time or initial entry into the water and the

  • subsequent underwater stroke both these phases demand the generation a huge explosive power

  • By measuring the force a B applies to the specially calibrated

  • floor plate while bearing a loaded weight across our shoulders

  • We can also assess the energy she can transfer from the starting blocks into that vital initial entry into the water

  • The standouts are really the reaction time and in particular the movement time

  • Which is actually faster than any other elite female swimmer ever measured, I mean truly incredible

  • Demonstrating that she can produce power very very rapidly the force velocity

  • Relationship, which is effectively how quickly a B can produce force and tell us that she is incredibly rapid and that?

  • Really tells us why she has got a great sprint start you want to get out in front

  • As fast as possible the hundredths of a second is literally

  • What wins race your reaction time your explosiveness off the block which is what I've worked on my starts gotten so much better

  • There's the entry there's the angle there's everything and the starts super important

  • For someone like Abby who is a sprint swimmer she is an anaerobic

  • athlete nonetheless

  • Aerobic capacity is still important to support that Sprint swimming

  • and it's also very very important in training so that she can enhance her recovery of

  • Multiple sprint set as the Spiro test has already shown us Abbey's lung function is way above the typical female of her age group

  • But the vo2 max remains the ultimate test of an athlete's respiratory system and will take Abby to a level of exhaustion

  • she has never experienced before and

  • We're just gonna hold on to that rate, that's perfect great work. I've been doing really well keep the stroke long

  • Excellent work keep pushing yourself

  • In a 50 meter freestyle swim only 4% of energy needs are met by aerobic processes

  • But in the 100 meter event it is 10 times that figure at over 40%. Let's go now good keep pushing

  • So Abby's relay performance requires her to take in as much oxygen as possible

  • And deliver it to her muscles as quickly and efficiently as she can final 10. Let's go

  • Let's get into the 140s come on push keep going keep going keep going last few strokes keep pushing keep pushing

  • Good good good

  • excellent work brilliant effort

  • Abby's four minutes of maximal effort on the rowing ergometer produced a vo2 peak of 48 milliliters per kilogram per minute

  • Putting her on the same level as an Olympic 100-meter track sprinter, but with one important difference

  • When tae-hee look at Eva's vo2 max test results one thing we do have to take into account is the fact she performed it on

  • A rowing odometer so what we'd expect to see is a higher vo2 max if we measured it in the pool for example

  • Because it's much more specific, but for a sprint based and the aerobic swimmer

  • Aerobic capacity is good which will support her sprint swimming and critically support her in training

  • I believe that endurance you build on land as well

  • Translate into just being a better athlete which translates into moving through the water better and just being comfortable in the water

  • Abby has shown that to be an Olympic gold medal-winning sprint swimmer

  • It's not enough just to have a perfect body shape you need a combination of lightning fast reactions

  • explosive power that can be deployed instantaneously and huge upper-body strength all underpinned with a

  • Determination to push your body to the maximum. Let's go again Abby is one of the best sprint swimmers in the world

  • She is a power based

  • anaerobic athlete and the test results really bear that out if we take a look at

  • Reaction time we take a look at movement time

  • They truly are exceptional higher than we've ever measured in an elite swimmer

  • And it's the combination of these factors, which make a baby one of the fastest sprint swimmers and an Olympic gold medalist

  • I love Therese and I

  • The rush you get during a race at the end of the race and just to see what you can do

  • I love seeing what I'm able to do

We've taken six of the world's top athletes to find out what it takes to make it true Olympians

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