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Posted
Hey everyone. I was just curious if there were people out there who swim to supplement their golf game?

Posted
Yes, I swim 2-3 times a week. Great total body workout if you vary your strokes.
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Posted

Yes, I swim 2-3 times a week. Great total body workout if you vary your strokes.

Do you ever get fatigued in your shoulders?


Posted
Never. 15 years ago I had rotator cuff surgery and the only thing that makes my sholders sore is high weight bench press.
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Posted

I'm a swimmer and have been doing it much longer than golf. Several years back I was very out of shape and swimming along with diet  put me back in to shape.

I think the exercise is great but it doesn't directly contribute to the golf score. I'm not a great golfer (yet) but I figure if I didn't swim I'd be even worse. :cry:

I use old Taylor Made clubs from eBay and golf shops.


Posted
I'm a swimmer and have been doing it much longer than golf. Several years back I was very out of shape and swimming along with diet  put me back in to shape.

I think the exercise is great but it doesn't directly contribute to the golf score. I'm not a great golfer (yet) but I figure if I didn't swim I'd be even worse.


If anything, your preventing injury by strengthening your shoulder muscles (deltoids, trapezius......) and the joint.  Keep swimming it'll help in the long run. :beer:


Posted

If anything, your preventing injury by strengthening your shoulder muscles (deltoids, trapezius......) and the joint.  Keep swimming it'll help in the long run.

Agreed. What about you ATLBraves. How much do you swim?

I use old Taylor Made clubs from eBay and golf shops.


Posted

Agreed. What about you ATLBraves. How much do you swim?


I try to swim at least 5,000 meters a week.  It helps with my shoulder function and back performance.  When I started to get very serious about golf I cut my swimming in half to dedicate more time to the game.


Posted

I try to swim at least 5,000 meters a week.  It helps with my shoulder function and back performance.  When I started to get very serious about golf I cut my swimming in half to dedicate more time to the game.

Me too mainly because I usually can't fit both in - or don't want to - on the same day.

I use old Taylor Made clubs from eBay and golf shops.


Posted

I've been swimming since my early days in my childhood and was on my school swim team and water polo team.  I continue to swim almost every day (5 day/week).

I think it helps me tremendously with my shoulder turn during my golf swing.  It also keeps my back lose and prevents having any problems with my back.

Don

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Posted
Swimming is great for shoulder strength and function. Just remember to stretch after. I love to swim, but the last ten years I have been battling foot cramps. I've tried everything to stop them, quinine, getting very hydrated before the workout, salt, etc. it is very frustrating. Anyone know of anything else for me to try? My doctor is out of ideas. FWIW, I've always had cramping issues even when I'm in fantastic shape. Last winter I ended up just using a float between my legs and just swimming without kicking. My normal freestyle is a two beat kick, so it's not because I over kick.

Scott

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Posted
Swimming is great for shoulder strength and function. Just remember to stretch after. I love to swim, but the last ten years I have been battling foot cramps. I've tried everything to stop them, quinine, getting very hydrated before the workout, salt, etc. it is very frustrating. Anyone know of anything else for me to try? My doctor is out of ideas. FWIW, I've always had cramping issues even when I'm in fantastic shape. Last winter I ended up just using a float between my legs and just swimming without kicking. My normal freestyle is a two beat kick, so it's not because I over kick.

My father has the same issue that your describing here. Have you tried doing some basic foot extensions and flexions with a resistance band? That'll srengthen up the fascia and underlying muscles in your foot region. Also, do you tend to flex your toes and foot muscles during the swim? Try relaxing them a bit and see if that will work


Posted
I swam at a pretty high level until i was 16. Then work got in the way. Perhaps i should start again. Probably been in a pool 20 times in the last 25 years. Before that i was training 8 times a week.

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Posted

Quote:

Originally Posted by boogielicious

Swimming is great for shoulder strength and function. Just remember to stretch after. I love to swim, but the last ten years I have been battling foot cramps. I've tried everything to stop them, quinine, getting very hydrated before the workout, salt, etc. it is very frustrating. Anyone know of anything else for me to try? My doctor is out of ideas. FWIW, I've always had cramping issues even when I'm in fantastic shape.

Last winter I ended up just using a float between my legs and just swimming without kicking. My normal freestyle is a two beat kick, so it's not because I over kick.

My father has the same issue that your describing here. Have you tried doing some basic foot extensions and flexions with a resistance band? That'll srengthen up the fascia and underlying muscles in your foot region. Also, do you tend to flex your toes and foot muscles during the swim? Try relaxing them a bit and see if that will work

Thanks for the suggestion.  I will try those exercises.  My feet are relaxed when I kick and I only do a two beat, which is why the cramps are odd.

Scott

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Posted
Swimming is great for shoulder strength and function. Just remember to stretch after. I love to swim, but the last ten years I have been battling foot cramps. I've tried everything to stop them, quinine, getting very hydrated before the workout, salt, etc. it is very frustrating. Anyone know of anything else for me to try? My doctor is out of ideas. FWIW, I've always had cramping issues even when I'm in fantastic shape.

Last winter I ended up just using a float between my legs and just swimming without kicking. My normal freestyle is a two beat kick, so it's not because I over kick.

I was a competetive swimmer my entire life until i went to college and stopped so i could focus on baseball and used to get calf cramps every darn day.  Sounds lame but Gatorade really helped me prevent the cramps---dont overdo it though or you will weigh yourself down with all of the sugar--for every one sip of gatorade i took i would take 2 sips of water

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Posted
[CONTENTEMBED=/t/83045/swim-workout-and-golf#post_1167713 layout=inline]Quote:[/CONTENTEMBED] [QUOTE name="boogielicious" url="/t/83045/swim-workout-and-golf#post_1167618"] Swimming is great for shoulder strength and function. Just remember to stretch after. I love to swim, but the last ten years I have been battling foot cramps. I've tried everything to stop them, quinine, getting very hydrated before the workout, salt, etc. it is very frustrating. Anyone know of anything else for me to try? My doctor is out of ideas. FWIW, I've always had cramping issues even when I'm in fantastic shape. Last winter I ended up just using a float between my legs and just swimming without kicking. My normal freestyle is a two beat kick, so it's not because I over kick.[/QUOTE] I was a competetive swimmer my entire life until i went to college and stopped so i could focus on baseball and used to get calf cramps every darn day.  Sounds lame but Gatorade really helped me prevent the cramps---dont overdo it though or you will weigh yourself down with all of the sugar--for every one sip of gatorade i took i would take 2 sips of water

Thanks. I've done Gatorade and it helped on occasion. I usually did G2 to reduce the sugar.

Scott

Titleist, Edel, Scotty Cameron Putter, Snell - AimPoint - Evolvr - MirrorVision

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Posted

Swimming is great for shoulder strength and function. Just remember to stretch after. I love to swim, but the last ten years I have been battling foot cramps. I've tried everything to stop them, quinine, getting very hydrated before the workout, salt, etc. it is very frustrating. Anyone know of anything else for me to try? My doctor is out of ideas. FWIW, I've always had cramping issues even when I'm in fantastic shape.

Last winter I ended up just using a float between my legs and just swimming without kicking. My normal freestyle is a two beat kick, so it's not because I over kick.

Often cramping is caused by low level of potassium.  Hence Gatorade helps sometimes.  I would recommend you eat bananas regularly to increase your potassium level.

Don

:titleist: 910 D2, 8.5˚, Adila RIP 60 S-Flex
:titleist: 980F 15˚
:yonex: EZone Blades (3-PW) Dynamic Gold S-200
:vokey:   Vokey wedges, 52˚; 56˚; and 60˚
:scotty_cameron:  2014 Scotty Cameron Select Newport 2

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  • Moderator
Posted

Quote:

Originally Posted by boogielicious

Swimming is great for shoulder strength and function. Just remember to stretch after. I love to swim, but the last ten years I have been battling foot cramps. I've tried everything to stop them, quinine, getting very hydrated before the workout, salt, etc. it is very frustrating. Anyone know of anything else for me to try? My doctor is out of ideas. FWIW, I've always had cramping issues even when I'm in fantastic shape.

Last winter I ended up just using a float between my legs and just swimming without kicking. My normal freestyle is a two beat kick, so it's not because I over kick.

Often cramping is caused by low level of potassium.  Hence Gatorade helps sometimes.  I would recommend you eat bananas regularly to increase your potassium level.

Thanks. I will try that.

Scott

Titleist, Edel, Scotty Cameron Putter, Snell - AimPoint - Evolvr - MirrorVision

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boogielicious - Adjective describing the perfect surf wave

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Note: This thread is 3815 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

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