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Butterfly Stroke

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Butterfly stroke



 
 
The butterfly, (fly for short) is a swimming stroke
List of swimming styles

A style is known as a stroke or "crawl". "Stroke" can also refer to a single completion of the sequence of body movements repeated while swimming in the given style....
 swum on the breast, with both arms moving simultaneously. The butterfly kick was developed separately, and is also known as the "dolphin kick". While other styles like the breaststroke
Breaststroke

The breaststroke is a swimming style in which the swimmer is on their chest and the torso does not rotate. It is the most popular recreational style due to its stability and the ability to keep the head out of the water a large portion of the time....
, front crawl
Front crawl

The front crawl, or forward crawl, is a swimming style usually regarded as the fastest of all the styles developed. It is one of two long axis strokes, the other being the backstroke....
, or backstroke
Backstroke

The backstroke, also sometimes called the back crawl, is one of the four swimming styles regulated by FINA, and the only regulated style swum on the back....
 can be swum easily even by beginners, the butterfly requires very good technique to be feasible. Many students consider it the most difficult style of swimming.






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The butterfly, (fly for short) is a swimming stroke
List of swimming styles

A style is known as a stroke or "crawl". "Stroke" can also refer to a single completion of the sequence of body movements repeated while swimming in the given style....
 swum on the breast, with both arms moving simultaneously. The butterfly kick was developed separately, and is also known as the "dolphin kick". While other styles like the breaststroke
Breaststroke

The breaststroke is a swimming style in which the swimmer is on their chest and the torso does not rotate. It is the most popular recreational style due to its stability and the ability to keep the head out of the water a large portion of the time....
, front crawl
Front crawl

The front crawl, or forward crawl, is a swimming style usually regarded as the fastest of all the styles developed. It is one of two long axis strokes, the other being the backstroke....
, or backstroke
Backstroke

The backstroke, also sometimes called the back crawl, is one of the four swimming styles regulated by FINA, and the only regulated style swum on the back....
 can be swum easily even by beginners, the butterfly requires very good technique to be feasible. Many students consider it the most difficult style of swimming. It is the newest swimming
Swimming

Swimming is the movement by humans or animals through water, usually without artificial assistance. Swimming is an activity that can be both useful and recreational....
 style swum in competition, first swum in 1933.

Speed and ergonomics

Butterfly Swim Side
The butterfly is the fastest style regulated by FINA
Fina

Fina may refer to:*Fina, a software system for financial analysis*Skies_of_Arcadia#Main_player_characters, a character in the Skies of Arcadia video game...
. The peak speed of the butterfly is even faster than that of the front crawl
Front crawl

The front crawl, or forward crawl, is a swimming style usually regarded as the fastest of all the styles developed. It is one of two long axis strokes, the other being the backstroke....
, due to the synchronous pull/push with both arms. Yet since speed drops significantly during the recovery phase, it is overall slightly slower than the front crawl. Butterfly swimmers have a top speed of , slightly under freestyle at , over backstroke at , and well over breaststroke at .(Taken from wikipedia's swimming world record page )

The breaststroke, backstroke, and front crawl can all be swum easily even if the swimmer's technique is flawed. The butterfly, however, is unforgiving of mistakes in style; it is very difficult to overcome a poor butterfly technique with brute strength. Most people consider it the most difficult swimming style. The main difficulties for students are the synchronous over-water recovery, especially when combined with breathing, since both arms, the head, and parts of the shoulder have to be fully lifted out of the water for these tasks. Once technique has been developed and the swimmer is good at the stroke, it is quite efficient and quick and actually requires less energy than racing breaststroke (For example).

History

In 1933 Henry Myers swam a butterfly stroke in competition at the Brooklyn Central YMCA in late 1933. The butterfly style evolved from the breaststroke. David Armbruster, swimming 'coach' at the University of Iowa
University of Iowa

The University of Iowa is a public university research university located in Iowa City, Iowa, United States. The university is organized into eleven colleges granting undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees....
, researched the breaststroke, especially considering the problem of drag due to the underwater recovery. In 1934 Armbruster allegedly refined a method to bring the arms forward over the water in a breaststroke. He called this "new" style "butterfly". While the butterfly was difficult, it brought a great improvement in speed. One year later, in 1935, Jack Sieg
Jack Sieg

Jack Sieg was an United States swimmer who developed the Butterfly stroke. He graduated from the University of Iowa....
, a swimmer also from the University of Iowa
University of Iowa

The University of Iowa is a public university research university located in Iowa City, Iowa, United States. The university is organized into eleven colleges granting undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees....
, developed a kick technique involving swimming on his side and beating his legs in unison, similar to a fish tail, and then modified the technique afterward to swim it face down. He called this style Dolphin fishtail kick. Armbruster and Sieg quickly found that combining these techniques created a very fast swimming style consisting of butterfly arms with two dolphin kicks per cycle. Richard Rhodes, (p422 hc Making of the Atomic Bomb) claims that Volney Wilson invented the 'Dolphin' after studying fish, and used it to win the 1938 US Olympic Trials, earning him a disqualification. The provenance of the Butterfly stroke is, however, contested by 'Cambridge school' Historians of the art of swimming [see below].

There are other claimants to the title of 'inventor' of the butterfly stroke, however. Jack Stephens (involved in project Ultra
Ultra

Ultra was the name used by the United Kingdom for intelligence resulting from decryption of encrypted Nazi Germany radio communications in World War II....
 at Bletchley Park
Bletchley Park

Bletchley Park, also known as Station X, is an estate located in the town of Bletchley, in Buckinghamshire. Since 1967, Bletchley has been part of Milton Keynes, England....
 during WWII), claimed to have invented the stroke almost 30 years before David Armbruster. Circa. 1907, at a public swimming bath in Belfast, 'Butterfly' Jack Stephens claimed to have perfected the rudiments of a stroke later to become known as 'butterfly'. Dr Philip Mcallister, of the Johns Hopkins and Cambridge Centre of Sporting Development Research, points to a swimming race conducted, in 1911, at the 'Holocokey' River in Belfast. Witness testimony reports of a "new stroke, something between that of a fish and a dolphin" which some contestants, in their bid for speed, reportedly adopted. However, the Irish Board of Swimming Ethics ruled that such a stroke was "ungodly", and excoriated the incidents from public records - thus explaining its only recent surfacing as a result of sustained archival enquiry. This stroke is used chiefly in racing and is adapted from the standard breast stroke. The swimmer's arms are lifted out of the water and extended, palms down, ahead of the body. The arms are then pulled vigorously, straight down under the body to the hips. The leg movement is the fishtail, or dolphin, kick which consists of an up and down movement of the feet with the legs held…

Currently, the entire style is referred to as butterfly, but sometimes still also called dolphin, especially when referring to the dolphin kick.

This new style was considerably faster than a regular breaststroke. Using this technique Sieg swam 100 yards in 1:00.2. However the dolphin fishtail kick violated the rules of the FINA and was not allowed. Therefore, the butterfly arms with a breaststroke kick were used by a few swimmers in the 1936 Summer Olympics
1936 Summer Olympics

The 1936 Summer Olympics, officially known as the Games of the XI Olympiad, an international multi-sport event which was held in 1936 in Berlin, Nazi Germany....
 in Berlin
Berlin

Berlin is the Capital of Germany city and one of sixteen States of Germany of Germany. With a population of 3.4 million within its city limits, Berlin is the country's largest city....
 for the breaststroke competitions. In 1938, almost every breaststroke swimmer was using this butterfly style, yet this stroke was considered a variant of the breaststroke until 1952, when it was accepted as a separate style with a set of rules by the FINA
Fina

Fina may refer to:*Fina, a software system for financial analysis*Skies_of_Arcadia#Main_player_characters, a character in the Skies of Arcadia video game...
. The 1956 Summer Olympics
Swimming at the 1956 Summer Olympics

At the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne, 13 swimming events were contested, seven for men and six for women....
 were the first Olympic games where the butterfly was swum as a separate competition, 100 m (women) and 200 m (men).

Technique

The butterfly technique with the dolphin kick consists of synchronous arm movement with a synchronous leg kick. Good technique is crucial to swim this style effectively. The wave-like body movement is also very significant, as this is the key to easy synchronous over-water recovery and breathing.

In the initial position, the swimmer lies on the breast, the arms are stretched to the front, and the legs are extended to the back.

Arm movement

The butterfly stroke has two major parts, the pull, the push, and the recovery. These can also be further subdivided. From the initial position, the arm movement starts very similarly to the breast stroke. At the beginning the hands sink a little bit down with the palms facing outwards and slightly down at shoulder width, then the hands move out to create a Y. This is called catching the water. The pull movement follows a semicircle with the elbow higher than the hand and the hand pointing towards the center of the body and downward. Do not form the traditionally taught "keyhole" when using this stroke, as it disrupts the flow and speed of the stroke. The arms should be pushed straight back after the Y is formed.

The push pushes the palm backward through the water underneath the body at the beginning and at the side of the body at the end of the push. The swimmer only pushes the arms 1/3 of the way to the hips, making it easier to enter into the recover and making the recovery shorter and making the breathing window shorter. The movement increases speed throughout the pull/push phase until the hand is the fastest at the end of the push. This step is called the release and is crucial for the recovery. The speed at the end of the push is used to help with the recovery.

The recovery swings the arms sideways across the water surface to the front, with the elbows straight. The arms should be swung forward from the end of the underwater movement, the extension of the tricep in combination with the butterfly kick will allow the arm to be brought forwards relaxed yet quickly. In contrast to the front crawl
Front crawl

The front crawl, or forward crawl, is a swimming style usually regarded as the fastest of all the styles developed. It is one of two long axis strokes, the other being the backstroke....
 recovery, this arm recovery is a ballistic shot. The only other way of lifting the arms and the shoulders out of the water is by dropping one's hip. Therefore the recovery, at least the acceleration of the arms, is in no way relaxed. It is important not to enter the water too early, because this would generate extra resistance as the arms moved forward in the water against the swimming direction, however, during longer distances, this cannot be avoided, and it should be noted that it is more important to avoid dropping one's hips. A high elbow recovery, as in front crawl, would be disadvantageous because of the natural undulations that are partially caused by the recovery and the relaxed movement caused by the momentum of a tricep extension. Limitations of the shoulder movement in the human body make such a motion unlikely. Hands should enter into the water again at 11 and one with thumbs entering first and pinky last.

The arms enter the water with the thumbs first at shoulder width. A wider entry loses movement in the next pull phase, and a smaller entry, where the hands touch, wastes energy. The cycle repeats with the pull phase. However, some people prefer to touch in front, because it helps them catch water, as long as they can do this efficiently, they are not losing anything. The underwater part is actually more like a keyhole than it isn't, contrary to what was said in the 1st paragraph.

Generally, viewed from below, the arm movement forms a fat "keyhole" figure during the stroke cycle in the water. However, more recently, a straighter arm pull has been favoured in competitive swimming.

Leg movement

The leg movement is similar to the leg movement in the front crawl
Front crawl

The front crawl, or forward crawl, is a swimming style usually regarded as the fastest of all the styles developed. It is one of two long axis strokes, the other being the backstroke....
, except the legs are synchronized with each other, and it uses a wholly different set of muscles. The shoulders are brought above the surface by a strong up and medium down kick, and back below the surface by a strong down and medium up kick. A smooth undulation fuses the motion together.

The feet are pressed together to avoid loss of water-pressure. The feet are naturally pointing downwards, giving downwards thrust, moving up the feet and pressing down the head.

There is no actual stipulation in competitive butterfly rules that a swimmer make a fixed number of pulses in butterfly–the swimmer may kick as little or as much as he or she may wish. While competitive rules allow such a choice, the typical method of swimming butterfly is with two kicks.

As butterfly originated as a variant on breaststroke, it would be performed with a breaststroke or whip kick by some swimmers. While breaststroke was separated from butterfly in 1953, the breaststroke kick in butterfly was not officially outlawed until 2001. However a number of Masters swimmers were upset with the change since they came from a time when butterfly was usually swum with a breaststroke kick. FINA was then convinced to allow a breaststroke kick in Masters swimming. Given the option, most swimmers choose to use a dolphin kicking action, but there still is a small minority of swimmers who prefer the breaststroke kick, for recreational swimming and even for competition.

Breathing

There is only a short window for breathing in the butterfly. If this window is missed, swimming becomes very difficult. Optimally, a butterfly swimmer synchronizes the taking of breaths with the undulation of the body to simplify the breathing process; doing this well requires some attention to butterfly stroke technique. The breathing process begins during the underwater "press" portion of the stroke. As the hands and forearms move underneath the chest, the body will naturally rise toward the surface of the water. With a minimum of effort, the swimmer can lift the head to break the surface fully. The swimmer breathes in through the mouth. The head goes back in the water after the arms come out of the water as they are swinging forward over the surface of the water. If the head stays out too long, the recovery is hindered. The swimmer breathes out through mouth and nose till the next breath. Some swimmers breathe to the side as in the front crawl, but their timing is otherwise the same.

Normally, a breath is taken every other stroke. This can be sustained over long distances. Often, breathing every stroke slows the swimmer down. (At a certain level, the stroke with a breath and the stroke without a breath become synonymous in their speed; therefore, very experienced competitors - such as Michael Phelps
Michael Phelps

Michael Fred Phelps is an United States swimming. He has won 14 career Olympic Games gold medals, the most by any Olympian. As of 2008, Phelps holds seven List of world records in swimming....
 - may breathe every stroke.) Other intervals of breathing practiced by elite swimmers include the "two up, one down" approach in which the swimmer breathes for two successive strokes and then keeps their head in the water on the next stroke, which is easier on the lungs. Swimmers with good lung capacity might also breathe every 3rd stroke during sprints for the finish. Some swimmers can even hold their breaths for an entire race (assuming that it is a short one).

Body movement


Swimming butterfly is difficult if the core is not utilized, and correct timing and body movement makes swimming the butterfly much easier. The body moves in a wave-like fashion, controlled by the core, and as the chest is pressed down, the hips go up, and the posterior breaks the water surface and transfers into a fluid kick. During the push phase the chest goes up and the hips are at their lowest position. In this style, the second pulse in the cycle is stronger than the first pulse, as the second pulse is more in flow with the body movement.

Although butterfly is very compatible with diving, the resulting reduction in wave drag does not lead to an overall reduction of drag. In the modern style of the Butterfly stroke
Butterfly stroke

The butterfly, is a List of swimming styles swum on the breast, with both arms moving simultaneously. The butterfly kick was developed separately, and is also known as the "dolphin kick"....
 one does only little vertical movement of the body.

Start


Butterfly uses the regular start for swimming. After the start a sliding phase follows under water, followed by dolphin kicks swim under water. Swimming under water reduces the drag from breaking the surface and is very economical. Rules allow for 15 m of underwater swimming, before the head must break the surface, and regular swimming begins.

Turn and finish

During turns and during the finish, both hands must simultaneously touch the wall while the swimmer remains swimming face down. The swimmer touches the wall with both hands while bending the elbows slightly. The bent elbows allow the swimmer to push himself or herself away from the wall and turn sideways. One hand leaves the wall to be moved to the front underwater. At the same time the legs are pulled closer and moved underneath of the body towards the wall. The second hand leaves the wall to be moved to the front over water. It is commonly referred to as an "over/under turn" or an "open turn." The legs touch the wall and the hands are at the front. The swimmer sinks under water and lays on the breast, or nearly so. Then the swimmer pushes off the wall, keeping a streamline position with the hands to the front. Similar to the start, the swimmer is allowed to swim 15m underwater before the head must break the surface. Most swimmers dolphin kick after an initial gliding phase.

The finish requires the swimmer to touch the wall with both hands at the same time, in the same horizontal plane.

Competitions


There are three common distances swum in competitive butterfly swimming, both over either a long course (50 m) or a short course (25 m pool). Of course, other distances are also swum on occasions. For example, most NCAA competitions are swum in a 25 yard pool.

  • 50 m Butterfly
  • 100 m Butterfly
  • 200 m Butterfly


The butterfly is also part of the Medley
Medley swimming

Medley is a combination of four different swimming styles into one race. This race is either swum by one swimmer as Individual Medley or by four swimmers as a Medley Relay....
 over the following distances: (Butterfly is the 3rd stroke swum in a medley and the first stroke swum in an individual medley)

  • 100 m Medley (short course 25 m pool only)
  • 200 m Medley
  • 400 m Medley
  • 4×50 m Medley
  • 4×100 m Medley
  • 4×200 m Medley


These are the official FINA rules. They apply to swimmers during official swimming competitions.

  • From the beginning of the first arm stroke after the start and each turn, the body shall be kept on the breast. Under water kicking on the side is allowed. It is not permitted to roll onto the back at any time.
  • Both arms shall be brought forward together over the water and brought backward simultaneously throughout the race, except after the start and at turns
  • All up and down movements of the legs must be simultaneous. The position of the legs or the feet need not be on the same level, but they shall not alternate in relation to each other. A breaststroke kicking movement is not permitted.
  • At each turn and at the finish of the race, the touch shall be made with both hands simultaneously, at, above or below the water surface.
  • At the start and at turns, a swimmer is permitted one or more leg kicks and one arm pull under the water, which must bring him to the surface. It shall be permissible for a swimmer to be completely submerged for a distance of not more than 15 meters after the start and after each turn. By that point, the head must have broken the surface. The swimmer must remain on the surface until the next turn or finish.
  • Only the meter distances are included in the official Olympics.
  • Must do open wall turn.


Notable butterfly strokers

  • Michael Phelps
    Michael Phelps

    Michael Fred Phelps is an United States swimming. He has won 14 career Olympic Games gold medals, the most by any Olympian. As of 2008, Phelps holds seven List of world records in swimming....
      (current world record holder 200m Butterfly)
  • Moss Burmester
    Moss Burmester

    Moss James Burmester is a New Zealand swimming. His specialist event is the 200m butterfly in which he holds the Commonwealth record of 1:54.35 set at the 2008 Summer Olympics....
     
  • Ian Crocker
    Ian Crocker

    Ian Crocker is an American Swimming who won gold medals in 2000 Summer Olympics, 2004 Summer Olympics and 2008 Summer Olympics as a member of the national team in the 4x100 medley relay....
      (current world record holder 100m Butterfly)
  • Inge de Bruijn
    Inge de Bruijn

    Inge de Bruijn is a former Netherlands swimmer, and a four-time Olympic Games champion....
      (current world record holder 100m Butterfly)
  • Inge Dekker
    Inge Dekker

    Inge Dekker is a butterfly and freestyle swimming swimmer from the Netherlands, who won the bronze medal with the Dutch Women's 4x100m Freestyle Relay Team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece....
     
  • Franck Esposito
    Franck Esposito

    Franck Esposito is a former swimmer from France, who won the bronze medal in the 200 metres butterfly at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona....
     
  • Lars Frölander
    Lars Frölander

    Lars Fr?lander is a Sweden swimmer from the village of Orn?s in Borl?nge. He competed in 5 consecutive Olympic Games . The highlight of his career was when he won the gold on the Swimming at the 2000 Summer Olympics#100 m Butterfly event at the Sydney Olympic Games in 2000....
     
  • Michael Gross
    Michael Gross (swimmer)

    Michael Gro? is a former swimming from Germany. A 202 cm athlete, he received the nickname "The Albatross" due to his especially long arms which gave him a total span of 2.13 m....
     
  • Otylia Jedrzejczak
    Otylia Jedrzejczak

    Otylia Jedrzejczak is a Polish swimming. She is the Olympic champion from 2004 Summer Olympics in the 200 metre butterfly stroke. She finished 4th in this event in the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing....
     
  • Michael Klim
    Michael Klim

    Michael Klim Medal of the Order of Australia is a Poland-born Australian swimmer. He was born in Gdynia....
     
  • Andrew Lauterstein
    Andrew Lauterstein

    Andrew Lauterstein is an Australia swimmer.Lauterstein grew up in Black Rock, Victoria and attended Brighton Grammar School. He has an elder brother and a younger sister....
     
  • Thomas Malchow
  • Mary T. Meagher
    Mary T. Meagher

    Mary Terstegge Meagher Plant is a former swimming from the United States. Meagher, originally from Kentucky, began competing at an early age, setting her first world record in the butterfly stroke at the age of 14 in 1979 at the Pan American Games....
     
  • Pablo Morales
    Pablo Morales

    Pablo Morales was an Swimming at the Summer Olympics for the United States. He won a relay gold and two silver medals swimming Butterfly stroke at the 1984 Summer Olympics and set the world record in the 100 m Butterfly at the Olympic Trials that year as well as setting relay records with teammates Rick Carey, Steve Lundquist, and Rowdy Gain...
     
  • Yuko Nakanishi
    Yuko Nakanishi

    is a Japanese people Butterfly stroke swimmer....
     
  • Susie O'Neill
  • Jessicah Schipper
    Jessicah Schipper

    Jessicah Lee Schipper Order of Australia is an Australian swimming. She trains at the Redcliffe Leagues Lawnton club in Brisbane, under veteran coach Ken Wood....
     
  • Mark Spitz
    Mark Spitz

    Mark Andrew Spitz is a retired American swimmer, best known for winning Swimming at the 1972 Summer Olympics at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games, an achievement surpassed only when Michael Phelps won his eighth gold medal of the 2008 Summer Olympics....
     
  • Petria Thomas
    Petria Thomas

    Petria Ann Thomas Order of Australia is an Australian swimmer and Summer Olympics gold medallist and a winner of 15 national titles. She was born in Lismore, New South Wales, New South Wales and grew up in the nearby town of Mullumbimby....
     
  • Jenny Thompson
    Jenny Thompson

    Dr. Jennifer Beth Thompson is a former competitive swimmer, and one of the most decorated Olympic Games in history, winning twelve medals, including eight gold medals, while representing the United States of America in the 1992 Summer Olympics, 1996 Summer Olympics, 2000 Summer Olympics, and 2004 Summer Olympics....
     
  • Libby Trickett
  • Milorad Cavic
    Milorad Cavic

    Milorad Cavic is a Serbian swimmer. A citizen of both the United States and Serbia, he attended Tustin High School in California, where he set four CIF records and a national high school mark in the 50 freestyle....
     
  • Roland Schoeman
  • Kaio Marcio de Almeida
    Kaio de Almeida

    Kaio M?rcio Ferreira Costa de Almeida is a Brazilian swimmer, who specializes in Butterfly stroke. He is also known as: Kaio M?rcio, Kaio M?rcio de Almedia, Kaio Almedia, or Kaio de Almedia....
     
  • Misty Hyman
    Misty Hyman

    Misty Hyman is an United States swimmer who won the gold medal in the 200m butterfly at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. Hyman was only expected to contend for silver on that night , as Australian Susie O'Neill was expected to repeat her title....
     


See also

  • World records in swimming
    World records in swimming

    Below is a list of current swimming world records as ratified by the international governing body International Swimming Federation. ...


External links

  • : Detailed discussion of swimming techniques and speeds
  • : Federation Internationale de Natation
  • : BBC Sport Academy
  • : Timed Finals