Analysis of best performances of front crawl swimming: a case study

Authors

  • Antonio Buglione Department of Theoretical and Applied Sciences, eCampus University, Novedrate, Italy
  • Gian Mario Migliaccio Department of Human Sciences and Promotion of the Quality of Life, San Raffaele Roma Open University, Rome, Italy; Maxima Performa, Athlete Physiology, Psychology, and Nutrition Unit, Milano, Italy
  • Fabio De Siati
  • Luca Russo Department of Theoretical and Applied Sciences, eCampus University, Novedrate, Italy
  • Johnny Padulo Department of Biomedical Sciences for Health, Università Degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy
  • Alin Larion Faculty of Physical Education and Sports, Ovidius University of Costanta, Romania
  • Pietro Enrico di Prampero Emeritus Professor of Physiology, University of Udine, Italy

Keywords:

elite swimmers; energy cost; record time; maximal aerobic power; maximal anaerobic capacity.

Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this work was to: 1) measure the energy cost of front crawl swimming at various speeds (range .8 -1.8
m·s-1 in elite and medium level swimmers; in addition, 2) estimate the maximal aerobic power and maximal anaerobic
capacity from the relationship between overall energy spent and individual best times over distances from 50m to 1500m in
one elite athlete. It will also be shown, that 3) the so obtained values are rather close to the actually measured ones.
Methods: Oxygen consumption was measured on 13 medium level and 5 elite swimmers (best time over 100m, 51.50±3.54s),
swimming the front crawl in a 25m indoor pool in the speed range .8-1.8 m·s-1. So, the energy cost of front crawl (Csw) could
be calculated.
Results: In both groups Csw increased with the speed as a second order polynomial. In the elite group it was ≈ 17 to ≈ 34 %
smaller than in medium level swimmers, (P= .005). Knowledge of Csw allowed us to estimate the overall energy expenditure
(Etot) during actual competitions as a function of the corresponding performance time (tr) in one elite swimmer. The results
show that (Etot) increased linearly with tr. For tr ≥ 100s the slope and y intercept of the resulting linear regressions yield
V̇ O2max and maximal anaerobic capacity, respectively. These turned out to be close to the directly determined values.
Conclusions: If the energy cost of swimming as a function of the speed is known, this approach yields reasonable estimates
of the swimmers’ maximal oxygen consumption and maximal anaerobic capacity.

Author Biography

Gian Mario Migliaccio, Department of Human Sciences and Promotion of the Quality of Life, San Raffaele Roma Open University, Rome, Italy; Maxima Performa, Athlete Physiology, Psychology, and Nutrition Unit, Milano, Italy

 

 

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Published

08-04-2025

How to Cite

Buglione, A., Migliaccio, G. M., De Siati, F., Russo, L. ., Padulo, J., Larion, A., & di Prampero, P. E. (2025). Analysis of best performances of front crawl swimming: a case study. Acta Kinesiologica, 19(1), 70–75. Retrieved from https://akinesiologica.com/ojs_3.3.0-7/index.php/akinesiologica/article/view/407

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Section

Original Scientific Article