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Encyclopedia > Sidestroke

The sidestroke is a swimming stroke , so named because the swimmer lies on one side. It is helpful as a lifesaving technique and is often used for long-distance swimming. The sidestroke allows the swimmer great endurance. Instead of working both arms and legs simultaneously in the same way, the side stroke uses them simultaneously but differently. A swimmer tired of exercising one side can just turn over and use the other, the change of action helping the limbs recover. This is a List of swimming styles commonly known and swum. ... This article concentrates on human swimming. ...


To begin, the swimmer may lie on the right side, stretching the right arm out as far as possible away from the feet, keeping the fingers of the right hand quite straight and the hand itself held edgewise, so as to cut the water like a shark's fin. The left hand is placed across the chest, its back against the right breast.


The legs make a scissor kick, in which the lower leg does the greater share of the work. Before its impetus is quite expended, the right arm comes round in a broad sweep, until the palm of the right hand almost touches the right thigh. At the same moment, the left hand makes a similar sweep, but is carried backwards as far as it can go. The phrase scissor kick has several meanings. ...


This completes one cycle of the stroke, which is then repeated.


The hands act directly upon the water like oars, and do not waste any power by oblique action. In ordinary swimming on the right side the left arm moves gently in the water, almost at rest. Then, after some time, the swimmer turns on the other side, and the left arm has its chance to work while the right idles.


A modification of swimming on the side is the Trudgen stroke. The side stroke is also called the Indian stroke, because the Indians applied it to their swimming technique. The trudgen is a swimming stroke sometimes known as the racing stroke, or the East Indian stroke. ...

This swimming-related article is a stub. Help Wikipedia by expanding it

  Results from FactBites:
 
Swimming - MSN Encarta (1171 words)
The sidestroke evolved out of the breaststroke technique in the 19th century, primarily because swimmers wanted to swim faster.
However, because the sidestroke generates less force than the other strokes, it turned out to be slower.
The sidestroke’s propulsion comes mainly from the legs in a movement called a scissors kick, because the legs are brought together powerfully like the shears of a pair of scissors.
Scissor kick - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (194 words)
The scissor kick is thus distinguished from the flutter kick used in the front crawl, in which the knees are bent.
The scissor kick is used in the sidestroke.
In some forms of football, notably association football (soccer) and Australian rules football, the scissor kick is a kick for goal where the player kicks the ball toward goal in the opposite direction to where they are facing by lifting their kicking foot to or above head height in the kicking action.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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