Recovery - the pause drill
Posted: March 25th, 2006, 11:28 am
I have posted comments about the recovery on a couple of different threads recently. It is a subject that is often ignored by those who are new to rowing/erging. Then I remembered the pause drill. I don't see any use for it on the erg, unless you have a flexible seat installed, but it is a very valuable technique for improving OTW performance. The stroke starts and ends with your legs and arms straight and your back vertical - the middle of the recovery. At the command "row," you bend at the hips and use your legs to bring the slide to the stops. The drive follows and the stroke is completed at the point where your arms have straightened and your hands are past your knees - i.e. back to the starting point. Then you pause for some specified time before you take the next stroke. If it is a coxed boat, the cox calls “row” for the next stroke. I don't know how it is done in an uncoxed crew, but in a single it is your own choice.
The pause drill can really exaggerate any flaws in technique, especially poor balance, but, if it is well executed, it is a great feeling to have the boat gliding steadily with the beveled oars all evenly spaced, just clear of the water. In a single, a really well balanced sculler could hold the pause indefinitely. For most of us ordinary folks, it is a good way to try to improve our techniques.
I see one possible value to doing this on an erg – at least for a few strokes. It emphasizes the sequence of movements of the recovery, breaking it down into getting your hands away and then following with back swing and bringing up the slide. With a tippy seat, it would also help to develop better balance.
Bob S.
The pause drill can really exaggerate any flaws in technique, especially poor balance, but, if it is well executed, it is a great feeling to have the boat gliding steadily with the beveled oars all evenly spaced, just clear of the water. In a single, a really well balanced sculler could hold the pause indefinitely. For most of us ordinary folks, it is a good way to try to improve our techniques.
I see one possible value to doing this on an erg – at least for a few strokes. It emphasizes the sequence of movements of the recovery, breaking it down into getting your hands away and then following with back swing and bringing up the slide. With a tippy seat, it would also help to develop better balance.
Bob S.