Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

SWIMMING SPEED

WHAT WEISSMULLER SAYS “ Sure, we take our sports too seriously,’’ said Johnny Weissmuller, onco the greatest of ail amateur swimmers, now being paid large sums of money to prove that Darwin was right, by leaping from limb to limb in tho Hollywood jungles as “ Tarzan.” “ Personally, I do not believe in what people call ‘ serious training,’ meaning by that giving up nil the mild pleasures of life and working yourself up to a high nervous tension, where every race is a matter of life or death. “ 1 think Maxey Rosenbloom, the boxer, has the right idea—get in good condition and then live the way you’re accustomed to living. The thing that makes you a champion is your technique, not your condition. My idea of the way to keep in shape was to swim regularly—not for my, wind, but for form. In other words, I practised—l didn’t train. “ I know what I’m talking about, too. I found it out when we were on those Olympic-Games trip, and we were supposed to stop doing' whatever it was we had been doing all our lives, and get to bed at certain hours and obey training rules that were designed for people who, certainly were not swimmers. “ Success in swimming—and I’ll hot it is true of a lot of other sports—lies in complete relaxation. 1 found out that when I went to bed at 9 o’clock 1 got nervous and all tied up. and 1 never did as well in Olympic competition as I did at other times when 1 was just Johnny Weissmuller and acting natural.” GLAD JAPANESE WON. Weissmuller took a certain delight in the triumphs of the Japanese swimmers at tho 1932 Olympic Games. And for a iiinny reason. “ You know,” he said, “ 1 got sick and tired of having people look at me after 1 had broken records, and then say 1 Well, it’s no wonder he wins all the races and holds all the records—look at that physique.’ “'lhey never gave old Bill Bachrach any credit for teaching me anything, and they never gave me any credit for finding out anything myself—-I was just a champion because I had a big chest and long arms. “ Now, I hated to see Americans get licked, and didn’t like to see my own records go by the board, but when a lot of little, short-legged, and shortarmed fellows like those Japanese boys came along and won everything it gave mo a chance to have the last laugh on the people who said that I won because 1 had a certain kind of physique.” Weissmuller believes the Japanese swimmers were victorious because they were exceptionally well trained. Tireir complete relaxation and knowledge ol exactly what they were doing was responsible for their success rather than any peculiarity of stroke or new discovery. “ I heard a lot about their new ‘ leg drive ’ and other stuff, but I am here to tell you that swimming is done with the arms—and don’t lot anybody tell you different. Kicking gives a rhythm, and the better arm stroke a swimmer has the higher his feet come in the water and the more power he seems to have in lus legs—but that is just appearance. His legs look good because his arms are good,” Johnny says the eight-beat crawl and tho foot flutter aro figments of the imagination largely and a delusion and a snare anyhow.

“ The old six-beat crawl is all anybody can uso with any success, and, as a matter of fact, don’t forget that Arne Borg, of Sweden, tho greatest distance swimmer of them all. only used a fourbeat crawl. Tho arms do the work and the feet get the credit.” Weissmuller says that although he swims comparatively little, and doesn’t “ train ” at all, in the sense that athletic coaches use the word, ho went out and swam a 100yds time trial in 53seo recently—and attributes it solely to tho use of correct swimming form. “ Mv advice is not to take athletics seriously,” ho said. “ Learn your stuff and practice it to improve your technique—but if you have to quit Jiving a normal life in order to be good—it isn’t worth it.”

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19331016.2.133

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 21543, 16 October 1933, Page 13

Word Count
698

SWIMMING SPEED Evening Star, Issue 21543, 16 October 1933, Page 13

SWIMMING SPEED Evening Star, Issue 21543, 16 October 1933, Page 13