The aims of the present study were to assess critical velocity using the swimmer curriculum in front crawl events and to compare critical velocity to the velocity corresponding to a 4 mmol·l-1 of blood lactate concentration and to the velocity of a 30 min test in young swimmers. The main finding of this work was that the CV using 100, 200 and 400 m was not different from V4 and that the CV including all the swimmer freestyle events was not different from Vt30. Moreover, CV50/100/200 and CV50to1500 presented a positive relationship with V4. The critical velocity was at first thought to correspond to a sustainable intensity and has been compared to parameters such as the maximal lactate steady state (the highest intensity that can be maintained without any drift in the blood lactate concentration) and the onset of blood lactate accumulation (intensity corresponding to a 4 mmol·l-1 of blood lactate concentration during an incremental test) (Dekerle et al., 2006). However, swimmers can hardly maintain CV for longer than 30-40 min (Dekerle et al., 2006) and CV has been shown to be close to Vt30 (Colantonio and Kiss, 2007; Dekerle et al., 2002; Fernandes and Vilas-Boas, 1999) and higher than maximal lactate steady state and V4 (Dekerle et al., 2005; Denadai et al., 2000; Martin and Whyte, 2001; Rodriguez et al., 2003; Wakayoshi et al., 1992; 1993). All these data must be interpreted with care, since it does not seem possible that swimmers could sustain this intensity indefinitely. However, the studies cited above which argue that CV does not represent a steady state threshold were based on wrong assumptions, omitting the premise of always including a long distance in the CV assessment (Fernandes and Vilas-Boas, 1999; Wright and Smith, 1994). In fact, Fernandes and Vilas-Boas, 1999 and Toubekis et al., 2006 reported CV values lower than V4 and Greco et al., 2007 reported that CV was significantly higher than Vt30 in males and females. The present study showed CV values based on 50, 100 and 200 m higher than V4 and Vt30 and CV values based on 100, 200 and 400 m higher than Vt30 and similar to V4. Moreover, CV based on all the events presented similar values of Vt30 and lower values than V4. Thus, it seems important to note that the value of CV is dependent on the exhaustion times used to plot the relationship (Dekerle et al., 2006; di Prampero et al., 1999; Fernandes et al., 2008; Toubekis et al., 2006), considering the influence of energy cost in swimming. This phenomenon is noted in our study as well. It seems logical that critical velocity would decrease when including more long-distance events. When including the 1500 m the CV would decrease since the aerobic component is very high while at the 50 m this component is very low (Gastin, 2001). Further, Wright and Smith, 1994 established the fact that a long swimming distance, of approximately 15 min duration, should be included as one of the distances used to compute CV, in order to avoid overestimation of this parameter. Therefore, the suggestion of Wakayoshi et al., 1993 and Dekerle et al., 2002 to use the distances of 200 and 400 m to assess CV should be treated with caution. Additionally, according to the specialized literature (Jacobs, 1986; Stegmann et al., 1981; Urhausen et al., 1993), the V4 does not represent the individualized lactate threshold in trained swimmers, since those values are usually lower than 3 mmol·l-1. However, the velocity corresponding to 3.5 mmol·l-1 of blood lactate concentration could better be used in trained swimmers (Heck et al., 1985). Thus, the problem did not seem to be the low values of Vt30 (well related with the CV obtained with all competition distances) but the fact that both V4 and critical velocity assessments not including a long distance could overestimate the anaerobic threshold. In an attempt to make the determination of CV quick and easy for coaches, the suggestion to base this assessment on only two performances seems pertinent (Wakayoshi et al., 1993; Fernandes and Vilas-Boas, 1999; Dekerle et al., 2002). However, including only two performances to determine CV would decrease its level of reliability, although the use of a long distance would help in correcting for this (Fernandes and Vilas-Boas, 1999; Wright and Smith, 1994). We were able to note that including more distance-time events would decrease the estimation error of critical velocity. Indeed, it was found an error of only 0.73% in the CV50to1500 whereas CV50/100/200 and CV100/200/400 presented an error of 2.60% and 2.00%, respectively. This situation has to be considered when using the distance-time relationship to predict the performance or monitoring effects of periods of training. This point of view reinforces the main concern of the present study. An alternative approach to the assessment of CV based on experimental tests is to use the swimmer curriculum to determine CV. Using this methodology one can assess CV based on all the performances that are available for a given swimmer. It seems that CV50to1500 is a good approach to determine Vt30, which has been shown to be close to CV obtained using experimental tests during training sessions (Dekerle et al., 2002). This tendency was already confirmed using competition times by Fernandes and Vilas-Boas, 1999. CV50/100/200 and CV100/200/400 presented significantly higher values than CV50to1500. Therefore, these values must be used carefully when designing training sets (Wright and Smith, 1994. Although CV100/200/400 was not different from V4, CV100/200/400 was not related to this velocity. Furthermore, we observed that there was no relationship between CV50/100/200, CV100/200/400 and CV50to1500. Once again one must take into account that the inclusion of different distance-time events could produce very diverse CV results. The CV was found to vary according to different distances. For instance, the change of 50 to 400 m (CV50/100/200 vs. CV100/200/400) was sufficient to produce different values of critical velocity. The CV has been shown in swimming to be a good indicator of the capacity of the aerobic energy system (Toussaint et al., 1998). Greco and Denadai, 2005 and Toubekis et al., 2005 confirmed this finding in young swimmers. CV is lower than the end velocity of an incremental test, traditionally associated to maximal aerobic velocity and it is highly related to V4 (Wakayoshi et al., 1992; 1993) and maximal lactate steady state (Dekerle et al., 2005). Altimari et al., 2007 suggested that anaerobic threshold velocity obtained from fixed lactate blood concentration of 3.5 mmol·l-1, as well as the critical velocity obtained through larger distances seems to be the most reliable indices of prediction of the aerobic performance in the adolescent swimmers. In the present study we found that CV50/100/200 was related to V4, presenting a positive relationship between each parameter (r = 0.73). The same relationship occurred between CV50to1500 and V4 (r = 0. 72), indicating that the swimmers with higher CV50to1500 presented higher V4 values. This assumption could be important in designing training sets in swimming teams, where the individuals are usually divided into training groups of similar level. However, should personal best times be used to design training sets, some concerns must be emphasized. The first is related to the selection of the events to be analyzed and the second is related to the chosen technique. Freestyle may comprise events from 50 to 1500 m but the other strokes are limited to 50, 100 and 200 m. events. It would be interesting therefore to conduct this study assessing CV in relation to different stroke techniques, rather than only in front crawl. The third concern is related to the data available for each swimmer because sometimes swimmers do not compete in all the events. On the other hand, some of the performances must be updated, which should be considered during the assessment of CV. In the present study the mean time gap between events personal records was 5.0 ± 1.2 months. In further investigations, it would be interesting to relate this time gap and critical velocity. However, in this study we analyzed only young swimmers and usually their personal best times correspond to the most recent official times. Thus, future analysis should extend the scope of this study to adult swimmers to test for significant similarities or differences. Moreover, it seems pertinent to compare CV for given distances obtained in competition and training contexts. |