Research article - (2025)24, 227 - 235 DOI: https://doi.org/10.52082/jssm.2025.227 |
What Is the Best Step Technique for Swimming Relay Starts? |
Santiago Veiga1,![]() |
Key words: Step-start, kinetic, kinematics, performance |
Key Points |
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Participants |
Thirteen male (18.24 ± 3.17 years, 1.90 ± 0.05 m and 85.38 ± 4.53 kg) and seven females (16.89 ± 2.11 years, 1.79 ± 0.04 m and 80.51 ± 3.82 kg) swimmers belonging to the Olympic Training Center in Hamburg (Germany) and with a current average World Aquatics Swimming Points in their personal best times of 742 ± 93 and 700 ± 76 points, respectively, participated in the present study. All swimmers took part in an international-level training program, with a weekly plan of nine water sessions and five land training sessions per week. They were all specialized in 50 m to 200 m events. The unbalanced distribution between males and females was due to the actual composition of the national swimming team. The Local Ethics Committee approved experimental procedures with code 2020-080 and all participants (or their parents in case athletes were under 18 years old) signed a written informed consent before the commencement of the study. The study complied with the recommendations of the Declaration of Helsinki. |
Procedure |
This was an observational and comparative study where participants were divided in two groups according to their preferred (and thus well-trained) relay start technique. Data collection took place in a 50 x 25 m swimming-pool equipped with OSB11 starting blocks and with water temperatures at 27ºC. After performing their usual out-of-water and in-water warm-up routine of approximately 1200 m distance covered, swimmers performed several 25 m sprints front-crawl at 100 m race pace with at least three minutes of passive rest between each. Each 25 m repetition began from a dive start where swimmers adopted their preferred relay start technique and where competition conditions were simulated with an incoming swimmer arriving at the wall. In total, 145 trials were collected corresponding to two different start techniques: i) the short step technique (N = 91; n = 45 females, n = 46 males), where swimmers had an initial position with one foot in the front edge of the block and another foot on the back plate; ii) the long step technique (N = 54; n = 10 females, n = 44 males), where swimmers began with one foot behind and the other foot on the back plate. From these initial positions, swimmers in both techniques performed one step forward with the initial rear foot and a circular backswing with the upper limbs, before beginning the lower-limbs extension for take-off. In the short step technique, the swimmer’s take-off from a parallel foot position, and in the long step techniques they take-off from a track start position (feet separate). A graphical description of each relay start technique is depicted in Force measurements during relay starts were acquired with four biaxial force transducers (ALTHEN, DMS F307-Z3065, Germany, measurement precision provided by the distributor: 0.5%) mounted on an Omega OSB11 starting block and by a custom-made analysis software (Holder Petersberg, Germany) employed to record the force signals at 1000 Hz. Once collected, the horizontal and vertical force signals were filtered with a Butterworth 2nd order filter at 10 Hz. Trials were filmed from a lateral view with one aerial and two underwater video cameras (Sony SNCVB630) operating at 50 Hz and with Full HD. The aerial camera was located at 2.5 m from the starting wall and 1.39 m above the water surface level. The underwater cameras were placed at 5 and 10 m (underwater) from the start wall and one meter below the water surface. The video signals for different cameras were automatically synchronized with a red coloured LED light in the field of view of each camera and the Utilius® Kiwano system (Utilus version: 1.5.2.0) produced by ccc software GmbH. Times to 5 m and 10 m from take-off to the swimmers’ head reaching the reference mark were used to evaluate overall start performances. In addition, an experienced observer manually coded the key events of the swimmer’s preparatory movements on the block, according to previous definitions in Peralvo-Simon et al. |
Statistical analysis |
The kinematic and kinetic start parameters were analysed with linear mixed models (LMM) to account for the multiple starts of the same swimmer. Gender (male or female) and the relay start technique (short step or long step) were defined as fixed effects. Differences in the general start performance between swimmers was controlled by using the personal best 5-m time in an individual start as a covariate. A diagonal structure was used as repeated covariance type (Verbeke and Molenberghs, |
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Relay Step Technique |
The LMM revealed significantly faster 5 m (0.09 s) and 10 m (0.09 s) times ( For the velocity and force parameters ( |
Gender |
Female swimmers obtained 0.11 s longer 5-m-times compared to male swimmers ( For the block velocities, female swimmers showed slower horizontal and vertical velocities than males. Differences in horizontal velocity were detected at the peak horizontal force during the step (-16%, |
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The present study aimed was to determine the best relay start technique for male and female competitive swimmers. The results indicated that the long step outperformed the short step relay start technique in both genders by demonstrating longer preparatory movements on the block, which assisted in the application of higher ground reaction forces and increased take-off velocity. Female swimmers showed a later timing of the key preparatory movements compared to males, and this resulted in slower velocities during the leg step and driving leg phases despite similar peak force application during take-off. Overall performance differences at the 5 m mark between both relay techniques (≈0.09 s) were similar to those reported between step and non-step techniques with Omega OSB11 by Qiu et al. (Qiu et al., The main reasons to explain the performance gap between the short and the long step relay techniques may be based first on block times. Swimmers performing the long step technique spent longer movement time on the block because their initial body position was located at the rear edge of the block ( Although this study revealed several advantages for the long step technique, there are greater challenges to performing this technique compared to the short step technique that swimmers and coaches should be aware of. Indeed, the small space for correct foot placement after stepping on the front edge of the block (Takeda et al., In terms of gender differences, the overall relay start performance of females was lower than that of their male counterparts, consistent with differences observed in free-swimming ability (Seifert et al., Gender differences on the block preparatory movements were especially evident on the long step relay technique. In this technique, female swimmers applied greater values of peak horizontal forces when driving off the block, despite their lower overall start performance. The asymmetrical feet positioning after the leg step (and during lower limbs extension) as well as the changes in the position of the rear leg when pushing off the back plate could reduce the ability to produce force (Takeda and Nomura, |
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Our study shows that the long step relay start technique seems to be superior to the traditional short step technique for competitive swimmers on an OSB11 start block. This advantage seems to be due to longer preparatory movements with the long step relay start technique and a greater center of mass displacement on the block that may allow swimmers to increase their forward velocity during the leg step and to apply higher maximum forces when driving off the block. This resulted in faster take-off velocities and shorter 5-m times compared to the short step technique. Regardless of the used relay start technique, gender gaps in start performance seem to be based on the early part of the block movement, where females showed slower horizontal velocities and lower forces with a later timing of the leg step and upper-limbs swing actions. This pattern resulted in slower overall performances compared to their male counterparts, despite similar relative peak forces applied during lower limbs extension for take-off. Swimmers should take advantage of the possibilities the new starting platform offers to increase horizontal displacement before driving off the block. |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
The authors would like to thank to swimmers who participated in this swimming study. One of the authors (Xiao Qiu) was supported by the China Scholarship Council with a bursary. The experiments comply with the current laws of the country where they were performed. The authors have no conflict of interest to declare. The datasets generated during and/or analyzed during the current study are not publicly available but are available from the corresponding author who organized the study. |
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
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REFERENCES |
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