Pull Buoy Threshold Set: 8×200m CSS Effort
Session Overview
The pull buoy removes your kick, isolating your upper body and forcing you to develop arm pull power and body position. Combining this with threshold-pace efforts creates a highly focused swim session that builds race-specific endurance while removing the leg fatigue that can compromise technique late in a hard set. Ideal for intermediate triathletes working to improve their CSS pace.
What You’ll Need
- Pull buoy (foam float positioned between upper thighs)
- Swimming paddles (optional — add for extra resistance)
- Swim goggles and cap
- Pace clock or GPS swim watch for tracking CSS pace
Warm-Up (15 minutes)
Swim 600m with pull buoy at easy effort: 200m easy freestyle, 200m alternating 25m catch-up drill and 25m normal stroke, 200m building from easy to moderate. Rest 30 seconds, then complete 4×50m at CSS pace with 20 seconds rest as activation efforts before the main set.
Main Set
Complete 8×200m with pull buoy at CSS pace (your Critical Swim Speed). Take 30 seconds rest between each rep. CSS is approximately your threshold swim pace — it should feel hard but sustainable for all 8 reps. If you haven’t calculated your CSS, target RPE 7–8 out of 10.
- Reps 1–2: settle into CSS pace, focus on a long catch and powerful pull-through
- Reps 3–4: maintain pace, count strokes per length and try to keep it consistent
- Reps 5–6: this is where it gets hard — breathe every 3 strokes and stay smooth
- Reps 7–8: final effort, hold pace without panic breathing or dropping stroke rate
- Rest: exactly 30 seconds between each rep (use the pace clock)
Cool-Down (10 minutes)
Remove the pull buoy and swim 400m easy freestyle with normal kick, focusing on relaxed breathing and smooth rotation. Finish with 2×50m backstroke to stretch out your chest and shoulders after the demanding pulling work.
Coaching Notes
- If your CSS is unknown, perform a 400m time trial and a 200m time trial (with full recovery between); CSS pace = (400m time minus 200m time) expressed per 100m.
- Adding paddles increases resistance on your arms — use them for reps 1–4 only if your shoulders are healthy; remove for reps 5–8 if fatigued.
- Make it easier: reduce to 6×200m or extend rest to 45 seconds.
- Make it harder: add swim paddles for all 8 reps, or reduce rest to 20 seconds.
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Training at your own risk. The information provided is for general guidance only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Please consult a doctor before starting any new exercise programme, especially if you have any pre-existing health conditions.
