10x200m Build Sets: Progressive Intensity Pool Swim Session

Session Overview

This 10x200m build set uses progressive intensity to develop race-pace endurance in the pool. Each 200m rep is faster than the last, training your body to hold quality swimming as fatigue accumulates — exactly the challenge you face in triathlon swim legs. Suited to intermediate swimmers preparing for Olympic or 70.3 distance events.

What You’ll Need

  • 25m or 50m pool
  • Swim watch or pace clock
  • Goggles and swim cap
  • Pull buoy (optional for warm-up variation)

Warm-Up (10 minutes)

400m easy continuous swimming at a relaxed pace — focus on long strokes and good rotation rather than speed. Follow with 4x50m build, each 50m starting easy and finishing at a strong effort. 15 seconds rest between each 50m. This gradually elevates your heart rate and primes your stroke mechanics before the main set.

Main Set

10x200m on descending time — start easy and get progressively faster through the set. Group the 10 reps into three blocks of increasing intensity:

  • Reps 1-3: Easy to moderate effort (RPE 5-6). Aim for 10-15 seconds slower than your CSS (Critical Swim Speed) pace. 20 seconds rest after each rep.
  • Reps 4-7: Moderate to threshold effort (RPE 7). Hold CSS pace or just above. 20 seconds rest after each rep.
  • Reps 8-10: Strong effort (RPE 8-9). Push 3-5 seconds per 100m faster than CSS. 30 seconds rest after reps 8 and 9, no extra rest after rep 10.

Total main set distance: 2,000m

Cool-Down (8 minutes)

300m very easy, alternating 50m freestyle with 50m backstroke. Focus on long, unhurried strokes and letting your heart rate drop naturally. Finish with 2x50m slow catch-up drill to reinforce stroke extension.

Coaching Notes

  • Record your split for each 200m — the data is valuable. If you can’t get faster through the set, you started too hard. Adjust the opening pace in future sessions accordingly.
  • The final three reps should feel genuinely challenging. If rep 10 feels comfortable, your CSS pace estimate needs revising upward.
  • To make this easier: extend rest to 30 seconds throughout and aim for a smaller intensity spread across the set.
  • To make it harder: cut rest to 15 seconds on reps 1-7 and add a short sprint (50m all-out) after rep 10.

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.