Swim Band and Paddles Power Set: 45-Minute Upper Body Strength Circuit

Session Overview

This session alternates between swim bands (resistance) and paddles plus pull buoy (amplification) to develop upper body power and a stronger catch. Contrasting restriction and enhancement within the same session builds proprioceptive awareness that transfers directly to faster, more efficient pool and open water swimming.

What You’ll Need

  • Swim resistance band (ankle band — the loop that ties your ankles together)
  • Swim paddles (sized to your hand — not the largest available)
  • Pull buoy
  • 25m or 50m pool

Warm-Up (8 minutes)

400m easy freestyle focusing on breathing rhythm and relaxed stroke. Include 4 × 25m catch-up drills to reinforce high-elbow technique before the power work begins.

Main Set

Alternate between band-only sets (no kick, restricted legs) and paddles + pull buoy sets. Rest 15–20 seconds between each 100m. Total main set: 1,600m.

  • 4 × 100m with swim band only (no kick, no paddles) — focus on catch power, 20 seconds rest
  • 4 × 100m with paddles + pull buoy — drive the water back aggressively through the full pull phase, 15 seconds rest
  • 4 × 100m alternating: 50m with band only / 50m with paddles + buoy — feel the contrast within each rep, 15 seconds rest
  • 4 × 100m plain freestyle — no tools. Apply everything learned. These should be your fastest 100s of the session

Cool-Down (5 minutes)

200m easy backstroke or mixed stroke — no tools. Let your arms decompress with long, lazy recovery strokes. No effort here.

Coaching Notes

  • The band-only sets will feel difficult and slow — that’s the point. Don’t compensate with excessive body rotation or head lift
  • On paddle sets: if your elbow drops during the pull, the paddle is too large; oversized paddles reinforce bad mechanics
  • The final plain-freestyle set is the key payoff — your clean stroke should feel measurably more powerful after the contrast work
  • Use this session at most once per week — upper body fatigue from band and paddle work requires full recovery before repeating

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.