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Backstroke

Swimming on the back with alternating arm strokes and leg kicks, ideal for back and shoulders.

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Backstroke

Backstroke: Strengthen Your Back While Swimming

Backstroke is performed on the back with alternating windmill arm movements and continuous leg kicks. It is an excellent stroke for strengthening the back and improving posture while providing good cardiovascular work.

Muscles Targeted

Backstroke primarily targets the lats, shoulders (posterior deltoids), biceps, trapezius and rhomboids. Legs work continuously with kicks.

Step-by-Step Execution

  1. Position: lying on the back, body horizontal. Hips high near the surface.
  2. Windmill arms: one arm at a time exits the water overhead, enters pinky-first, then pulls under the body.
  3. Leg kicks: continuous kicks from the hips, legs nearly straight.
  4. Eyes: look at the ceiling or sky, head still and aligned with the body.

Duration

Duration: 15 to 30 minutes. Often used to complement crawl for balanced muscle work.

Safety Tips

  • Watch for pool walls: learn to spot backstroke flags.
  • Keep hips high to avoid sinking and reduce drag.
  • Avoid turning your head: it stays still, the body rotates.

Variations

  • Single-arm backstroke: one arm only to correct technique.
  • Backstroke with pull buoy: isolate arm work.
  • Fast backstroke: 50m sprint for speed work.

Target Audience

All levels. Particularly recommended for people with back tension or looking to improve posture.

Diagrams and illustrations

Backstroke

Swimming on the back with alternating arms

Related tags

Backstroke: Complete Technique Guide | PratiConnect