History
Main article: History of swimming
Swimming has been recorded since prehistoric times; the earliest recording of swimming dates back to Stone Age
paintings from around 7,000 years ago. Written references date from
2000 BC. Some of the earliest references to swimming include the Gilgamesh, the Iliad, the Odyssey, the Bible, Beowulf, and other sagas. In 1778, Nikolaus Wynmann,
a German professor of languages, wrote the first swimming book, The
Swimmer or A Dialogue on the Art of Swimming (Der Schwimmer oder ein
Zweigespräch über die Schwimmkunst). Competitive swimming as we know it
today started in the United States started around 1800, mostly using breaststroke. Many Americans often used swimming competitions to settle differences in the frontier, such as property rights. In 1873, John Arthur Trudgen
introduced the trudgen to Western swimming competitions, after copying
the front crawl used by Native Americans. Due to a British dislike of
splashing, Trudgen employed a scissor kick instead of the front crawl's
flutter kick. Swimming was part of the first modern Olympic Games in 1896 in Athens. In 1902 Richmond Cavill introduced the front crawl to the Western world. In 1908, the world swimming association, Fédération Internationale de Natation
(FINA), was formed. Butterfly was developed in the 1930s and was at
first a variant of breaststroke, until it was accepted as a separate
style in 1952.
Competition
Competitive swimming became popular in the nineteenth century. The
goal of competitive swimming is to constantly improve upon one's
time(s), or to beat the competitors in any given event. However, some
professional swimmers who do not hold a national or world ranking are
considered the best in regard to their technical skills. Typically, an
athlete goes through a cycle of training in which the body is overloaded
with work in the beginning and middle segments of the cycle, and then
the workload is decreased in the final stage as the swimmer approaches
the competition in which he or she is to compete in. This final stage is
often referred to as "shave and taper"; the swimmer tapering down his
or her workload to be able to perform at their optimal level. At the
very end of this stage, before competition, the swimmer shaves off all
exposed hair for the sake of reducing drag and having a sleeker and more
hydrodynamic feel in the water.[1]
Swimming is an event at the Summer Olympic Games, where male and female athletes compete in 16 of the recognized events each. Olympic events are held in a 50-meter pool, called a long course pool.
There are forty officially recognized individual swimming events in the pool; however the International Olympic Committee only recognizes 32 of them. The international governing body for competitive swimming is the Fédération Internationale de Natation ("International Swimming Federation"), better known as FINA.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar