CoachDave

CoachDave
Coach Dave Cameron
davidccameron@hotmail.com
Whether it is swimming in open water, introducing innovative technique, or trying out new pacing sets, Dave Cameron practices what he preaches. Dave settled on distance freestyle events in high school. As a competitor for Carleton College until his graduation in 1999, he learned to appreciate the importance of form over force in swimming. With experienced and technical coaching, Dave set three team records, won two individual conference titles, and was a 15-time All-Conference swimmer. Apparently, this wasn't enough, as Dave continued competing as a Masters swimmer. After his triathletes involved him in open water swimming, Dave took this to the extreme with a successful swim crossing of the English Channel in 2004. In 2007, Dave undertook a journey that only 25 others worldwide have ever completed successfully. In attempting a double crossing of the English Channel, Dave took half an hour off his previous one-way time, but did not finish the over 24-hour swim.  As a coach, Dave strives to balance one-on-one feedback with effective workouts and group dynamics that help a team develop together. Each of Dave's teams has made huge strides under his direction.• Dave works directly with the YWCA Uptown morning groups, which now see up to 100 swimmers during eight different weekday practice times. YW Masters have competed in local meets, completed the 5-mile Minnetonka swim, and even tried out the original Ironman swim race- the 2.4 mile Waikiki Roughwater in Hawaii! • Seven years ago, the YWCA Otters were a one-season team with a few strong swimmers. Since then, the team has expanded its practice schedule, doubled its size, and made huge strides in YMCA league and USA Swimming competition. Each year, almost every team record is broken as swimmers develop their swimming with a strong technique and aerobic focus. Last year, eight of these swimmers were chosen to swim a team relay across the English Channel• In 2000, Dave started working with a masters group of trithletes in St Louis Park. With new practice times, technical expertise, and workouts that catered to the needs of triathletes, the program became Minnesota Tri Masters, the only tri-specific Masters club in Minnesota.Teaching ProfessionalDave studies swimming as a science. There is always new research to test, new workouts to try, and new techniques to analyze. He attends several coaching clinics each year, and often meets with other coaches to pick their brains or debate new methods and strategies. Dave is an active member of PowerBar Team Elite and offers guidance on race and training nutrition before, during, and after practice and race sessions.A fan of constructive criticism, Dave is aware of many ideas and possibilities in the swimming world, and is truly passionate when discussing swimming. Dave studied under Terry Laughlin and was certified as Minnesota's first Total Immersion Teaching Professional. Because of the success of TI's method, Dave has encouraged several other instructors to pursue this certification, and his swim teams use the drills throughout the season as a framework for successful technique.Dave is now an Area Leader with Total Immersion- any workshop you see in Minnesota, North or South Dakota, or Iowa likely has him directing.Dave runs a freestyle form, speed, and endurance camp in late winter every year. This year's camps will be in Pompano Beach, Florida at the beautiful outdoor 50-meter pool. Find out more at www.mntrimasters.com

TI Advanced

I’m very excited to debut a new workshop from the Central TI office. We’ll be launching this clinic in Towson, MD, San Francisco, Ca, and Minneapolis, MN but expect more of these soon in many of our most popular locations. …

Workshop Follow-up

OK- so I just had a dynamite workshop in San Francisco. i have done many workshops in the past 5 years, and many have had their unique successes, but this one had a flow and improvement across the board that …

Shaping the Vessel

Well, a couple months since my last entry, and I can say with confidence that a good portion of the "Channel weight" is gone. I am actually getting cold in the water again, which is actually a good thing.

While …

From cold water form to speed form…a slow transition

Often I get clients who transform their swimming to get closer to the level of speed or efficiency that their level of fitness warrants. I’m taking the opposite approach right now. I’ve got the stroke (though there’s always something new …

A bit more client privacy with technology

I’ve worked with many triathletes and competitive swimmers in the Upper Midwest. When someone comes in for an appointment, I could go all day on video analysis, and I often think that’s what the less-than-enthusiastic swimmer wants me to do, …

DC Article- Dangers of Unconscious Competence

 

The Dangers of Unconscious Competence

 

Many Total Immersion swimmers come from backgrounds where they have all the wrong instincts. Their experience with the drills and focal points is one where they can really see the difference when they …

DC Resource- Open water workout

 

Putting together an open-water workout

Training in open water shouldn’t be just out and back. Just like in the pool, a better workout can be had by building fundamentals, pacing, sprints, and drills into your swim. Here is an …

DC Resource- Open water ideas

 

Strategy: Pacing

If you haven’t been training outside of a 25 yard pool, open water pacing will be completely different for you from various sets you may have been doing. Your body is programmed for that break at the …

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