The Stroke for Distance Work
Before describing the movements of the double-over-arm stroke, we will here remark that almost all the world’s records for middle and long-distance swimming have been made by this stroke, and some idea of the speed attained can be formed by the following records, all made by George Hodgson of Canada, one of the world’s greatest distance champion swimmers, and the best exponent of this method the writer has ever seen: 400 meters, 5 minutes 24 2-5 seconds; 1,000 meters, 14 minutes 37 seconds; 1,500 meters, 22 minutes; 1,600 meters, 23 minutes 28 1-5 seconds, and one mile, 23 minutes 34 1-2 seconds. And at the time the great swimmer made these records at the Olympic games in 1912, he defeated all the fastest and best swimmers and record-holders from all parts of the world, some of them using the famous crawl stroke, thus proving himself, as well as the stroke, to be the best in the world at that time.
While it would not be literally correct to call the modern Trudgeon stroke a “double-over-arm-side stroke,” yet that is most nearly what the motions of the double-over-arm approach, for you must first swim one part of the stroke as a side-stroke movement, and then roll over partly on the breast to get your other arm out of the water, thus giving you more positive action and greater speed by getting both arms out, than you would get from the single-over-arm, in which one of the arms must be pushed under and through the water, with the resistance such negative action entails.