it makes ur shoulders bigger....
2007-04-03 04:03:13
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Swimming in general might build up some muscles on your shoulders but the people who really develop broad shoulders are the butterfliers. Since it's such a vital part of the stroke that their arms come a full 90 degrees around they naturally build muscle during both practice and competition. For them it just comes naturally even for people who were not-so broad shouldered at the beginning of the season.
But the other strokes in competitive swimming won't do as much for your shoulders. They will make your shoulders slightly broader though, but it may be hard to tell or even unnoticable in some cases. I'd say backstrokers are the next to benefit from swimming in terms of broad shoulders since sprinting for backstroke is more like a windmill effect rather than the normal bend the elbows kind of thing that they always teach you (I'm a compeitive free/back swimmer myself and I can guarentee you I don't care about what they taught me in a single swimming lesson or most of my coach's recommedations, I just swim so that I get the best time while not drowning).
2007-04-06 05:40:52
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answer #2
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answered by I want my *old* MTV 6
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Not necessarily, there is a guy on our team who has been swimming competitively for 11 years and he is still a beam pole. I swam for four years and I didn't get any broader either. If you are lifting on a regularly basis I think you have a better chance of broader shoulders.
2007-04-03 19:15:58
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answer #3
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answered by best32glove 4
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Swimming mainly would improve some muscle tissues on your shoulders notwithstanding the individuals who extremely strengthen large shoulders are the butterfliers. because it really is such an major area of the stroke that their hands come an complete ninety tiers round they certainly construct muscle for the time of both practice and competition. For them it merely comes certainly even when you were no longer-so large shouldered on the starting up of the season. yet the different strokes in aggressive swimming gained't do as a lot on your shoulders. they'll make your shoulders rather broader nonetheless, notwithstanding it will be difficult to inform or perhaps unnoticable from time to time. i ought to assert backstrokers are the subsequent to earnings on swimming in words of large shoulders on the grounds that sprinting for backstroke is more advantageous like a windmill effect extremely than the traditional bend the elbows kind of difficulty that they consistently coach you (i'm a compeitive loose/decrease back swimmer myself and that i will guarentee you i do not care about what they taught me in a unmarried swimming lesson or maximum of my coach's recommedations, I merely swim so as that i'm getting the right time at the same time as no longer drowning).
2016-12-03 04:26:57
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answer #4
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answered by klingelhoefer 3
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You have to swim for a very long time and very hard... I have been swimming competatively for 9 years and i don't have broad shoulders. but im not in high school yet, the girls on the highshchool team have slightly broader shoulders. Flyers tend to have the broadest of them all. Swimmers are known though to have broad shoulders.
2007-04-03 09:53:45
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answer #5
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answered by swim chick 2
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thats not really true it can depend on how good you are and how much you swim i have broader shoulders then some of the people on my swim team and some don't really have broad shoulders so not neccessarily
2007-04-06 10:28:35
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answer #6
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answered by door knob 2
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It won't make your shoulders move or really change other than if you are intensely training in a stroke that uses the shoulders a lot like butterfly does, the muscles in your shoulders and around them will get bigger so they will appear different.
2007-04-06 16:32:08
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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No. The breadth of your shoudlers is preestablished by your genetics and bodytype. Swimming will increase the muscle mass on the shoudlers you already have. Shoudler breadth is bone and tendon and cannot be altered without surgical intervention. However, the visible addition of muscle mass may create the appearance of broadened shoudlers.
Hope this helps!
2007-04-03 02:45:31
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answer #8
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answered by Kristy 7
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yes... because swimmers use their upper body a lot more than other athletes (such as runners, soccer players, etc.), the muscles in their shoulders and arms tend to be much stronger. however, it depends if you swim competatively or not.
2007-04-03 12:42:14
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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If you do it a lot and at high intensity, yes it will.
2007-04-03 01:17:40
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answer #10
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answered by cowsvils 3
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