Phases of Athlete Development
in the Walton Waves Age Group Program


The Walton Waves program has been structured on the premise that there are four basic phases of athlete development in age group swimming. At each level of the program, we continually try to evaluate and adapt to the multitude of factors, both scientific and sociological, that impact the growth and development of young athletes. Experience has taught us that the perfect age group program is a moving target that changes as the population we serve changes and as we learn more about the development of young people.

Following is an outline description of the four phases of development and the basic premises that currently guide our thinking at each of these levels.

Phase I: Basic Skill Development – Ages 11 & Under, White Group, 50%, 3x/wk

This phase is the introductory level of competitive swimming. In order to begin in the novice levels of our program, swimmers must be able to swim a minimum of 25 yards freestyle and backstroke.

Phase II: Basic Training Development – Ages 10 to 14, Gold Group, 67%, 5x/wk

At the age of 11-14, swimmers move into the second level of our age group program. Swimmers who move into these practice levels are able to swim all four strokes and maintain good technique on low intensity interval work. This phase is a transitional level where the emphasis begins to change from primarily teaching to a relatively equal balance of technique work and physiological development.

Phase III: Progressive Training – Ages 12 to 18, PreSenior Group, 78%, 6x/wk

Most team members move into the senior levels of our program at age 13. The quantity and intensity of the training program increases. For the first time, the program structure calls for more time to be devoted to physiological conditioning than to teaching fundamentals.

Phase IV: Advanced Training – Ages 14 & Over, Senior Group, 88%, 6-8x/wk

Swimmers with the appropriate dedication, desire, experience, and talent move to the advanced training level of our program at 14-15 years of age. The training program in Phase IV is very demanding with a heavy emphasis on distance-based physiological training.