What is the Butterfly Stroke? The Dolphin Wave
The Butterfly Stroke is the second fastest competitive swimming style, celebrated for its spectacular dolphin-like body waves and powerful, symmetrical arm recoveries. It is the most advanced and physically demanding stroke, requiring core strength, spinal flexibility, and precise coordination.
Biomedically, butterfly relies on a continuous kinetic chain wave that travels from the head, down the spine, and is released through the feet. It was developed in the 1930s as a variation of breaststroke and became an official Olympic event in 1952.
At Swim For Life Vietnam, we teach butterfly as an advanced course. HLV Nguyen Huy Manh notes: "Butterfly is a rhythm stroke. If your timing is right, the water lifts you up. We teach students to connect the dolphin wave with the arm sweeps, making the movement feel fluid and graceful rather than exhausting."
Health Benefits of Butterfly
Butterfly is the ultimate total-body conditioning stroke:
- Maximum Calorie Burn: Burning up to 800 kcal/hour, it leads all strokes in metabolic expenditure and fat reduction.
- Core Powerhouse: The continuous dolphin kick activates the rectus abdominis, obliques, and lower back muscles, building a strong core.
- Shoulder & Chest Development: The symmetrical recovery expands chest flexibility and builds strength in the upper back and shoulder girdle.
- Spinal Mobility: The wave motion promotes flexibility and articulation in the thoracic and lumbar spine.
The Dolphin Kick and Body Wave
The **Dolphin Kick** is the engine of the butterfly stroke. Keep legs together and move them as a single flipper:
- Wave Origin: The wave does not start at the knees; it begins at the chest. Press your chest down into the water, which naturally pushes your hips up.
- The Downward Whip: Whip your legs down by flexing your hips. Keep ankles relaxed to snap the water.
- Double Kick Rhythm: You must kick twice per arm cycle:
- Kick 1 (Entry): Kicking as hands enter the water to raise the hips.
- Kick 2 (Exit): Kicking as hands push past the thighs to lift the chin for breathing.
The Arm Stroke: The Keyhole Pattern
Both arms move simultaneously under the water in a keyhole-like path:
- Entry: Hands enter thumb-first, shoulder-width apart, fingers slightly angled outward.
- Sweep & Catch: Sweep hands outward, then pull them inward under your chest (drawing the top of a keyhole). Keep elbows high.
- Push: Push hands forcefully backward past the hips. Accelerate through this phase to generate maximum speed.
- Recovery: Sweep arms wide and low over the surface. Thumbs point down, shoulders and wrists relaxed.
Breathing Timing in Butterfly
Breathing requires perfect synchronization: **Head rises before hands, head drops before hands.**
- Start lifting your chin forward as hands sweep inward under the chest.
- Inhale quickly through your mouth as the second kick lifts your shoulders. Keep your chin low, scanning the surface.
- Submerge your face before hands enter the water in front. Exhale slowly under water.
Stroke Coordination Chart
| Phase | Arm Action | Leg Action | Breathing |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Entry | Hands enter shoulder-width | Kick 1 (Down) | Face submerged, start exhale |
| 2. Catch & Pull | Sweep inward under chest | Legs rise up straight | Exhaling under water |
| 3. Push | Push hard past thighs | Kick 2 (Down) | Lift chin to inhale quickly |
| 4. Recovery | Sweep arms wide over water | Legs rise up straight | Face enters before hands touch |
Master Butterfly at Swim For Life
Ready to master the most athletic swimming stroke? Our 1-on-1 private lessons at Swim For Life help you build the strength, timing, and flexibility needed to swim butterfly with grace.
What We Offer:
- Customized Wave Drills: Structured lessons focusing on spinal articulation and chest pressing.
- Rotator Cuff Protection: Learn to recover your arms without straining your shoulder joints.
- Flexible Scheduling: Arrange sessions at premium pools across Hanoi and HCMC.