Swimming performance has traditionally been explained through conditioning, strength, technique refinement, and aerobic capacity. Yet the decisive factor in high-speed swimming is rarely muscular or metabolic first. It is neurological.
How impulses are transmitted, how rhythm is preserved, and how propulsion remains coherent under pressure. This seminar introduces the principles of Neural Engineering for Swimming, a framework that examines swimming performance through the architecture of the nervous system.
This work is based on decades of observation, coaching experience, and the study of neural organisation in elite sport.
Participants will leave with a deeper understanding of the neural mechanisms that underpin swimming speed and race stability.
April 8
Online Seminar
2 hours
Coach Tim Taylor
Derived from Soviet performance science, this approach trains the neural architecture behind elite swimming β timing, rhythm stability, reflex coordination, and execution under pressure.
This is not sports psychology.
This is neural engineering.

Faster decision-making under race conditions

Identity that doesnβt shake under pressure

Visualization that fires automatically

Response rehearsal for false starts, chaos, noise
For 8 April 2026 online Clinical Swimming Briefing