As Kristin Nicholson put it, swimming is a "training sport."
"And there's no question that there's a daily grind to get to where you want to be," Nicholson said. "You train so hard and so long for maybe 30 seconds in the water at one time. It's a hard sport."
The Chanhassen girls' team, which Nicholson coaches, just makes it look easy.
The Storm came into this fall as one of the elite programs in the state, despite only actually being an official, independent team for less than five years. The team returns two of the state's best swimmers in juniors Zoe Avestruz and Kaia Grobe, and those two have a slew of teammates poised for breakout seasons.
In just a handful of meets so far this fall, Chanhassen already is making waves, dominating the competition with a number of girls hitting times that are faster than their "peak" cuts at state and sections a year ago. The Storm is 2-0 in dual meets and finished fourth in the gold division of the Minneapolis South Invitational.
It's easy to see why the Storm entered the season as the No. 6-ranked team in Class 2A. It's a little more complicated to see how it has gotten here.
The simple answer: "Just a lot of hard work playing off," Avestruz said. "Everyone's working a lot harder. … It's stroke technique, underwater turns — all those little things that make that big difference."
The more complicated answer revolves around a successful mix of talent and unique training, a practice regimen that Nicholson's swimmers utilizes to keep themselves fresh mentally and physically while tapering their times for the end of the season.