October 16, 2013 at 1:42 a.m.
Bermuda100 / Hope4Life

Why refuelling is crucial

Why refuelling is crucial
Why refuelling is crucial

By David Bascome, Sun Columnist- | Comments: 0 | Leave a comment

I want to talk to my young athletes about the importance of what they are putting in their bodies before, during and after their game or event.

Parents and coaches need to be aware of what your young people are putting in their bodies during their season. 

The information I have provided below is the same information I hand out to my professional players. It is very important they prepare their body and mind to be at the highest level. 

Pregame Plan

Normally, it takes about three to four hours to completely digest and absorb a regular mixed meal. As long as there’s enough time for digestion, the pregame meal can be anything that contains carbohydrates, protein, and fat and which the athlete knows he or she can tolerate.

Because fat takes longer to empty from the stomach, it’s probably wise to avoid fried or high-fat foods on game day (and most other days). Eating high-fat foods can cause sluggishness because the energy they provide isn’t as available as the energy from carbohydrate-rich food. 

Foods high in fibre, such as bran cereal, should also be avoided before exercise. Fibre can cause cramping as well as necessary bathroom visits at inconvenient times. 

Athletes competing in events with short, intense bursts, such as sprinting, short-distance swimming, or rowing, should allow their stomachs to empty before competition starts to prevent nausea. 

During intense activity, working muscles channel blood flow away from the stomach, causing discomfort if exercise is begun with food still in the stomach. 

For some athletes, eating a carbohydrate-rich snack within an hour before their event fuels them up. A piece of fruit, an energy bar, or some crackers should be easy to digest.

Some athletes can tolerate anything they eat. Others find that drinking a carbohydrate drink such as juice is easier than eating.

All of this depends wholly on the individual. Whatever athletes choose as their pregame meal should be familiar to their bodies and taste good. This is not a good time to experiment with new foods.

During Events

Athletes know the phrase “hitting the wall” but usually associate it with distance runners depleting their glycogen stores and running out of gas. 

In fact, hitting the wall can happen in any sport. Soccer, football, and tennis use glycogen to fuel the intense stop-and-go activity common to these sports.

Without snacking and drinking during these long games, athletes feel exhausted quickly and hit the wall. 

When muscles are well nourished, with good glycogen stores at the beginning of an event, they perform longer if they also receive fuel during the event. Encourage athletes to take advantage of breaks in activity to eat or drink easy-to-digest, carbohydrate-rich foods such as fruit, energy bars, or sports drinks. They’ll feel more energetic throughout the event. 

Recovery

What you eat within the first few minutes after a workout or competition is known as your “recovery meal”. This small meal is the most important and underrated part of training.

It sets the stage for how the athlete feels for the rest of the day and affects the next day’s training or competition. 

Recovery eating is essentially reloading the muscles with glycogen. Fifteen to 30 minutes after exercising, the muscles are like sponges, waiting to refill the glycogen stores that have just been exhausted.

If athletes refill within this time range, they’ll be revved to go. If they miss their window of opportunity, they’ll feel sluggish and lazy for the next event.

Carbohydrate plus protein appears to be the most effective combination for restoring glycogen.

Eating a snack (such as a banana with yogurt) within 15 minutes of the end of a workout and then eating a regular meal two hours later maximizes muscle receptivity.

Many athletes just can’t or don’t want to eat directly after exercise. 

In such cases, drinking a sports drink or diluted fruit juice is a good first step to refueling.

Remember that the recovery meal is just a small eating episode — it’s not breakfast, lunch, or dinner. 

Hope this helps. Until next time! 

David Bascome is the coach of Baltimore Blast and founder of the Hope4Life Foundation and the Bermuda100 initiative, which aims to support schools, and recruit and train leaders in our community.


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