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Nutrition
for Swimmers After
heredity and training, nutrition plays the largest role in the quality of
a swimmer's performance. Most every person involved in competitive
swimming knows that nutrition is important. Following are some keys
terms and helpful guidelines that will aide in better performance in the
pool. Fast
Facts to Remeber
Suggestions
for Eating to Win
A
swimmer gets most of their energy from their body breaking down food that
is rich in this. A carbohydrate is like a wick on a candle.
It burns slowly for long lasting energy to give you the power to perform
at long meets or practices. You should eat as much as possible
daily, but always eat a lot more a week before a meet. Don't wait
until the night or day before the meet. Examples:
potatoes, pizza, spaghetti or pasta, pancakes, bread and
cereal.
Protein
is important to a swimmer's body to build all the cells. As you grow
you build new cells and having protein in your meal make those cells
stronger. Examples:
chicken, turkey, milk
Fats
are used by the body for energy. The difference between them and
carbohydrates is that they take a whole lot longer to be broken down for
us to use, so they sit there and end up making swimmers get fat.
Remember,
fat gets in fast when you're hungry, but takes its time leaving!!!
Fat
is also very heavy. If you feel heavy you swim slower and it makes
it harder to sprint. Examples:
Fast food hamburgers, french fries and potatoe chips
Just
remember that you need water to swim and your body needs water too.
Make sure and drink at
least 8 glasses of water a day!
It is also very important to keep your body full of fluids while you work
out. So drink a big glass before practice, during practice, and
after practice. You do sweat while you swim! Sports drinks are
also good at any time, but don't stop drinking water.
If
you eat a good balanced diet, it should always include lots of fruits and
vegetables. They are loaded with the power of vitamins and minerals
that add extra energy the body need to perform to its best. Milk also has
lots of vitamins and minerals the body uses to build strength so you can
last through that 100 butterfly.
When
you have long waits before you swim or just FEEL
hungry, its good to have nutritious snacks on
hand. Things like a 1/2 of a bagel, a small box of dry cereal, fruit
(apples or oranges are great), granola or power bar are good
choices. It is not a good idea to eat too close to your race, so
give yourself time to digest the food. Sports drinks (watered down)
or water are great if you are
thirsty.
YOU
ARE ALWAYS A WINNER WHEN YOU EAT TO WIN Some
Tips on Good Food to Eat
Nutrition... .
The
week leading up to the event .
After
the warm up-recover for the heats .
Drinking
and eating between event .
Recovery after a hard day's
competition .
Top-Up Snakes between
events .
Day
in the life of World Class Swimmer Nutrition
for Meets One
thing that all of us coaches noticed at these meets was that many of the
swimmers were . . . . how should I put this . . .
. not eating in a manner which would benefit
their swimming optimally. Or in other
words: EATING JUNK! When
at a meet, keep in mind that the more food in your stomach, the more blood
that has to go there to digest it. If blood and oxygen are going
there, then there’s less going to the muscles to make them
work. But
if you are at a meet for most of the day, you have to eat something,
right? So what to eat . . . .Here’s a
little plan of things to eat and when to eat them. Notice that there
is NO ROOM for hot dogs, fries, hamburgers, or any other chow from
McDonald’s in this outline. The
biggest generalization is to avoid things with fat, and go with things
that have carbohydrates and are easily digested. Nutrition
Guidelines Preparation
and Recovery for Competition The
week leading up to the Event
The
Pre-Event Meal
After
the Warm-Up - Recover for the Heats
Drinking
and Eating
Recovery
After a Hard Day's Competition
Top-Up
Snacks Bewtween Events (1-2 hour breaks)
Note
1: A
quick way to tell if something really is "low fat" is to check the
nutrition label. If there are more protein grams than fat grams in a
serving, it's probably OK. If there's more
fat, then it's probably better to go with something
else. Note
2:
Choose smaller amounts if you only have just over 1 hour. In longer breaks
you can afford to eat a little more, but don't eat constantly. Items in
bold might be better for middle length breaks as they are smaller and
perhaps easier to digest. Longer
Breaks or After the Competition
Day
in the Life of a World Class Swimmer This
is from a recent issue of Sports Illustrated for woman. It goes through
typical day in the life of Jenny Thompson, arguably the best female
sprinter in the world for the past five or six years.You think your life
is centered around swimming? Well,this is what it takes to get to the top and stay there
for the better part of a decade. 5:50
am:
no matter how long an athlete has been in training, waking up early is
never easy. Energy bars get Thompson through practice, but what she
really wants is coffee. 6:07
am:
Before the sun comes up, Thompson starts churning out 7100m in 8:49
am:
She hits the gym for an hour of strength training.
10:00
am:
Driving back to her apartment, Thompson sports ice packs on both shoulders to stave off screaming
joints. En route, she makes a pit stop for that long-overdue cup of
java. 10:15
am:
At home, she answers e-mails and returns phone calls. Then, a
mandatory hoe-hour nap. No problem, even after the caffeine
fix. “If I sit or lie down anywhere, I’m asleep in five seconds”,
she says. 12:42
pm:
Lunch with some friends. 1:20
pm:
Thompson researches medical schools at the undergraduate advising centre,
then joins the Stanford swim teams daily yoga session. After Zenning
out, she cranks out another 7000+ metres in the
pool. 5:58
pm:
A quick change and then gets dressed up for dinner out with a
friend. 10:00
pm:
The 26-year-old is in bed - “asleep in five seconds” - as next practice is
only eight hours away. And she’s been following a schedule much like this
since before she first broke on to the world swimming scene back in
1990. Take
note that this sprinter - already the best in the world - regularly puts
in close to 15,000 metres in a day. The distance groups regularly goes over 20,000m in a
day. |