Post by Admin on Dec 13, 2012 22:31:40 GMT -5
Sports Nutrition Tips
Sports Medicine Systems, Inc.,
Nancy Clark, MSRD
There is no single magic food that will help you feel stronger, train harder and compete better. However, every food that you eat, in combination with when you eat it, can affect your athletic performance. Here are a few sports nutrition tips which may help you eat to win!
FUEL: The best fuels for your muscles are carbohydrates - either simple sugars such as the naturally occurring sugars in fruits and juices or complex carbohydrates, the unrefined grains and starches in whole wheat bread, brown rice, bran cereal, oatmeal, etc.. These provide not only energy but also important vitamins and minerals. If you fill up on too many refined carbohydrates (i.e. soft drinks, candy), you will fuel your muscles but neglect the spark plugs that help your engine run smoothly. You store only carbohydrates-not protein or fats-in your muscles in the form of glycogen (muscle sugar). During hard exercise, you burn this glycogen for energy. If you totally deplete your glycogen stores, such as the marathon runner who "hits the wall", you feel overwhelmingly exhausted. Eating high carbohydrate foods (cereal, pancakes, bread fruit, vegetables, potatoes and pasta) can help prevent early exhaustion.
QUICK ENERGY: Eating lots of sweets and sugary foods for quick energy before you exercise may hurt your performance. Here's why: After you eat any kind of concentrated sugar (i.e. dried fruit, juices, soft drinks, jelly beans, etc.), your body secretes insulin, a hormone that carries the sugar from your blood into the muscles. Exercise, like insulin, also helps carry sugar into the muscles. The combined effect of insulin with exercise can cause your blood sugar to drop abnormally low. You may experience hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) and feel light headed, shaky, tired and uncoordinated. If you are craving an energy boost prior to exercise because you are hungry and feeling droopy, you don't have to eat sugary foods for energy. A simple snack of crackers, fruit or bread can perk you up without risking negative hypoglycemic effects. The best solution to the quick energy problem is to prevent the need for an energy boost! Simply eat a bigger breakfast or lunch; fuel up , rather than try to run on fumes! You will have time to digest this food and store it in your muscles. You will be ready for action--not hungry and tired prior to the afternoon or evening workout. You will be less likely to crave sweets for a quick fix because you will already have adequate energy
Fluids: You are unlikely to starve to death during exercise. However, you can endanger your health and performance due to lack of fluids. To prevent yourself from becoming dehydrated, drink lots of liquids before, during and after strenuous exercise. Water is always safe before exercise; water and or diluted juices or sports drinks during exercise; water or juices afterwards. A good rule of thumb is that you should constantly take small drinks during strenuous exercise. If you feel thirsty, you are already beginning to feel the effects of dehydration. Be prepared! Always bring your own water, juice or sports drinks to practices and games.
Pre-Competition Meals: When you are planning strenuous morning exercise (such as an early morning softball game), you will fuel your muscles best if you eat a high-carbohydrate meal the night before. By eating a hearty amount of pasta, potato, rice, noodles, bread and other carbohydrates for dinner, you will have a time to digest the food and store it in your muscles as glycogen. If you were to eat a big breakfast prior to the game, the food would sit undigested in your stomach and merely bounce along for the ride. This might cause discomfort or pit stops! Hence, you will want to do most of your pre-competition eating either the night before or atleast 3-4 hours before an afternoon or evening competition. Some athletes like to eat a small snack within 1-2 hours of exercise. This keeps them from feeling hungry and can help maintain a normal blood sugar level. Some popular choices include cereal with lowfat milk, one or two slices of toast (hold the butter!) or some plain crackers. Avoid large fatty meals such as the traditional steak and egg breakfast that tend to sit heavily in the stomach for 3-4 hours.
Recovery Foods: You should eat carbohydrate-rich foods within one to four hours after hard exercise to replace the glycogen that you burned off. Your muscles are most receptive to replacing this fuel at that time. A simple post-exercise refresher might be orange juice and bananas-rich sources of not only fluids and carbohydrates but also potassium and vitamins. Remember that only carbohydrates quickly re-fuel your muscles and prepare you for tomorrow's workout. Hence, if you are tempted to choose a greasy burger with french fries for your recovery feast, choose instead carbohydrate-rich thick crust pizza with single cheese and veggie toppings, or a dinner that focuses on potato, bread, vegetables, juices and other carbohydrates.
Nutritional Guidelines
In a nutshell, there are a few simple guidelines that you should always keep in mind when preparing for exercise:
1. For early morning games or practices, eat lightly at breakfast. You should load up on
carbohydrates the evening before. Following the game you should eat a snack to help
replenish lost energy.
2. For afternoon games or practices, eat a good breakfast that is high in carbohydrates
and low in fats and sugars. Depending on the time of your games you should eat a light
snack at least 1 hour before. If your game is in the late afternoon you may have time
for a light meal but be sure that you have atleast 2 hours before the game if you are
going to eat a meal.
3. For evening games or practices eat a normal breakfast and lunch that is high in
carbohydrates. Before the game eat a light snack and afterward eat a meal.
4. When eating to prepare for exercise, be sure to eat foods that are high in carbohydrates
and low in sugar and fat. This is especially important when preparing for tournaments.
5. Understand the importance of proper hydration before, during and after all practices
and games.
6. Completely avoid loading up on sugary junk foods and sodas before strenuous exercise
and during tournaments!
Sports Medicine Systems, Inc.,
Nancy Clark, MSRD
There is no single magic food that will help you feel stronger, train harder and compete better. However, every food that you eat, in combination with when you eat it, can affect your athletic performance. Here are a few sports nutrition tips which may help you eat to win!
FUEL: The best fuels for your muscles are carbohydrates - either simple sugars such as the naturally occurring sugars in fruits and juices or complex carbohydrates, the unrefined grains and starches in whole wheat bread, brown rice, bran cereal, oatmeal, etc.. These provide not only energy but also important vitamins and minerals. If you fill up on too many refined carbohydrates (i.e. soft drinks, candy), you will fuel your muscles but neglect the spark plugs that help your engine run smoothly. You store only carbohydrates-not protein or fats-in your muscles in the form of glycogen (muscle sugar). During hard exercise, you burn this glycogen for energy. If you totally deplete your glycogen stores, such as the marathon runner who "hits the wall", you feel overwhelmingly exhausted. Eating high carbohydrate foods (cereal, pancakes, bread fruit, vegetables, potatoes and pasta) can help prevent early exhaustion.
QUICK ENERGY: Eating lots of sweets and sugary foods for quick energy before you exercise may hurt your performance. Here's why: After you eat any kind of concentrated sugar (i.e. dried fruit, juices, soft drinks, jelly beans, etc.), your body secretes insulin, a hormone that carries the sugar from your blood into the muscles. Exercise, like insulin, also helps carry sugar into the muscles. The combined effect of insulin with exercise can cause your blood sugar to drop abnormally low. You may experience hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) and feel light headed, shaky, tired and uncoordinated. If you are craving an energy boost prior to exercise because you are hungry and feeling droopy, you don't have to eat sugary foods for energy. A simple snack of crackers, fruit or bread can perk you up without risking negative hypoglycemic effects. The best solution to the quick energy problem is to prevent the need for an energy boost! Simply eat a bigger breakfast or lunch; fuel up , rather than try to run on fumes! You will have time to digest this food and store it in your muscles. You will be ready for action--not hungry and tired prior to the afternoon or evening workout. You will be less likely to crave sweets for a quick fix because you will already have adequate energy
Fluids: You are unlikely to starve to death during exercise. However, you can endanger your health and performance due to lack of fluids. To prevent yourself from becoming dehydrated, drink lots of liquids before, during and after strenuous exercise. Water is always safe before exercise; water and or diluted juices or sports drinks during exercise; water or juices afterwards. A good rule of thumb is that you should constantly take small drinks during strenuous exercise. If you feel thirsty, you are already beginning to feel the effects of dehydration. Be prepared! Always bring your own water, juice or sports drinks to practices and games.
Pre-Competition Meals: When you are planning strenuous morning exercise (such as an early morning softball game), you will fuel your muscles best if you eat a high-carbohydrate meal the night before. By eating a hearty amount of pasta, potato, rice, noodles, bread and other carbohydrates for dinner, you will have a time to digest the food and store it in your muscles as glycogen. If you were to eat a big breakfast prior to the game, the food would sit undigested in your stomach and merely bounce along for the ride. This might cause discomfort or pit stops! Hence, you will want to do most of your pre-competition eating either the night before or atleast 3-4 hours before an afternoon or evening competition. Some athletes like to eat a small snack within 1-2 hours of exercise. This keeps them from feeling hungry and can help maintain a normal blood sugar level. Some popular choices include cereal with lowfat milk, one or two slices of toast (hold the butter!) or some plain crackers. Avoid large fatty meals such as the traditional steak and egg breakfast that tend to sit heavily in the stomach for 3-4 hours.
Recovery Foods: You should eat carbohydrate-rich foods within one to four hours after hard exercise to replace the glycogen that you burned off. Your muscles are most receptive to replacing this fuel at that time. A simple post-exercise refresher might be orange juice and bananas-rich sources of not only fluids and carbohydrates but also potassium and vitamins. Remember that only carbohydrates quickly re-fuel your muscles and prepare you for tomorrow's workout. Hence, if you are tempted to choose a greasy burger with french fries for your recovery feast, choose instead carbohydrate-rich thick crust pizza with single cheese and veggie toppings, or a dinner that focuses on potato, bread, vegetables, juices and other carbohydrates.
Nutritional Guidelines
In a nutshell, there are a few simple guidelines that you should always keep in mind when preparing for exercise:
1. For early morning games or practices, eat lightly at breakfast. You should load up on
carbohydrates the evening before. Following the game you should eat a snack to help
replenish lost energy.
2. For afternoon games or practices, eat a good breakfast that is high in carbohydrates
and low in fats and sugars. Depending on the time of your games you should eat a light
snack at least 1 hour before. If your game is in the late afternoon you may have time
for a light meal but be sure that you have atleast 2 hours before the game if you are
going to eat a meal.
3. For evening games or practices eat a normal breakfast and lunch that is high in
carbohydrates. Before the game eat a light snack and afterward eat a meal.
4. When eating to prepare for exercise, be sure to eat foods that are high in carbohydrates
and low in sugar and fat. This is especially important when preparing for tournaments.
5. Understand the importance of proper hydration before, during and after all practices
and games.
6. Completely avoid loading up on sugary junk foods and sodas before strenuous exercise
and during tournaments!