Gaby Mora

Eating for training and competition

Nobody would think about running 10km as preparation for an Olympic weightlifting meet. You should be polishing off your lifts and throwing in some max days to simulate competition day. This should translate seamlessly to nutrition. However, many athletes overlook their nutrition strategy and show up to competition with no plan. Eating for training and competition require the same amount of thought.

If you are planning to participate in any kind of sporting event, from amateur to elite-level competitions, you should have a nutrition strategy in place. This includes non-competitive events such as martial arts gradings.

As you will see below, your nutrition strategy is unique to you because it depends on many physiological and exercise factors.

Pre-event

Technically, the time before the event includes all the time from weeks or months in advance up to the seconds before the competition. This is perhaps the most important period of time for your nutrition strategy.

Get a plan

Whether you get a nutritional plan for the event from a sports dietitian or you make it up yourself, you need a plan for before, during and after the event. What goes on the plan depends on multiple factors, including:

Test the plan

“Everything works on paper”. Even the most carefully designed plan may not work in practice. You need to test the plan in advance and in similar conditions to game day. This means:

Trial the protocol and see how you go. Check for the following:

Refine

You might get things right the first time but you might need to tweak the protocol a few times. Perhaps there was nothing wrong with your performance or digestion but you simply didn’t like the products you used. Perhaps the same foods work well in winter but not summer, or vice versa. Test different brands until you find the one that works for you.

Stick to the plan

Once you have your plan dialed in, don’t mess around with it. Use it in every key session. Use the same foods, same brands, same timing. Let your body know what is going into it on the day of the event, so that it only needs to focus on performing at the highest level.

Prepare for disaster

If you can afford to have spares, do so. If you’re packing food in ziplock bags, double-bag it.

On the day

Post-event

Regardless of the competition result, your priority now is to refuel, repair and recover. Fluids, carbohydrate and protein are essential for this.

A note on alcohol: even though is very common to celebrate the end of an event with one or five drinks, alcohol is likely to have a negative impact in inflammation, the immune system and sleep quality. In addition, alcohol consumption might impair the ability to build muscle.

[Photo by Victor Xok on Unsplash]