Categories
Childrens Health Soccer Parents

Nutrition in Soccer and other sports

Nutrition is very important for health and football performance. In fact the quality of your diet is the second biggest determinant of football performance, second only to football training.

The Food Pyramid

Half of your diet should be made up of bread, rolls, bagels, pasta, rice, cereals. These foods contain carbohydrate, the main source of energy your body uses while playing soccer. Make sure that around half of every meal is made up of the bottom of the pyramid. You should be eating at least 5 pieces of fruit and vegetables a day. These contain vitamins that help you produce energy during sports or soccer.

Fact- A glass of fruit juice counts as one piece of fruit.

Milk, yogurt or cheese should be eaten 3 times a day. These foods contain protein and calcium, which helps build strong muscle and bone. Try eating a handful of nuts each day. Meat, chicken or fish should be eaten twice daily. Red meat should be eaten once or twice a week to make sure you get enough Iron. Iron helps carry oxygen in the blood. Oxygen is important for making energy. Chocolate/sweets/ice-cream etc should be eaten rarely (Treats). Instead eat an extra piece of fruit.

Keeping Hydrated

  • When you are well hydrated (drink enough fluids) you can control your body temperature and can produce energy more efficiently. When you do not drink enough fluids your performance decreases.
  • Carrying a bottle everywhere you go helps to increase fluid intake. Try to drink at least 2 and a half litres of fluid a day. Preferably water and other options include Milk, juice can count towards your fluid intake.

Meals before Training/Matches

Eating before a match or training is very important and effects how well you play. When playing football your body uses mostly carbohydrates for energy. Your body has a limited store of carbohydrate, which it keeps in the muscles. The more carbohydrate stores in your muscle the longer you can keep up sprinting/ jumping maximally and concentrating in training and matches.

By eating Pre-match meals you top up your carbohydrate stores helping you to out perform your opponents. Pre-match meals should be eaten  roughly 3-4 hours before kickoff

  • If you find it difficult to eat before a match try eating liquid foods such as smoothies or even water
  • Sample a few exercise meals and decide which ones are best for you
  • Snacks before Training/Matches
  • You should try to eat a snack 60-90 minutes before kick-off. This further tops up your carbohydrate stores. For examples of pre match snacks see Table 1.
  • When playing away games and long journeys make sure to bring a snack with you.
  • If you get stomach cramps or are uncomfortable eating so close to training/matches, experiment with different eating times, and liquid snacks such as some sports drinks (See post on Sports drinks), home made one preferably.
  • Foods from Table 2 are best but if unavailable choose foods from either table.

Hydrating

  • To make sure you are hydrated drink 500ml of fluid 2 hours before training/kick-off.
  • Drink a further 200-400ml over the course of the last 10 minutes before training/kick-off.
  • If it is uncomfortable or there is fluid sloshing around in you’re your stomach stop drinking.
  • During the match make sure to drink at least two full mouthfuls every 15-20 minutes, even if you don’t feel thirsty. Thirst is a very bad indication of when your body needs water. Leave water bottles around the pitch for easy access and grab a drink whenever you can. Try not to leave it until half time to start drinking.

Hydrating After a training or a game

  • After the match or training it is important to restore the fluids you lost through sweating. If you do not do this it can affect your performance in the next match or training session. (Especially if in a tournament)
  • Weigh yourself before and after each training session and match (only wear a pair of shorts). When you sweat during exercise you lose water weight. This needs to be replaced. Drink 1.5 litres of fluid for each kilogram you have lost.
  • Sports drinks contain carbohydrates and can help you maintain your performance throughout training or matches. (Sports drinks are not suitable for kids)

Home Made Sports Drinks

  • Homemade sports drinks are just as good if not better than commercial sports drinks
  • To make a homemade sports drink, mix equal amounts of fruit juice and water. Then add a pinch of salt (one pinch for every 500ml) and shake well.
  • Make enough for the whole match and for afterwards (at least 2 litres).
  • You can use fruit cordial instead just make sure the ratio of water to cordial to water is around 1:8. Remember the pinch of salt.
  • Milk and water can all be used to replace sweat losses after training or a match. Chocolate Milk is also great.

Eating After Training

  • It is important to eat early after training, within 2 hours. Eating early speeds up recovery and replaces your muscle carbohydrate stores.
  • At least part of meals after training or matches should include foods from Table 3.
  • If you do not feel like eating a lot straight after training or matches, eat snacks and try liquid snacks such as smoothies or yogurt drinks. Eat a meal as soon as you can.

Pre-match meals should be eaten roughly 3-4 hours before kickoff

Food Tables 1, 2 and 3

  • For examples of Pre exercise Meals see Table 1
  • List of certain foods that are best eaten Pre training and matches also see Table 1.
  • For a list of Pre Match Foods See Table 2
  • For a list of After Match Foods See Table 2

Table 2 is a Pre match Food list Click here → Table 1 & 2 – Pre Match Meals, Snacks & Food

Table 3 is a After Match Food list Click HereTable 3 – After Match Foods

To Summarise

The Food Groups

Your diet will need to be high in complex carbohydrates. It will need to have moderate amounts of protein, salt, sugars, and sodium. It should be low in fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol.

All this may sound quite complicated. Yet in fact it is quite simple. You can easily follow the guidelines by eating in a balanced way, including a variety of foods from each of the five major food groups that nutritionists recognise Grains, Vegetables, Fruits, Milk and Meat.

Carbohydrates: Active, soccer-player should get around 50 to 60% of their total calories in the form of carbohydrates. They are the fuel that makes your muscles go. That means around 3.0 grams of carbohydrate per pound of body weight. Carbohydrates should be the largest part of your meals both before training or a game and after. You should even plan to boost your carbohydrate intake during a game with a drink, which is also important for rehydration.

The best type of carbohydrates are rich in nutrients and obtained from complex (Starchy) carbohydrates found in Vegetables, Breads, Cereals, Pasta, and Rice, Rather than the simple (sweet) carbohydrates found in Milk and Fruits.

Protein: Many people mistakenly think that a diet rich in the protein found in milk and meat helps build muscle and physical performance. In fact a well balanced diet has only 10 to 15% of its calories in the form of protein. Excess protein will stress the Kidneys and lead to dehydration and calcium loss. Muscle size is dependent on sufficient calories from a balanced diet, physical maturity, genetics and training.

Fat: Fat in moderation remains an important part of a balanced diet for a soccer player, and around 20 to 30% of your calories should come from fat. Fat is important for many of your functions. It is a secondary source of energy to fuel your muscles and is essential for brain and nerve function. Fat provides essential vitamins A, E, D, K and omega 3 fatty acids which help you recover quickly by reducing inflammation and swelling when you get injured.

Tips on eating and drinking before and after a game:

Build up your calorie intake in the days leading up to a game to ensure your muscles contain a good store of glycogen the agent that powers you. On the day of a game remember that soccer is a stop and go sport that requires fluids and carbohydrates throughout the day of the game.

The night before and 2-3 hours before a game focus on carbohydrates, moderate protein, low fat foods and fluids (pasta with vegetables and chicken, fruit, skimmed milk, cereal, yoghurt, toast, juice (See Table 1). Help your muscles recover fast eat and/or drink a high Carb Snack within 30 minutes after the game.

Young people have different fluid needs to an adult and are more likely to get overheated when playing in hot weather, although fluid loss should also be replenished during cold weather.

You should drink around 150ml to 300ml of a suitable fluid every 20 minutes or so during a game or during training, and keep drinking after exercise even if you do not feel thirsty.

Note: The above is based on various books and research and is only a guide.

Categories
Childrens Health Irish Grassroots Football

Sports Drinks, Overhyped, Overrated and Unhealthy for our kids.

Well recent reports have suggested just that, when it comes to hydrating kids particularly those sports players, there’s a category of beverages that’s causing quite a stir or even a Buzz….’ The power sports drinks’

The commercial departments say they have that “extra” ingredient which gives them an edge, whether it’s an increase in energy, alertness, or even enhancing athletic performance.

However studies have proven that sports make absolutely no difference to performance:

“The hype of these drinks has reached astronomical proportions, and their advertising tentacles have reached down even to minor sports and schools, involving children. Subsequently, there is now a battle raging in US public schools with billions of dollars at stake. Public health advocates are pushing for a ban on sports drinks and flavoured waters in schools, warning that drinks such as Gatorade, Lucozade and Powerade contain as much as two-thirds the sugar of sodas, and more than three times the sodium”.

New Law in the US

According to the Washington Post (September 26, 2007 issue), Senator Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) has introduced a bill would have the government set new nutritional standards for the foods and drinks that schools sell to students. But it’s the issue of these standards which is quickly becoming a hot button topic.

The question of whether sports drinks and vitamin waters should be considered “healthy alternatives,” or “junk food?”  brought this bill to the forefront of the US congress.

The trade groups representing bottlers like Coca-Cola and Pepsi are vehemently countering the bill, stating sports drinks are lower in calories, “appropriate” for high school students, and “essential” to young athletes.

“Just what “appropriate” means is in question, but seeing annual sales of sports drinks reach 7.5 billion in 2008 gives you a good reason as to why these manufacturers are lobbying so hard to keep them in schools. With soft drinks being meant to have been phased out in schools back in 2009, they are counting on these sports drinks to keep the money flowing in”.

“In 2006, sports drinks were the third fastest growing beverage category in the United States, after energy drinks, such as Red Bull, and bottled water, according to the trade journal www.beverage-digest.com/

Under current US law, meals served in school cafeterias must meet some standards, but snack bars, school stores and vending machines may sell anything that contains at least trace amounts of protein, vitamins and minerals.

In other words, they barely have to keep you alive.

With such a loose standards, (and millions spend in advertising to make sure sports drinks are related to health and athletics), is no wonder that many students and children drink them like water and drink them even when they are not exercising at all!

“All of this, of course, assumes that the children in question are actually working out”

Healthy Alternatives

The argument is how beneficial the likes of Lucozade, Gatorade, Powerade and others sports drinks are to young students. Carefully crafted words such as “healthy alternatives” and “essential” are an insult to anyone who understands the issue of nutrition.

Is sports performance more important than overall well being?

Whats in a bottle Gatorade versus a can of Coke?

  • A 355ml bottle of Gatorade contains 75 calories – 21 grams of sugar and 165 milligrams of sodium
  • A can of Coke has 150 calories, 40.5 grams of sugar and 52 milligrams of sodium.

If a student consumes a 600ml bottle of Gatorade, he/she ingests approximately 275 milligrams of sodium, almost 12 percent of the recommended daily allowance for people ages 14 to 18. Already, more than 75 percent of children consume more than the recommended 2,300 milligrams of sodium each day, according to the Institute of Medicine.

Too much sugar and sodium is well understood to be detrimental to our health. When you drink a sports drink inappropriately, you are compounding tooth decay, the possibility of high blood pressure, a likelihood of diabetes, heart disease, obesity, chronic fatigue syndrome and so on.

A report from the University of California at Berkeley warns that inactive students who drink 600ml of sports drink every day for a year may gain about 13 pounds almost a stone. Considering the ingredients, this comes as no surprise.

“Giving children sports drinks is as bad as making them smoke”. – Dr. Donal O’Shea

High Fructose Corn SugarThe sugar/chronic disease connection

(Excerpt from Dr.Mercola)

Just like other sugars high fructose corn sugar (HFCS) disrupts your insulin levels, and elevated insulin levels are going to increase your risk of nearly every chronic disease known to man, including:

  • Cancer
  • Heart disease
  • Diabetes
  • Premature aging
  • Arthritis and osteoporosis

You name it, and you will find elevated insulin levels as a primary factor.

There’s also new evidence that HFCS increases your triglyceride levels and LDL (bad) cholesterol levels. Part of what makes HFCS such an unhealthy product is that it will tend to raise your blood sugar levels and cause sugar to attach too many of your body’s proteins, thus causing permanent damage to them. Because most fructose is consumed in liquid form, these negative metabolic effects are significantly magnified.

Although these drinks are often referred to as “energy” drinks, in the long run, sugar does just the opposite.

It acts like a H-bomb – a quick explosion of energy followed by a plummeting disaster, as your pancreas and other glands do all they can to balance out the toxic stimulation to blood sugar. Any kinesiologist (also known as human kinetics is the scientific study of human movement. Kinesiology addresses physiological, mechanical, and psychological mechanisms) or chiropractor will show you how sugar dramatically reduces strength!

Do kids really need the electrolytes?

Quote – “Most kids you see carrying around sports drinks are not athletes,” said Mary Story, a professor of nutrition at the University of Minnesota’s School of Public Health and one of the authors of the institute’s report. “When you look at the ingredients, its water, high-fructose corn syrup and salt.

The question is who is really benefiting? Is it the kids or the companies that make the drinks?

Makers of sports drinks say they’re better because they replace electrolytes that water does not, and the taste makes people want to drink more, ensuring that they get more hydration, (and more calories). However, studies of sports drinks have shown to be conflicting.

A 2002 (›) study showed that drinking sports drinks while working out allowed athletes to go 37 percent longer before feeling fatigue…

University of New Mexico

In 2004, a researcher said that Gatorade is no better than water because it isn’t retained any better than water”, so while it may make an athlete feel better initially, it isn’t any better for long-term hydration.

All of this, of course, assumes that the children in question are actually working out and not just drinking energy drinks with their lunch. But even otherwise,  it is unnecessary to replace losses of sodium, potassium and other electrolytes during exercise since it is unlikely that a significant depletion the body’s stores of these minerals during normal training.

Only in extreme exercising conditions (over 5 or 6 hours, such as an Ironman or ultra-marathon), is the consumption of a complex sports drink with electrolytes recommended. Athletes who do not consume electrolytes under these conditions risk over hydration (or hyponatremia). (Excerpt from Wikipedia)

Alternatives to Sports Drinks

A lot of these drink organisation tell us a lot of bull, but remember they’re not nutritional experts. High fructose corn syrup is not an essential ingredient, but rather a dangerous additive, making performance drinks for children nothing but marketing hype. ‘I think a lot of us know that’.

Your best bet for primary fluid replacement is pure, fresh water. If your child is going to be involved in a long game, drinking simple carbs (sugar, corn syrup, and so on), will spike blood sugar, which will then be followed by a fall, causing sluggishness and hampering overall performance.

Sports drinks are for athletes who are exerting themselves beyond measure! They are NOT for kids, students who are sitting in study hall or classes doing lessons or even just walking around and marketing them for sports so early on, teaches kids that performance is more important than overall health. 

We live in a culture where manufacturers/advertisers glorify the athlete for us, and we follow along like sheep. Drinking their product does not replace genetics, desire and hard work. It is merely a fad that makes the fat cats rich.

If you value your child’s health, keep them away from this drinks at all costs. 

Some of sports greats have come and gone, they never needed nor used performance enhancing or ‘non enhancing’ drinks, yet they were still able to reach unbelievable levels of performance and rehydrate on the magic of H20. 

Research - Article Edited and adapted: Health in Motion, Wikipedia, Dr Mercola, Washington Post

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Categories
Childrens Health

Interesting Article

Modern life is ‘producing a generation of weaklings’, claims research as physical strength declines in 10-year-olds

This is an Article from the Guardian paper last week, interesting enough!

Children are becoming weaker, less muscular and unable to do physical tasks that previous generations found simple, research has revealed.

As a generation dedicated to online pursuits grows up, 10-year-olds can do fewer sit-ups and are less able to hang from wall bars in a gym. Arm strength has declined in that age group, as has their ability to grip an object firmly.

The findings, published in the child health journal Acta Paediatrica, have led to fresh concern about the impact on children’s health caused by the shift away from outdoor activities.

Who’s Stronger

Academics led by Dr Gavin Sandercock, a children’s fitness expert at Essex University, studied how strong a group of 315 Essex 10-year-olds in 2008 were compared with 309 children the same age in 1998. They found that:

■ The number of sit-ups 10-year-olds can do declined by 27.1% between 1998 and 2008

■ Arm strength fell by 26% and grip strength by 7%

■ While one in 20 children in 1998 could not hold their own weight when hanging from wall bars, one in 10 could not do so in 2008.

“This is probably due to changes in activity patterns among English 10-year-olds, such as taking part in fewer activities like rope-climbing in PE and tree-climbing for fun,” Sandercock said. “Typically, these activities boosted children’s strength, making them able to lift and hold their own bodyweight.”

The fact that 10% could not do the wall bars test and another 10% refused to try was “really shocking”, he added. “That probably shows that climbing and holding their own weight was something they hadn’t done before.”

Previous research

has already shown that children are becoming more unfit, less active and more sedentary and, in many cases, heavier than before.

But the new study also found that children in 2008 had the same body mass index (BMI) as those a decade earlier. Lead author Daniel Cohen, of London Metropolitan University, said this meant that, given their declining strength, the bodies of the recent test group are likely to contain more fat and less muscle then their predecessors. “That’s really worrying from a health point of view. It’s good news that their BMI hasn’t risen, but worrying that pound for pound they’re weaker and probably carrying more fat,” said Sandercock.

Bring in Fitness testing in all schools

The authors want ministers to reduce their reliance on the National Child Measurement Programme, which surveys primary schoolchildren’s BMI, and introduce fitness testing in all schools– a call made last year by the then-chief medical officer, Sir Liam Donaldson.

“Climbing trees and ropes used to be standard practice for children, but school authorities and ‘health and safety’ have contrived to knock the sap out of our children,” said Tam Fry of the Child Growth Foundation.

“Falling off a branch used to be a good lesson in picking yourself up and learning to climb better. Now fear of litigation stops the child climbing in the first place.”

He added: “Fitness tests may or may not be appropriate, but Sandercock should not be discouraging the use of BMI measurements.”

A Department of Health spokeswoman said the government had introduced several programmes promoting active lifestyles among the young, and the health survey for England reported back on physical activity levels. She added: “The Department of Health has no current plans to introduce fitness testing for children.”

Content: Denis Campbell – The Guardian