[Perform Beautifully] Is Your Program Best Suited for Your Sport?
Food. Sleep. Supplements. Are they important? You bet they are! But they take on a whole new meaning when they are wrapped in to your training program and you are actually trying to elicit an effect out of them. What you find a lot these days are people who read a good amount of information regarding particular topics and then take the pieces that resonated the most with them and incorporate them into their program. This is not necessarily a bad practice and many good things can come of it until the pieces you are putting together no longer blend together to produce the training effect that you want. This happens simply because you lost focus and began trying the latest supplement fad or you adopted the “amazing” food plan of your buddy and neither of these had anything to do with your ultimate goal.
When you know what you should be focusing on with your sport, it makes it so much easier to tailor your food plan and gym life to reflect those goals:
BASKETBALL, SOCCER, TENNIS AND ETC.
These sports are power sports. At some point in the game (mainly from beginning to end, haha) you are going to perform short, powerful moves that require a major shift in direction or some other form of speed/agility. You need to be strong, quick, alert and fast to be able to be competitive here. You also need to have endurance as these games last long. So you need to be able to come back hard and fast time and time again. This is no easy feat when you are doing it with the steak and cheese sub you had the other day washed down with two beers. That’s not going to work so let’s try something else:
Performing: 2 days/week (maybe you’re in a league)
Eating: 45% more than baseline
Macro Breakdown: 25 to 35% protein
45 to 55% carbs
Fats round out the remainder
Training: 3 days lifting—powerlifts abound in here!
2 endurance cardio days recommended
1 day functional SAQ type training
Supplements: One that supports immune function
One that supports recovery
A few that harness alertness and proper cell function
Hydration: Critical
MARATHON, TRIATHALON, IRONMAN, CYCLING, ADVENTURE RACING
These sports are all about the endurance factor. You must be able to go for long periods of activity without losing speed or effectiveness. You need staying power here and that’s not going to happen with you eating goos and gels like they are breakfast. Save those for long runs and race days and focus on a plan that’s going to give you all the food you need to be able to perform time and time again. The take home message for you: recovery.
Performing: 5 days/week
Eating: 55% more than baseline
Macro Breakdown: 50 to 60% carbs
25 to 35% fat
Protein round outs the remainder
Training: 2 days lifting—short, full body romps
1 day functional with lots of BW training
Supplements: Many that support immune function and antioxidant properties
A few that support recovery
One that supports proper cell function
Hydration: Crucial
WRESTLER, MMA, POWERLIFTER, RECREATIONAL LIFTER
These sports are all about muscle and strength. You need to be able to move your weight around here and it needs to be fast for whatever size you are at the time. This is where you hear terms like “pound for pound” or “powerful for his size” and etc. You do not need the same type of endurance above; you need to maintain strength for a long time. See below for a snap shot of your requirements.
Performing: 3 to 5 days/week
Eating: 45 to 60% above baseline (depends on weight class and etc.)
Macro Breakdown: 30 to 40% protein
20 to 25% fat
Carbs round out the remainder (high on ST side)
Training: 4 days lifting—powerlifts, olympic lifts, BW
1 day support lift that nurture grip, neck, rotator function
3 days/week moderate cardio
Supplements: Many that support proper cell function/growth
One that supports recovery
Some that support immune function
Hydration: Important
What you see here are 3 very different programs for 3 very different sports. What I normally see are the same nutrition and supplement programs for the very different training programs. Men tend to take care of their training first, nutrition second. They try to fuel their needs based on “an as needed” basis and that is a huge mistake. Again, if you want this vessel to perform for you in the manner in which was meant, you need to give it what it needs when it needs it. You cannot have a one size fits all type of food/supplement mentality when your training is so vastly different.
Next, I’ll show you how women are a bit different. We want to mother all over our food and what/how/when we eat but do whatever for training but hope to have a different training result every time. That’ll be fun! See you tomorrow when I have a recipe treat for you! WOOP WOOP!:o)








Jodi – this is exactly the type of info I was looking for! Two questions: 1) How do you determine baseline? and 2) do you follow these guidelines 7 days a week or only on the days you are participating in your sport? If you only follow on the days you are participating in your sport, what do you eat the other days? Thanks and keep the good info coming! Dani
So many great points here. I think people get a little information overload sometimes and apply a little bit of what they read one place and a little bit from others and expect success.
I train differently than many of my friends so they can’t eat, recover, supplement the same way I do or they won’t be successful.
Just seeing these 3 different programs juxtaposed is so enlightening. All of the boo-boo’s we make when we just pick and choose with no regard to goal. Awesome–and useful!–info.
Hey girlie!
first let me say, i love your new blog! it is very informational, straight forward and inspirational!
question: i have been reading a lot lately that being on the birth control pill can hinder muscle gain – what is your take on the subject?
Dani: 1)baseline is BMR and it is not always the “calculated” one 2) that depends on your goal so I can’t give a blanket answer for that. Normally, though, it changes throughout the days of the week. Thank you, girl!
Joanna: You are so right!
Heather: Thank you, girl!!
Lori: Thank you!!!! I might have to do a post on that one, girl. I can’t my hands on the study though… Let me look into that for you!:o)