The purpose of Performance Nutrition is to unleash the power of food so that athletes have more:
- Time to train: By reducing the risk of injury and illness.
- Effective training: By facilitating the adaptive response to training.
- Competition performance: From getting the food right in the days leading into competition; through individual race nutrition plans to cutting edge ergogenic aids.
Using cutting edge performance nutrition science, we work closely with athletes and coaches to support performance in the following areas:
- Individualised food and supplementation plans: Helping athletes understand what to eat, when to eat around training and why this impacts upon performance.
- Discipline specific strategies: Nutrition strategies that focus on the demands of the different disciplines within athletics and the different athletes within the disciplines.
- Biochemical and haematological analysis to identify deficiencies and support optimal metabolic function.
- Body composition assessments and guidance in achieving optimal form.
Nutrition helps an athlete to:
- Prevent injury and illness and reduce time spent away from training.
- Adapt from training through exploiting nutrient training interactions.
- Support competition performance whether it be fuelling for a marathon, nutrition priming for a 100m or planning nutrition strategies between heats.
Examples of Performance Nutrition Support:
- Injury and Illness Prevention/Treatment:
- Periodising carbohydrate intake to allow the immune system to function effectively during heavy periods of training.
- Calcium timing to enhance bone recovery.
- Probiotics support for helping gut function and general immunity.
- Diets to support tendon healing.
- Adaptation to Training:
- Nutrition and training interaction to maximise performance
- Protein timing – amount and type to maximise adaptation to specific training.
- Nutrient timing to maximise recovery from exercise.
- Maximising impact from altitude training
- Competition Performance
- Fuelling race performance.
- Enhancing power:weight
- Nutritional priming on competition day.
- Optimising body composition
- Performing in hot conditions
- Menu planning
- Travel nutrition.
George Robinson (PhD Student at British Athletics)