How to Eat Well: A Primer for Athletes
Copyright: Nancy Clark, MS, RD 7/04
By: Nancy Clark
Eat well. Believe it or not, that’s what most active people need to learn to do. Eat for performance. Eat for health. I am surrounded by athletes who do not know how to eat well. They know how to skip breakfast and lunch. How to stay away from carbs. How to blow their diets. These athletes would not only perform better but also be healthier down the road if they could eat better on a daily basis, eat at the right times to optimize energy, eat the best foods to promote future good health, and eat wisely to manage weight.
For many athletes, eating well seems a trivial concern. They joke about overdosing on Vitamin C-3 (Chocolate Chip Cookies). They are influenced by these prevailing beliefs: Food is fattening; I don’t have time to eat or I don’t have time to eat well. A survey of 50 collegiate football players reports they averaged 59% of their calories from sugars and fats. Yes, that’s a lot of junk food...
The daily intake of those football players contrasts sharply with the daily diet of Diana Dyer, a three-time cancer survivor who optimized her eating and acquired remarkable benefits. After having been diagnosed with breast cancer for a second time (11 years after her first breast cancer diagnosis–and this was several years after a childhood neuroblastoma), Diana decided she would put only “protective foods” in her body. This means a soy-shake with fruit, flax and berries for breakfast, and lunches and dinners abundant with fresh fruit, colorful salads, beans, nuts, fish, soy and other wholesome foods. Being a dietitian, Diana also recognizes the need for “soul foods” (birthday cake, chocolate chip cookies). She eats them on occasions when she wishes to nourish her soul.
So has all this healthy eating done any good? Diana believes her optimal diet is largely responsible for the increase in her white blood cell count. It rose from the too low 2,500 cells/cubic millimeter it had been for 11 years after her first breast cancer treatment to the more normal level of 4,700 after her second breast cancer treatment. As I listened to Diana tell this story at Grand Medical Rounds at the Dana Farber Cancer Center, I internalized how powerful and strong food is as a health protector. Yes, food is fuel and one of life’s pleasures, but the right foods can also be critical health protectors and healers. (Diana's book A Dietitian's Cancer Story and her website www.cancerRD.com offer more information about healing food plans.)
The purpose of this article is to invite you to think how you eat and to offer a few tips on eating well as an athlete ... eating healthfully, appropriately and enjoyably. Eating to heal the tiny injuries that occur with each workout. Eating to refuel the muscles and prepare them for the next session. Eating to optimize muscular growth, enhance the immune system, and protect your body from the diseases of aging. I hope the information will inspire you to choose a positive sports diet that repairs your muscles optimally, fuels them energetically, and protects your good health.
Eating Tip #1. If you have weight to lose, eat; don’t diet.
Diets are oppressive, unrealistic and ineffective. They tend to leave you hungry
all day long and you will never win the war against hunger. As a client of mine
decreed, “My mother put me on my first diet when I was nine years old,
I have gotten fatter and fatter with every successive attempt to lose weight.
Diets have made me fat, not thin!” So true. Do not diet!
The best way to control your weight is to eat––wholesome foods,
quality calories, protective foods. Starting at breakfast, have a fruit smoothie,
oatmeal topped with nuts and honey, multi-grain toast smothered with peanut
butter, yogurt with berries and granola. All of these choices are quick and
easy, tasty, health protective and energy enhancing. Fear not that you’ll
“get fat” eating breakfast. Research indicates breakfast eaters
are not only leaner than breakfast skippers, but also have better quality diets
overall. Plus, you need a hearty breakfast to fuel your afternoon workout (or
refuel your morning workout) and dampen the desire for evening junk food. The
best way to lose weight is to eat satiating food; you can feel fed but still
lose body fat. See Tips #2 and #3...
Eating Tip #2. Include more fiber-rich breads, cereals, fruits and vegetables
on a daily basis.
Fiber is satiating; it keeps you feeling fed. Think oatmeal, fruit smoothie,
fruit on bran cereal, trail mix, fruit salad. Enjoy abundant colorful vegetables––red
tomatoes, yellow squash, green beans, orange carrots. Visit the salad bar .
Have a pile of stir-fried veggies with brown rice.
Take a break from Frosted Flakes, PopTarts, Oreos, soda pop, even non-essential
sports drinks and highly processed energy bars. By eating all the colors of
the rainbow, you’ll consume a variety of health protective fibers and
phytochemicals that you’ll never find in any vitamin pill, protein powder
or gel. Diana eats at least 9 to 14 servings of fruits and vegetables per day--that’s
two or three fruits with each meal plus abundant vegetables.
Eating Tip #3. Eat more nuts and peanut butter.
Nuts add crunch to a meal and substance to a snack. Peanut butter adds oomph
to a sports diet. Feared as being fattening, research indicates that people
who eat nuts or peanut butter five or more times a week are not fatter than
those who stay away from nuts. That’s because nuts offer a satisfying
combination of fiber + protein--two substances that abate hunger.
The fat in nuts is health protective. It boosts your immune system and reduces your risk of heart disease and adult-onset diabetes by more than 20%. Healthful fat is an important part of an athlete’s diet, particularly if you do endurance exercise. Research suggests that runners who boosted their fat intake from a very low fat diet to an average fat intake improved their performance. The researchers believe the additional fat replenished intra-muscular fat stores and provided more fuel for sustaining long workouts.
Instead of snacking on Pringles and Ritz, reach for almonds or peanuts. No hardship there! Enjoy peanut butter & honey sandwiches and PB on multigrain bagels. Even commercial peanut butters like Skippy and Jiff have negligible amounts of the bad (trans) fats that contribute to heart disease. Enjoy this super sports food!
Eating Tip #4. Boost your calcium intake--not only for your bones but also
for improving blood pressure and weight management.
Aim for a calcium-rich food at each meal, be it lowfat milk on cereal, yogurt
with lunch and/or a decaf latte for an afternoon boost. Eight ounces of yogurt
offers 400 milligrams of calcium; 8 ounces of milk, 300. Your target is 1,000
to 1,500 mg/day. Lowfat dairy foods are also excellent sources of high quality,
muscle building protein. Eating milk on cereal before a workout or enjoying
a chocolate milk afterwards for a recovery food is a perfect way to get a protein-carb
combination that enhances muscle growth and repair, as well as optimizes refueling.
Inspired?
If so, here's a sample sports menu to fuel your good intentions! (Adjust the
eating times according to your workout schedule.) The simplest guideline is
to have at least three different types of food at each meal.
Sports nutritionist Nancy Clark, MS RD counsels casual exercisers and competitive
athletes. Her private practice is at Healthworks, the premier fitness center
in Chestnut Hill, MA (617-383-6100). She is author of the best-selling Nancy
Clark's Sports Nutrition Guidebook, Third Edition ($23) and her Food Guide for
Marathoners: Tips for Everyday Champions ($20) Both books have chapters on how
to eat well for sports and health. See www.nancyclarkrd.com or send a check
to Sports Nutrition Services, PO Box 650124, West Newton MA 02465.