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Energy and carbohydrate for training and recovery

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TLDR
Football players should achieve an energy intake that provides sufficient carbohydrate to fuel the training and competition programme, supplies all nutrient requirements, and allows manipulation of energy or nutrient balance to achieve changes in lean body mass, body fat or growth.
Abstract
Soccer players should achieve an energy intake that provides sufficient carbohydrate to fuel the training and competition programme, supplies all nutrient requirements, and allows manipulation of energy or nutrient balance to achieve changes in lean body mass, body fat or growth. Although the traditional culture of soccer has focused on carbohydrate intake for immediate match preparation, top players should adapt their carbohydrate intake on a daily basis to ensure adequate fuel for training and recovery between matches. For players with a mobile playing style, there is sound evidence that dietary programmes that restore and even super-compensate muscle glycogen levels can enhance activity patterns during matches. This will presumably also benefit intensive training, such as twice daily practices. As well as achieving a total intake of carbohydrate commensurate with fuel needs, the everyday diet should promote strategic intake of carbohydrate and protein before and after key training sessions to optimize the adaptations and enhance recovery. The achievement of the ideal physique for soccer is a long-term goal that should be undertaken over successive years, and particularly during the off-season and pre-season. An increase in lean body mass or a decrease in body fat is the product of a targeted training and eating programme. Consultation with a sports nutrition expert can assist soccer players to manipulate energy and nutrient intake to meet such goals. Players should be warned against the accidental or deliberate mismatch of energy intake and energy expenditure, such that energy availability (intake minus the cost of exercise) falls below 125 kJ (30 kcal) per kilogram of fat-free mass per day. Such low energy availability causes disturbances to hormonal, metabolic, and immune function.

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Position of the American Dietetic Association, Dietitians of Canada, and the American College of Sports Medicine: Nutrition and athletic performance.

TL;DR: This position paper reviews the current scientific data related to the energy needs of athletes, assessment of body composition, strategies for weight change, the nutrient and fluid needs of Athletes, special nutrient needs during training, the use of supplements and nutritional ergogenic aids, and the nutrition recommendations for vegetarian athletes.
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Nutritional Strategies to Promote Postexercise Recovery

TL;DR: During postexercise recovery, optimal nutritional intake is important to replenish endogenous substrate stores and to facilitate muscle-damage repair and reconditioning to stimulate muscle protein synthesis, inhibit protein breakdown, and allow net muscle protein accretion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stress, sleep and recovery in elite soccer: A critical review of the literature

TL;DR: A comprehensive and critical review of the current available literature regarding the potential acute and chronic stressors placed on elite soccer players that may result in compromised sleep quantity and/or quality is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Body composition in athletes and sports nutrition: an examination of the bioimpedance analysis technique

TL;DR: Although the BIA method shows promise for estimating body composition in athletes, future research should focus on the development of general athlete-specific equations using a TBW-based three- or four-compartment model.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

American College of Sports Medicine position stand. The female athlete triad.

TL;DR: The female athlete triad (Triad) refers to the interrelationships among energy availability, menstrual function, and bone mineral density, which may have clinical manifestations including eating disorders, functional hypothalamic amenorrhea, and osteoporosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical and metabolic demands of training and match-play in the elite football player.

TL;DR: There are major individual differences in the physical demands of players during a game related to physical capacity and tactical role in the team, and these differences should be taken into account when planning the training and nutritional strategies of top-class players, who require a significant energy intake during a week.
Journal ArticleDOI

Luteinizing hormone pulsatility is disrupted at a threshold of energy availability in regularly menstruating women.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that LH pulsatility is disrupted only below a threshold of energy availability deep into negative energy balance and suggest priorities for future investigations into the mechanism that mediates the nonlinear dependence of LH pulsatile on energy availability.
Journal Article

The female athlete triad

TL;DR: The female athlete triad: disordered eating, amenorrhea, osteoporosis KIMBERLY YEAGER;ROSEMARY AGOSTINI;AURELIA NATTIV;BARBARA DRINKWATER; Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise
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