Winning with your B game.

Can you win with your B game?

fitness coach devonIf everything goes well in your training, you get a good night’s sleep, you arrive on time, you warm up well, you feel good and you win. Well done. But how often does this happen.

More important is winning with your B game.

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Do we need sleep?

There is still no real explanation of why we need sleep.

As you arrive at work on Monday morning tired, are you thinking I didn’t get enough sleep this weekend?

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Sleep deprivation

Does one bad night’s sleep affect performance?

If you are worried about poor performance after having a bad night’s sleep, that is normal behaviour. The good news is that losing one night’s sleep is unlikely to affect you physically.

Instead it affects your mood and your motivation to train.

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Sleep Deprivation and Insulin Sensitivity

Average sleep levels have dropped

Average sleep in the USA has dropped from 9 hours a night to less than 7 hours per night over the last 100 years: so much for having more leisure time!

This could have an impact on health in the long term as recent research has shown that short term sleep deprivation leads to an inability to regulate insulin as well as people who have a good night’s sleep.

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Sleep- How much should I be getting?

how much sleep should I be getting?In almost every training book, manual or Coaching handout, sleep is covered as a topic very briefly: “the athlete should get 7-9 hours sleep a night” is about the norm, then the author moves on.

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Should I take Creatine? – A summary of recent research

Creatine supplementation for athletes.

linford christie creatineCreatine supplementation became popular with athletes following the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain, when gold medal winners Linford Christie and Sally Gunnell revealed that creatine was a factor in their success.

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The best sports nutrition supplement is…

Arnie supplement

best supplement“How can we make more money from impressionable teenage boys?”

Is a question equipment manufacturers in the 1950s asked. Today, sports supplement companies make a fortune by selling products that promise short cuts and quick gains to young males with low self- esteem.

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Making athletes robust

ro·bust