1 / 12

Diet & Athletic Performance

Diet & Athletic Performance. Noadswood Science, 2012. Diet & Athletic Performance. To understand how diet can aid athletic performance. Food Groups. What are the 7 food groups? Carbohydrates Fat Protein Vitamins Minerals Fibre Water. Essential?.

moira
Download Presentation

Diet & Athletic Performance

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Diet & Athletic Performance Noadswood Science, 2012

  2. Diet & Athletic Performance • To understand how diet can aid athletic performance

  3. Food Groups • What are the 7 food groups? • Carbohydrates • Fat • Protein • Vitamins • Minerals • Fibre • Water

  4. Essential? • Nutrients are found within different foods, and they all play important roles within the body

  5. Endurance • In endurance sports it is crucial to build up a store of carbohydrates – specifically before competing athlete’s want to maximise the amount of glycogen stores in the muscles… • To aid this they will control their diet very specifically, increasing the amount of complex carbohydrates they eat (bread, pasta rice etc…)

  6. Power • Other athletes will concentrate on a diet high in protein – this will build up their muscles for strength…

  7. Muscle Strength • A diet high in protein will help build up muscles – baseline measurements of the strength of muscle uses the grip test method • A hand grip dynamometer can be used to measure grip strength • This records the maximum reading (kg) from three attempts

  8. Sports Drinks • Sports drinks are crucial to an athletes performance – isotonic drinks (sports drinks) not only include water but sugars and electrolytes which are lost during exercise… • Isotonic – designed to quickly replace the fluids which are lost by sweating (and a boost of carbohydrates) • Hypertonic – supplements for daily carbohydrate intake • Hypotonic – replace fluids lost through sweating and are low in carbohydrates

  9. Make Your Own • It is very easy to make your own sports drinks: - • Isotonic – 500ml unsweetened fruit juice (orange, apple, pineapple) + 500ml water mixed together in a jug and cool down in fridge • Hypertonic – 400ml of squash + one litre of water + pinch of salt mixed together in a jug and cool down in fridge • Hypotonic – 100ml of squash + one litre of water + pinch of salt mixed together in a jug and cool down in fridge

  10. Fitness • Being fit means your body is able to do the activities your lifestyle demands - e.g. being able to run; get upstairs without getting out of breathe; being strong enough to lift things etc… • Fitness is different for each person, but is made up of: - • Strength • Speed • Stamina • Suppleness

  11. Fitness • When you exercise your muscles work harder - using up more oxygen • To compensate, your heart beats quicker pumping more blood around your body • Your breathing rate also increases, allowing you to get more oxygen into your body (and expel more carbon dioxide)

  12. Heart Rate • Fit people (who exercise a lot) have stronger heart muscles, so their heart pumps more blood with each beat • This means it can beat less than an unfit person’s and still pump the same amount of blood • So fit people usually have slower resting heart beat rates • After exercise a fit person’s heart rate usually returns to its resting rate quicker than an unfit person • This is also true of their breathing rate

More Related