At the peak of every elite athlete’s competitive career, their dietary and exercise habits are developed for a performance purpose — to play at peak condition on the field, court or course. Immediately after every athlete’s competitive career ends, their dietary and exercise needs cease being centered on athletic performance and must evolve to meet basic daily health and wellness needs.
Elite athletes spend years, if not decades, developing performance-based habits which range from ingesting up to 5,000 calories per day to regular “max outs” in weight rooms. During the performance-purpose years, those athletes also often have teams of experts — team coaches, strength and conditioning coaches, nutritionists, trainers, doctors — providing roadmaps to athletes which reinforce those habits. Immediately following the end of their competitive careers, elite level athletes’ dietary and physical health needs evolve from being performance-purposed to being lifelong health-and-wellness-purposed. However, too often, those athletes do not know how to change their habits to match these new needs, and they also lose the support staff that have guided them for so long.
Too often, the elite athlete finishes his or her competitive career and does not know what he or she does not know — first, that they need to evolve and, second, how to go about doing so. The Nutrition and Exercise Pillar for the Always An Athlete curriculum emphasizes for student-athletes the need to begin thinking about adapting their habits before they need to i.g. before leaving competitive sports, and should provide them with fundamentals so they can develop their own roadmap.
LEARN MORE