Nutrition for Swimmers

Nutrition is really important for maximising performance and growth. After talent and effective training, good nutrition is the Enhance your training and performance. Swimmers should eat a variety of foods and a diet which is high in fruit and vegetables and low in fat and sugar. Loss of fluid and a reduction in carbohydrate stores are two major causes of fatigue in a swimmer. Carbohydrate produces energy, protein builds and repairs muscles.

Effects of poor nutrition


Training:

Heavy legs

Can’t keep up

Tired

Racing:

Can usually feel it at back end of a meet

Feelings of fatigue

Longer recovery

Effects of fluid loss

Reduction in muscular strength

Perception of effort is increased

Fatigue

Reduced skill

Inability to concentrate

Drink before, during and after exercise

Eat to compete

Boosting Carbohydrates for competition:

Start the day with a bowl of cereal (not sugary) or toast.(wholemeal)

Porridge with banana and honey

Wholemeal rice and pasta with tomato based sauce

Baked beans

Sweet potato, jacket potato

Low fat snacks such as dried fruit, malt loaf, bagels, bananas.

Pre event meals & snacks:

Breakfast cereal with milk

Porridge with syrup and raisins

Wholemeal Toast with scraping of honey or jam

Banana or jam sandwiches

Muffins, crumpets, pancakes

Beans on toast

Jacket potato with low fat filling

The night before competition:

Rice or pasta with low fat sauce

Noodle dish

Beans on toast

Egg on toast

Chunky vegetable based soup and sandwich

Boiled or mashed potato with meat or fish

Between races:

Diluted squash

Bananas and raisins

Energy bars ( check sugar content)

Plain biscuits

Rice cakes

Fruit

Food to have after a training session

Meals and snacks must be carbohydrate rich, with a little bit of protein. The protein will help you to recover quicker. Protein is used to build and repair muscles.

Sandwiches (like bananas/jam/honey)

Rolls/pitta bread

Muesli bars and dried fruit bars

Popcorn

Fresh/dried/canned fruit

Rusks or dried cereals

Current buns/tea cakes/Malt loaf/Raisin bread

Sesame snacks

Sesame sticks

Fruit cake

Plain-type biscuits,

garibaldi/fig rolls

Pop-tarts

Jelly cubes

Scones/muffins/brioche/crumpets

Bowl of cereal

Toast

Low-fat rice pudding

Low-fat fruit yoghurts

Crispbreads/rice cakes/crackers

Slice pizza (thick base)

Bread pudding/cheese buns/scotch pancakes

Tuna pasta salad

NUTRITIONAL GUIDELINES 

FOR AFTER TRAINING

Train Hard! Don't forget these guidelines.

The purpose of a recovery snack or drink is to replace the energy that has been used and the sweat that has been lost during a training session.

Think about the timing of your recovery snack. 

The sooner you eat after training, the better your recovery will be. 

You want to be eating within 30 minutes after a training session. 

Keep food handy in your bags.

Drinks

Make sure that you drink plenty of fluids to avoid becoming dehydrated. It is important that you are replacing the water lost by sweating in training.

* Water

* Squash

* Fruit juice


A healthy balanced diet rich in carbohydrates with vegetable and fruit will help to keep you healthy and in form.