Sleep is a key component in achieving optimum performance in sports and daily activities
"A night of sleep is as much preparation for the subsequent day's activity as it is recovery from that of the previous day" John Allan Hobson
In today's modern society, sleep is an afterthought. With a culture that praises working hard above all else, sleep is very low on the priority list of most individuals. I blame it on the lack of education for the youth and the general public. We cannot fix or alleviate what we do not know is broken.
This is probably the reason I get looked at as if I'm speaking a lost language when I mention to my athletes that an average person should get around 7-8 hours of sleep and that athletes typically need more. Many athletes rely on caffeine to get through the day, without realizing the athlete is perpetuating their poor sleep cycle.
Getting a full night of sleep may seem like a dream to many so in this article I will attempt to break down what sleep is, why it's important and how to improve the quality of our sleep.
While I am primarily focusing on how sleep affects athletic performance in this article, please realize that lack of sleep has much more devastating and long-lasting effects on the body than just running fast or not getting a new personal record.
WHAT IS SLEEP?
Many people think that sleep is just a time when your mind gets to rest but this could be further from the truth. Sleep is a state where awareness of environmental stimuli is reduced. It is distinguished from wakefulness by a decreased ability to react to stimuli, but is more reactive than a coma or disorders of consciousness, with sleep displaying different, active brain patterns. Sleep serves an essential function that allows your body and mind to recharge, leaving you refreshed and alert when you wake up. Healthy sleep helps the body remain healthy and stave off diseases. Without enough sleep, the brain cannot function properly. This can impair your abilities to concentrate, think clearly, and process memories. This can explain why a lack of sleep or quality sleep can make you feel lethargic or unable to optimally perform.
There are four different major theories as to why we sleep:
Energy conservation
The main function of sleep is to reduce a person's energy demand during part of the day and night when it is least efficient to hunt for food. The body has decreased metabolism during sleep. This concept is backed by the way our metabolic rate drops during sleep. Research suggests that eight hours of sleep for human beings can produce a daily energy savings of 35 percent.
This could be a result of not having readily available food in the early development of humans so our bodies had to rest during the night so we could have energy during the day until the next meal.
Inactivity theory
The inactivity theory is based on the concept that humans were less active at night because we might die from the predation of injury in the dark, thus creating an evolutionary and reproductive benefit of sleeping at night.5
Restoration Theory
Restoration theory is based on the fact that sleep allows for the body to repair and replete cellular components necessary for biological functions that become depleted the longer we stay awake and deprive ourselves of sleep. This is backed by the findings that many functions in the body such as muscle repair, tissue growth, protein synthesis, and release of many of the important hormones for growth occur primarily during sleep.
Brain plasticity theory
Brain plasticity theory states that sleep is necessary for neural reorganization and growth of the brain's structure and function. It is clear that sleep plays a role in the development of the brain in infants and children and explains why infants must sleep upwards of 14 hours per day.
The brain has trouble processing what we have learned during the day or trouble recalling information in the future if it does not receive a healthy amount of sleep.
I believe that it is not one but a combination of these theories as to why we need sleep. This not only applies to us humans but to all animals. All animals need sleep.
WHY IS SLEEP IMPORTANT?
Sleep is the primary factor in athletic performance. This is not to say that sleep will alter your genetic code and make you faster but that proper sleep will help you reach the optimal athletic performance capacity. Athletes always want to know what supplements they can take to get better while ignoring the fact that sleep is the best legal performance-enhancing drug.
Usain Bolt slept around 9.5-10 hours a day during his time competing as an elite athlete. Sleep after a performance is just as important as sleep is after a performance. An athlete's speed of recovery is markedly improved as sleep helps to fight against chronic inflammation.
EFFECTS ON THE BODY WITH SIX HOURS OR LESS OF SLEEP
Time to physical exhaustion is dropped by 30%
Peak muscle strength decreases
Exhalation of carbon dioxide decreases
Inhalation of oxygen decreases
Perspiration decreases
Risk of injury increases
Age at a much faster rate
If you are an athlete or a coach, the bullet points above should be very alarming. No matter how we want to look at it or attempt to justify it, there are no benefits for lack of sleep or shortcuts to getting the sleep back. Lack of sleep produces a lower quality of life.
HOW SLEEP HELPS ATHLETIC PERFORMANCE
SLEEP EXTENSION
A study conducted on the Stanford University men's varsity basketball team showed that players that had 10 hours of sleep for five to seven weeks had a significant improvement in all measures after habitual sleep extension. Players that slept more demonstrated faster sprint times and greater shooting accuracy. Players also reported improved alertness and mood and less sleepiness and fatigue.
Although this study was conducted with basketball players, there is a good possibility that some of the improvements experienced by the players would also apply to track and field athletes. For example, this study shows that the players increased their sprint times by 4.5% with sleep extension. All power athletes should take this information to heart. If a bit of sleep extension can help an athlete perform at an optimal level then why wouldn't an athlete take full advantage of the benefits?
NAPPING
Napping can be beneficial to athletes suffering from some degree of sleep deprivation. A 30-minute nap has been shown to increase 20-meter sprint performance and alertness, and decrease sleepiness. Although athletes should be getting eight-plus hours of sleep a night, a quick nap may be quite beneficial to athletes before a big competition or tough practice. Especially, when time constraints just will not allow an athlete to get adequate sleep. It is said that Usain Bolt woke up from a nap 35 minutes before he broke the world record.
INJURY PREVENTION
A study of middle and high school athletes found that teens who slept less than eight hours per night were 70% more likely to report an injury than those who slept more than eight hours. Athletes that slept six hours or less per night were 80% more likely to report an injury compared to athletes that slept nine hours or more per night that only reported a 15-20% chance of injury. Decreased sleep has been shown to be immunosuppressive and increases susceptibility to upper respiratory infections in particular.
Sleep helps to prevent injury. Athletes and coaches have to be very conscious of sleep and rest. When an athlete has finals or has to stay up late studying for an exam, it would be wise for the athletes and coaches to reduce the training volume so that the athlete can recover. The highest risk for injury occurs when the training load increases and sleep duration decreases.
RECOVERY
Sleep is a typically overlooked part of recovery by athletes. Sleep is the body's natural way to repair itself. Imagine that each night your body needs eight hours of sleep to completely repair itself but yet an athlete is only getting six hours of sleep. Eventually, the body starts to break down if this repetitive cycle continues to repeat.
Lack of sleep is one of the main causes of fatigue and tiredness among athletes. During sleep, recovery is largely promoted through hormone activity. Melatonin helps to neutralize oxidative radicals which harm cells and promote tissue inflammation. Melatonin also regulates the circadian rhythm in response to light with low and high levels of secretion.
Sleep promotes the restoration of the immune and endocrine systems, recovery of the nervous system and the metabolic expenditure of the previous training day, and stimulating memory and learning potential for the subsequent training day.
SLEEP BARRIERS
Training and Competition
The training schedule can significantly affect an athlete's sleep duration. Athletes typically have decreased sleep and increased pretraining fatigue before days with early morning training and nighttime competition. For coaches that like to do early morning practices on a Friday morning before a cross country meet or have random morning practices during the season, that extra hour of sleep that you are depriving your athletes of may be much more detrimental than we think. Most coaches think that they are getting their athletes an extra hour of sleep the day before when they are actually just depriving them of sleep.
Track and cross country meets typically increase the stress and anxiety level of athletes. Many athletes suffer from symptoms of insomnia. Over 35% of athletes have reported symptoms of insomnia related to the stress of competition.
Academic Pressures
High School athletes' sleep duration and quality are also greatly affected by academic pressures. Many athletes must maintain straight A's while taking AP classes and also studying for standardized tests for college. While this issue is not unique to athletes, they have to manage the additional time constraints that come along with training and competing.
Sadly, this usually means that athletes have to sacrifice sleep so that they can keep up with their academic commitments, possibly exposing younger athletes to an even greater risk of sleep deprivation. I have personally noticed that runners I train during the summer typically seem to be much more energetic and less stressed when it comes to training. I attribute it to athletes being able to get more sleep and not having to deal with the daily stress of school.
DEVELOPING GOOD SLEEPING HABITS
Relaxation, goal setting, imagery, and self-talk help are all tools that an athlete can use to minimize the effects of stress on the athlete's performance. Visualization of desired outcomes the days before a big competition can help to boost the athlete's confidence which may lead to better sleep and therefore, better performance. Visualization techniques can help an athlete have a clear mind and relax before going to bed, in turn, leading to better quality sleep.
TIPS FOR BETTER SLEEP
Sleep needs to be consistent in order to improve the quantity and quality of sleep
This means going to sleep and waking up at the same time every day of the week.
65 degrees is the optimal temperature to fall asleep.
The body needs to drop its core temperature to about 2-3 degrees Fahrenheit in order to fall asleep
Avoid caffeine
Caffeine negatively affects your quality of sleep
For the people that say that I fall asleep after drinking coffee, the quality of deep sleep declines by about 20%, which is why those people wake up still feeling tired and have to drink another cup
No reason for youth to ever have caffeine
Establish a bedtime routine
Do not sleep with your phone in reaching distance
Go to sleep early enough so that you get at least get the 7-8 hours of sleep
In conclusion, sleep is a non-negotiable biological necessity. We cannot negotiate on how much we sleep with our bodies. It is an innate part of our being. We are the only animal in the world that does not abide by our natural sleep cycle.
While I do realize that it may be close to impossible for some people to get 7-8 hours of sleep every night, nonetheless, that is what we should be aiming for every day whether we achieve the goal or not. The decimation of sleep is having a catastrophic impact on the health and wellness of young athletes. Sleep deprivation is an epidemic that can only be addressed by intentionally treating sleep as one of the most important factors in our lives. We are not meant to be slaves to caffeine.