How Do Athletes Perform At A Top Level Beyond Age 40? This 41-year-old Reveals Strategies That Even Regular Guys Can Use
I’M NOT AN ELITE ATHLETE. I’m just a guy on the precipice of middle age who enjoys running, biking, soccer and tennis. If I can push myself to my physical limit a couple of times a week and still have the energy to crawl around with my daughter, then I’m satisfied.
That makes me a useful filter. The pros have unlimited budgets and few demands on their waking hours beyond making themselves fitter. If you want to spend thousands – or tens of thousands – to sleep in an oxygen pod wearing infrared pyjamas, then knock yourself out. But chances are you care only about things that work, are safe and fit your schedule and budget. So trust the guy with a day job, a bad back and a new baby. Here’s what I learned in two years of reporting for my book Play On.
Periodise your regimen
The importance of periodising and the risks of not doing so have been drilled into my head by the likes of soccer coach Raymond Verheijen and exercise scientist Trent Stellingwerff. For an elite athlete, periodising can mean creating a structured program of build-up and tapering that yields peak fitness at a precise time. For me, it’s more about the principles: ramping up training gradually, preparing my body for specific demands and avoiding fatigue. If you invite me to play soccer and I haven’t been keeping in soccer shape, or if I’m nursing an injury I could play through, I say no. Benching yourself sucks, but it doesn’t suck as much as missing an entire season because you got hurt.
Emphasise recovery
This story is from the July 2018 edition of Men's Health Australia.
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This story is from the July 2018 edition of Men's Health Australia.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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