Last month the Food Programme on Radio 4 ran a 2-part series
entitled Eating to Run. Naturally I was intrigued and listened in. The program covered a wide range of topics with a focus on
how the food we eat can impact on our performance.
- They spoke to expert sports nutritionists at Loughborough University about the right balance of macros and foods for elite British athletes.
- They spoke to Brendan Foster about what he ate when he was breaking world records. Toast and honey.
- They looked at what the world’s best marathon runners form Kenya eat (mostly rice and potatoes), and the diets of the running mad Japanese who eat a lot of fermented foods and run a lot faster than we do.
- They spoke to Scott Durek, perhaps the worlds most gifted ultra-distance runner. He advocates a vegan diet with lots of fermented foods as this improved the efficiency of the gut.
- And they briefly described Tim Noakes and the LCHF diet. Noakes was the great pionner of nutritional research for performance running and he now admits to have got it all wrong.
Lots of people advocating hugely different diets. And loads
of contrasts; the scientists from Loughborough insist that you need to burn
carbs and you need to recover quickly with a protein and carb drink; and the Kenyans
(who happen to be rather better than the British) who eat nothing at all after
a long training run. Brendan foster replenished his body with a couple of pints
of shandy!
And the conclusions that I come to are these:
Eat whatever works for you and your body, but make sure you
are not harming actually yourself.
I believe that a lifetime of high carbohydrate food is
likely to contribute to bad health, especially if you are intolerant to carbs
as many people undoubtedly are.
I also believe that most of the science described by sport
nutritionists and quoted by Lucozade is aimed solely at elite athletes.
And as Charlie Spedding puts it so well in his biography entitled Last to First: "Why is it that
most of that fastest British marathon runners in the last 40 years were running over
20 years ago?" (In 1984, for instance,
2hr 15min was broken 25 times by British athletes. In 2012 it happened on just
three occasions). Something is not right here.
The notion that we must run on carbs in order to be
champions relates to a tiny fraction of runners; and except for sprinters the
rest of us could certainly run just as well on fat if we chose to and would be
best off considering what energy source is more healthy. And the answer to this
would appear to be to “Eat Real Food, mostly vegetables and not too much”.
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