Showing posts with label sleep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sleep. Show all posts

Monday, September 22, 2008

Ride, Sleep and Repeat

A look at Team Columbia’s schedule on Friday, the day of the 99-mile seventh stage at the Tour de France. Riders were given the schedule before going to bed. Often, before breakfast, medical teams show up unannounced to test the riders’ blood or urine for drugs or anomalies.

  • 8:55 A.M. Wake up.
  • 9 Breakfast is coffee, bread, croissants, eggs and cereal.
  • 10 A carbohydrate-rich meal of pasta is served about three hours before the start.
  • 10:45 Riders pack their bags, which are loaded onto a truck and sent to the next hotel.
  • 11:15 The team bus leaves so that it arrives at the start an hour before the stage begins. On the bus, the team directors meet with the riders to plan tactics.
  • 1:10 P.M. The stage starts.

AFTER THE RACE Riders return to the bus, where they clean up, change, eat and relax on the way to their hotel.

  • 6 P.M. Each rider has an hour of therapeutic massage. It is also time to chat with friends and family on the phone.
  • 8 Dinner.
  • 10-11 Bedtime. Some riders watch TV, others read or go online. This is a time to forget about the race.

Source: The New York Times - Other Sport - by Michael Barry


Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Sleep more when you train

"1/3rd of Americans get 6 hours of sleep a night or less when they really need at least 8 1/2," says James Mass, Ph.D. If you are training, says Maas, shoot for 9 hours. Between the 7th and 8th hour, you go into your last phase of REM sleep. "That's when your mind really restores and repairs itself," he says. Miss that phase and your reaction time and concentration suffer. The best way to work up to the right amount of sleep is to add 15 minutes a night until you start waking up feeling alert and energized all day. Bicycling Magazine, Nov 2001

Source: Bikyle.com- Cycling Tips/ Photo from wordpress.com

Established in December 2006