Don’t call it over-training, they say, call it over-reaching. Or better yet, call it under-performing. All that to get away from the accusatory tone that comes with the word. How much is too much? Well, it all depends on how they play, right?

At the ACSM conference I attended a session on “Over-training” in high-performing athletes. I particularly tuned into “team sports” and “endurance athletes,” courtesy of Dr. William Sands (gymnasts) and Dr. Randall L. Wilber (track athletes). Fatigue is the enemy, for sure. It is more related to the volume of the workload than the intensity of the effort. So, to be efficient in training design, integrate performance conditioning into the coach’s training plan. This is the principle Fit2Finish has developed: organize the game to train the desired fitness. Don’t separate them.

Here’s what I learned:

Here’s what I knew:

Interesting training model: green zone–amber zone–red zone

FUN Fact #1: many high level athletes say that one must push beyond the amber line into the red zone in their training to recognize where this line is so they can approach it but not cross.

Take to the field:

FUN fact #2: Protein ingested before sleep improves overnight muscle recovery and force production by 22%. (reported in Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 2012)