To Snooze or Not to Snooze: Sleeping Between Sessions

Earlier this month, via our Facebook fan page, we were asked a question by a parent who was concerned about multi-session meets.

I am interested in hearing opinions on how much to sleep/rest between prelims/finals. One caveat: this question is for a 15 year old girl who is still maturing. She is finaling at the sectional/zone level, and now has junior national cuts, so it’s an important issue for us going forward. Anyway, we have always been of the opinion that she needed to sleep as much as possible before finals, as in 1 1/2 to 2 hrs., especially since early prelims usually meant she’d not gotten as much sleep the night before as preferred (she’s a 9-10 hour a night sleeper left to her own devices). However, at a zone meet this summer when she had roommates from other teams, some had the opinion from their coaches that you should not sleep more than 45 min. to an hour b/c your muscles won’t have time to wake back up before finals. Anybody have an opinion on that or an experience to share?

 

Here’s my thoughts on the issue.

Sleeping between sessions is fairly common for swimmers, but the amount of time to spend on it really depends on how far apart sessions are. If you’ve got a 5 hour gap before you have to warmup, a 2 hour nap probably won’t be a problem. If the break is only 3 hours, you might limit your sleeping time to more like an hour. The important thing is to remember to wake up with plenty of time to get yourself loose and to restore your body to it’s waking functionality. As a good rule of thumb, try and be up and moving around about an hour before having to leave for the pool. This should give your body plenty of time to be ready to go.

A swimmer also has to know their own body. If you tend to feel really groggy after napping, then leave a little extra time to wake up. If you usually snap back to attention immediately when you alarm goes off, then the hour should be fine. Also be sure to leave time to eat before a nap, as eating right before finals could exacerbate any hangover from a mid-day nap.

The most important thing is that you get plenty of sleep on a regular basis. One of the most famous studies done on sleep and athletic performance was done with the Stanford swim team. After 6 weeks of getting 10 hours of sleep a night, 5 members of the team were able to improve their 15 meter times by .51 seconds, and their reaction times off the block by .15 seconds.

But this is a sleep debt that the athletes repaid over 6 weeks, and includes long periods of better sleeping habits. Other studies have demonstrated that one night of shortened sleep doesn’t have much of an effect, if any, on performance. If a swimmer is getting 9-10 hours of sleep a night, shortening a nap between sessions shouldn’t have a significant effect. If anything, swim coaches should rethink the seemingly pervasive theory that early-morning practices are a way to develop mentally tough, and therefore better trained, swimmers.

The biggest effect that getting up earlier than normal for a big meet can have on a swimmer is their mood and attitude. A cranky swimmer will not be mentally focused enough to swim well. So the biggest thing you can do for your swimmer is to not let her believe that an extra half-an-hour of sleep between sessions will make or break her meet. Keep her focused on racing and on the pure enjoyment of competition, and you’ll see the best results.

I am interested in hearing opinions on how much to sleep/rest between prelims/finals. One caveat: this question is for a 15 year old girl who is still maturing. She is finaling at the sectional/zone level, and now has junior nat’l cuts, so it’s an important issue for us going forward. Anyhoo, we have always been of the opinion that she needed to sleep as much as possible before finals, as in 1 1/2 to 2 hrs., especially since early prelims usually meant she’d not gotten as much sleep the night before as preferred (she’s a 9-10 hour a night sleeper left to her own devices). However, at a zone meet this summer when she had roommates from other teams, some had the opinion from their coaches that you should not sleep more than 45 min. to an hour b/c your muscles won’t have time to wake back up before finals. Anybody have an opinion on that or an experience to share?

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NESWIM
13 years ago

As former swimmer and parent of swimmers that currently are either age groupers or college age my experience is that first and foremost don’t be too concerned with the amount of sleep (or lack thereof) for a still developing swimmer. As pointed out, its consistent rest throughout the season that is most important and the swimmer shouldn’t be too concerned or nervous about lack of sleep. My kids did not consistently nap until they got into their late teens….my youngest still doesn’t nap but instead reads or does his “electronics”….I agree 100% that as a parent you need to manage the logistics supply (food/drink/rest) as if it were a finely honed operation. Have everything mapped out so that your child… Read more »

13 years ago

I agree with coach Erik, remember everyone is different. I too could only take a 30-45 minute nap no matter the difference between prelims and finals.

13 years ago

As a former swimmer and coach and finding out what works for my body, it was either very short (20-30 minutes) or moderate length (90 minutes). Any longer than 2 hours (depending on amount of racing in prelims) was too much. I always allotted 30 minutes between wake-up and leaving for the pool. The commute to the pool was of varied length, but if you give yourself time to get to the pool, go through your pre-warm-up routines and warm-up routines, you should be fine. Your first big meets (traveling away from home, 3-5 days, championship format) are always a learning experience. Lastly, don’t put more into then necessary. No matter where you are going, the pool will be filled… Read more »

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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