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23rd December 2017
10:24am GMT

James Hudson played over 100 times for Gloucester[/caption]
One of the big messages which I try and promote to the players is about getting regular good quality protein throughout the day. During the festive period there’s a real danger and temptation to just have a massive Christmas lunch and neglect the rest of the day.
The boys are training the day before and the day after Christmas and they need to recover well in between. To optimise that recovery it’s important to eat things that leads to your body using all of the protein consumed.
It’s about having regular feeding throughout the day, aiming for 4-6 meals and snacks, ensuring that each portion has enough in it but not too much. The danger is to have one big lunch and not much else, meaning your total intake for the day is sub-optimum.
Turkey is an excellent source of protein, a real good ‘repair food’. In truth, there’s not too much wrong with the Christmas dinner, but it’s all the trimmings and extras that can cause problems; the chocolate, cakes and cheese that appear in around Christmas are very energy dense.
Somebody like Mariano Golaza is probably in need of the most calories and I’d expect him to put away 3,300 calories on Christmas Day.
Having said that it is like any other rest day where quality is more important than quantity, which isn’t going to come from your deep fried party food and stuffing!
If players do make a few poor choices on Christmas Day their recovery from Christmas Eve training could be poor. They may feel pretty sluggish and a bit sore still from training which is not what we are looking for.
The biggest danger is overdoing it on Christmas Day and then compensating that by not eating enough and under fuelling for the game on the 27th.
Hopefully nobody will push the boat out like that on Christmas Day, because in their own mind they’ll need to be in their normal routine and build up to game day. They need to come into the game nicely fuelled up and that means sticking to the plan over Christmas, not eating too much or too little on certain days.
To be brutally honest, the advice to players is that they shouldn’t be drinking any alcohol. They contain empty calories and they have a poor effect on muscle recovery.
As a general rule, we wouldn’t expect any players to indulge in alcohol. If it was a normal day off in a training week they wouldn’t be drinking, so there’s no reason they should do so at Christmas.
The days of the prop forwards being able to get away with it are well and truly behind us now. There’s such fine margins in the Premiership, so you have to prepare perfectly. It’s not much fun being an athlete at Christmas, but its one sacrifice players are willing to make if they want to perform at their best.
We have three big games in twelve days, so it’s a really important time of year that can make or break your season. If we can build on or recent good performances then that could lead us to rally towards the end of the year.
As a professional athlete you simply can’t use the excuse of ‘Christmas’ to do what you wouldn’t do normally – it will catch up with you!
It’s a nice day for the players to relax and switch off, but the major focus is on the rugby and you can’t afford to have a loose couple of days.Explore more on these topics: