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Hoop Dreams Achieved Through Snoozing
Reported July 6, 2011
(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Young basketball players spend
hours dribbling up and down the court aspiring to NBA stardom. Now, new
Stanford University School of Medicine research suggests another tactic to
achieving their hoop dreams: sleep.
Cheri Mah, a researcher in the Stanford Sleep Disorders Clinic and Research
Laboratory, has shown basketball players at the elite college level were
able to improve their on-the-court performance by increasing their amount of
total sleep time.
The study suggests "sleep is an important factor in peak athletic
performance," said Mah. In the paper, she and colleagues wrote "athletes may
be able to optimize training and competition outcomes by identifying
strategies to maximize the benefits of sleep."
It's no secret that lack of sleep can have negative consequences. Extensive
research has shown the impact that sleep debt has on cognitive function,
mood and physical performance. But, as Mah and her colleagues point out in
the paper, very few studies have looked at the opposite: the effect that
sleep extension can have on performance. Few other groups have looked
specifically at the effect of sleep on athletes.
While things such as nutrition and physical training are part of an
athlete's daily regimen, Mah said competitive athletes at all levels
typically do not focus on optimizing their sleep and recovery. They are
usually just told to get a "good night's sleep" before a competition.
"Intuitively many players and coaches know that rest and sleep are
important, but it is often the first to be sacrificed," Mah added. "Healthy
and adequate sleep hasn't had the same focus as other areas of training for
peak performance."
The researchers asked the players to maintain their normal nighttime
schedule (sleeping for six to nine hours) for two to four weeks and then aim
to sleep 10 hours each night for the next five to seven weeks. During the
study period, players abstained from drinking coffee and alcohol, and they
were asked to take daytime naps when travel prohibited them from reaching
the 10 hours of nighttime sleep.
At the end of the sleep extension period, the players ran faster 282-foot
sprints (16.2 seconds versus 15.5 seconds) than they had at baseline.
Shooting accuracy during practice also improved: Free throw percentages
increased by 9 percent and 3-point field goal percentage increased by 9.2
percent. Fatigue levels decreased following sleep extension, and athletes
reported improved practices and games.
"The athletes were training and competing during their regular season with
moderate-to-high levels of daytime sleepiness and were unaware that it could
be negatively impacting their performance," she said. "But as the season
wore on and they reduced their sleep debt, many athletes testified that a
focus on sleep was beneficial to their training and performance."
The findings suggest, Mah said, that it's important for sleep to be
prioritized over a long period of time, not just the night before "Game
Day." She called optimal sleep an "unrecognized, but likely critical factor
in reaching peak performance." She said the findings may be applicable to
recreational athletes and those at the high school, semi-pro or professional
level.
SOURCE: SLEEP, published online July 1, 2011
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