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As athletes move into winter or pre-season training, this guide will show you how to reset daily habits, re-focus on recovery, and build a solid base before ramping up mileage again.
When you move into pre-season training, this is a great opportunity to reset your nutrition. In this period you are able to prioritise parts of your nutrition that may be neglected during training seasons. This is the time to support your adaptations from previous blocks, so you can start your next from a well fuelled and recovered stance.
During peak training weeks, high mileage and limited time can disrupt regular eating patterns. Large energy demands often mean meals become rushed or inconsistent. During a heavy training block, meals and snacks often focus on quick, easily digestible energy to avoid disrupting training. Pre-season offers a valuable opportunity to rebuild healthy daily habits, reintroducing regular meal times, prioritising balanced meals, and increasing intake of micronutrient-rich foods. By resetting your meals in the pre-season, you can better support recovery and adaptation, laying a strong nutritional foundation for the season ahead.
Pre-season is an ideal time to be more intentional about recovery. With less focus on fuelling long training sessions, there is greater opportunity to optimise how you support repair and adaptation. This includes meeting daily protein targets and spreading protein intake evenly across the day, rather than concentrating it in a single meal. It’s also important to avoid under-fuelling, even without long sessions, your body still needs sufficient energy to recover and adapt. Maintaining good hydration and establishing a consistent sleep routine are equally important, as both play a key role in effective recovery and overall training readiness.
As winter approaches, the risk of illness, particularly upper respiratory infections, increases. During this period, it’s important to prioritise overall health and take steps to reduce both the risk and severity of symptoms. Ensuring you meet your micronutrient needs is key, including supplementing with vitamin D if you live in the Northern Hemisphere. Eating a varied, colourful diet helps support immune function and makes it more likely you’ll meet nutrient recommendations. Being intentional about diversifying your plate is a simple but effective way to support immune health throughout the winter months.
This period is an ideal opportunity to identify habits that tend to slip during the training season, particularly in peak weeks. Using this time to strengthen your nutrition and recovery routines can help set you up for the next season and make future training feel more manageable. It also allows you to build a strong nutritional foundation, ensuring your approach supports your goals from the outset and can be sustained as training demands increase. Developing this base now makes it easier to scale intake appropriately when mileage begins to rise again.
Resetting your nutrition in the pre-season isn’t about doing more, but about doing the basics well. By building strong habits now, you create a solid foundation that supports recovery, resilience, and performance as training ramps up.
Connie Jones SENr ANutr is a registered associate nutritionist with the AfN and a registered sports and exercise nutritionist under the BDA.
Website: Visit Website | Instagram: @connierosenutrition