A lot have asked what you do about the altitude if your England...Finally, a soccer question in my area of expertise! Here's what I'd do if I were England.
First, the impact at 7k feet is real and significant. You can see it in the soccer data, total distance covered and high speed running drop significantly. 3-9% for the former, 10-15% for later. The higher the altitude, the bigger the effect. The less acclimated, the bigger the effect.
At 7k feet VO2max would drop about 10-13%. We saw this in track performances at the 1968 Olympics. And performance drops about 5-6% depending on race distance. Jim Ryun ran lights out in the 1500, but ended up second to Kenya's Keino because he was better at altitude.
So what do we do?
1. Acclimate...if you had more time this would be the key. You train at altitude, maybe even use altitude tents, etc. But it takes time...
About a 3 week acclimatization cuts the VO2max/performance drop in half as your physiology adapts. One study on track athletes showed it took 19 days to fully acclimate.
England doesn't have that time.
2. Arrival time
The research points to two different approaches: compete as soon as possible (within ~24 hours) after arrival. Why? You compete before poor sleep and plasma-volume loss sets in.
Generally, plasma shifts starts right after arrival but reach the level that impairs endurance capacity by about 24 hours and increase from there before leveling off.
Or you arrive 5+ days before and hope to acclimate. While it varies for each individual, generally 1-3 days after arrival, performance sucks as your body is adapting to the drastic change.
But...fly in/out is also risky as it involves travel, sleep disturbance, etc. close to the match.
So in their situation, it's all about tradeoffs. Altitude is a massive stressor. Everything from blood to respiration is put under stress to adapt. So you've got this dip before adaptation.
You can lessen that dip being acclimated. But who knows what England did.
Honestly, depending on travel, I would have flown straight from the last game to altitude. Buy yourself as close to 5 days as possible. And if possible maybe even somewhere like 5k feet within driving distance. No idea on planning, but if I didn't acclimate. That's what I'd likely do. I'd avoid the coming in 2 days before. Worst tradeoff.
So what do you do now?
1. Hydration and plasma volume.
Altitude drives respiratory water loss and diuresis, and plasma volume decreases acutely. Hydration strategies can blunt this. Folks have even tried manipulating high sodium intake to help sh9ift plasma volume
2. Fuel with carbohydrate.
We generally will burn more carbs at higher altitude. Make sure you are fueled up. AND use fueling strategies mid-game more like an elite endurance athlete. Something like maurten's gels would work well.
3. Bicarb it up.
Altitude is going to harm aerobic abilities. All those sprints and high speed running will build up more fatigue. The new sodicum bicarbonate is a must here. I'd load up if I were England. Plus, altitude tends to lower blood bicarb. Also,, it tends to help more for folks who aren't fully acclimated.
4. Protect sleep.
Disrupted sleep is a major part of it. So do everything you can to help get a good nights sleep. Limits screen time, blue light blockers, all the stuff.
5. Tactics and pacing.
You've got to adjust. Mexico will be adapted. You won't. Learning how to pace better and time your runs will be key. If you try to do the same thing as always, you will be screwed.
6. Beet Root juice.
It can boost endurance performance. Works better on non-elite endurance athletes. Which would honestly be a lot of these soccer guys. And altitude can impair the natural turning of nitrite into nitric oxide, so theoretically beet root juice would help even more at altitude. Though, you'd hoped to test it, or else you could be peeing red stuff that might scare folks, ha.
7. Caffeine.
Not altitude specific, but boosts endurance performance. A well timed dose to peak in the 2nd half would be helpful.
8. Heat adaptation.
Where England may have benefited from playing in the US is that heat addaptation (and its boost in plasma volume) can help with altitude. So even if they aren't altitude adapted, the heat wave in the US may have helped them.
There you go. The science of altitude adaptation for performing. Hopefully, England is prepared! And if not, maybe they see this post and start downing the bicarb, maurten, beet root, and caffeine. Ha
-Steve
Mexico vs. England is going to be fantastic.
Fans better hope they've prepared for competing at 7k feet altitude. It's a whole different ballgame. And if I'm Mexico, I'm making those guys run...
🏴 2-1 🇨🇩
Harry Kane and England are not to be denied as the Bayern Munich man creates some space for himself before unleashing a world class finish beyond Mpasi
Watch all 104 games from the #FIFAWorldCup on RTÉ
Inching closer to the world record.
And a phenomenal race by Bol in 1:55.
The 800 is the race of the year. So many good storylines and talent all tackling it. Hope we see everyone line up in peak shape to make history.
🗣️ “I think the world record will be broken soon, I’m not going to compare myself to people like that… I’m very satisfied with a 1:55 right now.”
Despite Femke Broeders-Bol’s rapid ascension in the 800m this year, the former 400mH World champion understands there’s levels to half-mile greatness. Broeders-Bol ran a big PB of 1:55.60 to finish 2nd in today’s #ParisDL.
🎥 FULL INTERVIEW: https://t.co/rcEihhv2mv
With so much junk out there on HIIT and other interval training... I put together a free guide: How to Design Better Workouts.
Filled with insights on writing creative workouts that get the right stimulus for the desired adaptation.
Sign up: https://t.co/rpnalDnQXb
You can see all the effort the turtle made to return to its natural habitat! 🐢🥺
A huge thank you and a big shoutout to all the kind-hearted people who rescue animals!!! 🙏
"He probably had to learn a lot very quickly!"
Aidan O'Brien reacts to Constitution River getting the better of Hawk Mountain and Montreal at Chantilly...
Tip for novice runners:
You don't need a gel/gatorade for your 5k or 10k race.
It's doing nothing except maybe giving you GI issues.
Energy intake isn't a limiter until we get close to ~2hr of racing
For ~60-90min, it can help via modulating perception of effort, but not necessary
Burgin brilliance at the #RabatDL 🤩
Max Burgin completely controls the 800m to win in 1:42.98 - what a statement win that is to open up his outdoor season 👏
#DiamondLeague
Huge congratulations to Ellen Barber, proudly sponsored by Paul Nicholls Racing, on an incredible personal best of 6169 points at Götzis, Austria 🇦🇹 — widely regarded as the most prestigious heptathlon/decathlon meeting in the world.
A phenomenal performance that reflects the hard work, dedication and commitment she brings every day and we are immensely proud. With the Commonwealth Games selections in the coming weeks we are keeping everything crossed for Ellen🤞🤞
@Ellen_Barber@meeting_goetzis@James_Athletics