Carbohydrate Availability and Running Performance in Professional Male Footballers
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn how different daily carbohydrate intakes affect training performance in professional male football players during a pre-season training week.
The main questions it aims to answer are:
* Does a higher carbohydrate intake affect how much high-speed running and sprinting players complete during football training?
* Does a higher carbohydrate intake affect players' jumping performance, perceived effort, recovery, and daily readiness?
Researchers will compare two carbohydrate intakes. In one condition, participants will consume a moderate-carbohydrate diet. In the other condition, participants will consume the same base diet plus carbohydrate drinks. The drinks will look and taste similar, but only one type will contain extra carbohydrate.
Participants will complete both conditions during two pre-season training weeks. The order of the conditions will be randomized. This means participants will be assigned by chance to start with either the moderate-carbohydrate condition or the higher-carbohydrate condition.
During the study, participants will:
* Follow a standardized diet during each training week
* Drink three study beverages per day during each condition
* Take part in their regular team football training
* Wear a global positioning system device during training to measure running activity
* Complete countermovement jump tests during the training weeks
* Report their perceived effort, recovery, and daily readiness
This study will help researchers understand whether changing carbohydrate intake during a normal football training week affects training output and recovery-related measures in professional football players.
Gender: MALE
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Carbohydrate Intake and Exercise Performance