Healthy Eating
The Start line
Thinking as a runner, I view healthy eating as the ‘Start Line’ for the event of sports nutrition. Getting a good start allows you to build speed, overcome hurdles, reduce injury and ultimately beat your PB time after time. While there is no denying that specialized nutritional strategies can give an edge, they can only be effective when the athlete is building on a solid foundation of healthy eating. This article focuses on the healthy eating diet which will provide all the calories, protein, vitamins and minerals required for day to day life. On the rationale of learning to walk before we can run, subsequent articles will look at nutritional strategies for training, events and recovery but in order to benefit from these, I recommend you start using the Food Pyramid today.

Athletes who have mastered the Food Pyramid, have much to gain from further nutritional strategies in training, events and recovery. They have an understanding of the essential components of the diet and their functions. They can clearly identify food groups which play a role in improving performance or enhancing recovery, and therefore they can make informed decisions about their intake without having to follow a very strict or limited dietplan.
The Food Pyramid balances foods in the amounts needed to make sure that you get all the energy and vitality that you need. Foods that contain similar nourishment are grouped together and can be interchanged, as seen in the shelf system. This allows you flexibility of choice, and provides the variety you need for good health.
You can see at a glance that most of your food should come from the breads cereals and potatoes shelf and from the fruit and vegetables shelf. The more active you are, the higher your energy needs will be. Energy should come from the breads, cereals and potatoes shelf, and from the fruit and vegetable shelf. Together these two shelves provide the majority of your carbohydrate, fibre, vitamin and minerals requirements.
For many reasons it is more appropriate for athletes to choose low-fat option from the dairy shelf, these play an important role both in pre-event, and recovery strategies and so choosing low-fat dairy products is a good habit to form at this stage. Also choose lean meat options from the meat shelf and be aware of portion sizes (…probably smaller than you may be used to!!)
Fats, biscuits, cakes, confectionary and high fat food snacks can be enjoyed as part of a healthy eating plan, but in limited amounts. While certainly there is a role for refined carbohydrate and sugar in sport, on a day to day basis it more better to get sugar and carbohydrate from the bottom two shelves of the pyramid.
Choosing foods from each shelf in the food pyramid in the correct amounts will provide you with the balance of energy, protein vitamins and minerals you need each day.
Always ensure you are drinking recommended volume of fluid each day. The more fluid you drink the more your body tolerates and remember thirst is a very poor indicator of hydration status. Making drinking throughout the day a habit, is by far the most successful way of meeting requirements every day.
Ruth Kilcawley
BSc Human Nutrition & Dietetics






If you want to know what nutrition is, I strongly recommend you read or listen to "The China Study - startling implications for diet, weightloss and longterm health",
by T. Colin Campbell, Emeritus Professor of Nutritional Biochemistry at Cornell University, NY, U.S.A.
This is an outstanding piece of work based on the longest study of nutrition and it's connection to health and disease that has ever been conducted.
Campbell has worked at the forefront of Nutritional Biochemistry for over 40 years.
It's available on amazon.com or amazon.co.uk and can be ordered in any good bookshop in Ireland.
Reading or listening to this may save your life.
Diet for a New America (John Robbins) is also an exellent book that changed my life dramatically for the better.
Anonymous, Thank you for your contribution, however I feel it is important to point out the following.
The Food guide pyramid is currently the recognised and accepted best practice method of promoting healthy eating in Ireland at present. While it may seem quite basic, it incorporates foods in quantities which have been shown repeatedly to benefit health and protect against disease. the beauty of this guide is that it allows people to eat a healthy and nutritious diet based on sound nutritional rationale.
I am familiar with the highly controversial work of Mr Campell, but i, like all of my profession, base my advice on sound evidence based, best practice guidelines which take all works into account as opposed to singular authors who may have other motives (the promotion of veganism for example).
Nutrition is an evolving science of that there is no doubt, but also a very complex one. the role of a dietitian is to desseminate nutritional findings and provide guidance on how we can use nutrition to promote health and protect against disease, or in this forum enhance athletic performance. There is always a danger in simply looking at diet from a singular perpective.
Chronic Disease prevention is multifactorial. From a dietary perspective many of the same issues Mr Campell highlights such as overconsumption of animal protein are incorporated into the food pyramid as you will notice in that ony two portions (120g/day) of meat are recommended per day, when the actual consumption in Ireland and All western Countries is much greater.
However there are so many other factors which have far superior quality evidence.
My role here is to advise athletes on how they can eat healthily taking account of their sport, the role of nutrition in chronic disease and the latest books advocating thier own take on it, is a very interesting topic, but perhaps it is not appropriate here.
Ruth Kilcawley
BSc. Human Nutrition Dip. Dietitics
MINDI SNIG
Well done Ruth, you seem to have the right balanced attitude! A lot of the eating problems people seem to have today, including athletes is there is such a diversity of information that it can seem daunting at times. I work as a hypnotherapist and am currently studying nutritional therapy but as a runner i appreciate how people feel they are being pulled in every direction, sometimes unfortunately by authors who have underlying interests for a particular product, which is why i find your comments refreshing. Nutrition, as with performance, (see Niamh Flynn, this site) is an individual thing for every athlete, depending on metabolism, level of training, type of training etc. In hypnotherapy sessions for weight management i often find that people are often disillusioned, having tried many diets, feel they have worked so hard at it, only to put the weight back on again. Being a nutritionist i have a good idea what your opinion would be on these restrictive regimes. Well done, we may discuss again sometime!
John Connolly Dip.Hyp
Member of National Guild of Hypnotists
john@mindbodyireland.com
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