Moving Past the Eight-Hour Myth
For elite athletes, telling them to get eight hours of sleep is like telling a chef to just 'cook something tasty.' It’s not wrong, but it misses the entire point. Modern teams competing at the highest level have moved beyond generic advice and into the realm
of sleep operations. They employ sleep coaches who treat rest as a critical performance metric, just like nutrition or strength training. These specialists understand that the stress of travel, evening matches, and high-stakes competition disrupts normal sleep patterns. The goal isn’t just duration but quality and timing, creating personalized plans that manage fatigue, accelerate recovery, and sharpen cognitive function for match day.
The Art of the Tactical Nap
Napping isn't for toddlers; it’s a strategic tool. For soccer players, naps are prescribed with the precision of a training drill. There are two main types. The first is the 20-30 minute 'power nap,' typically taken before 4 p.m. This short burst is proven to boost alertness, improve reaction time, and enhance sprint performance without causing grogginess or interfering with nighttime sleep. The second is a longer, 90-minute nap that covers a full sleep cycle. This is reserved for days demanding serious recovery, like after heavy travel or an exhausting match. Far from being a sign of laziness, a well-timed nap is one of the most consistent features of an elite player's routine, used to top up energy and maintain peak readiness.
Banking Sleep Before the Battle
You can’t save up sleep in the long term, but you can 'bank it' in the short term. This strategy, also known as sleep extension, is a game-changer for tournament football. In the days or even weeks leading up to a major competition, players will intentionally extend their sleep, adding an extra hour or two each night. The concept is simple: by building up a reserve of rest, players become more resilient to the inevitable sleep disruption that comes with travel and pre-game nerves. Studies show this practice significantly mitigates the negative effects of a single night of poor sleep, helping maintain physical endurance and cognitive performance when it matters most. It's like charging a battery to 110% before a long trip.
Are You a Lark or an Owl?
One of the most overlooked factors in performance is a player's chronotype—their natural tendency to be a morning person ('lark') or an evening person ('owl'). Sports science shows that physical performance often peaks in the late afternoon or early evening, which aligns with the body's peak core temperature. However, this peak occurs at different times for different chronotypes. An extreme evening type might outperform a morning type by a significant margin in a late match. Coaches and sports scientists are increasingly aware of this, using chronotype information to tailor training schedules and even understand which players might be at their sharpest for a 9 p.m. kickoff versus a noon start.
Weaponizing Light and Darkness
Jet lag is the enemy of any international tournament. To combat it, teams now manipulate their environment with military precision. The key is controlling exposure to light, which is the most powerful signal for setting our internal body clocks, or circadian rhythms. Upon arrival in a new time zone, teams use strategies to either seek or avoid light at specific times. This might involve using bright light therapy lamps in the morning to advance the body clock or wearing blue-light blocking glasses and staying in rooms with blackout curtains in the evening to help produce melatonin, the sleep hormone. It’s a deliberate, scientific process to get a squad of 26 players synchronized to the local time as fast as humanly possible.















