CrossFit East Bay Rest Day 090330: Social Climbing @ GWPC
Polly On Her Coffee Run Photo: Tom Campitelli
It's Time to Make a Coffee Run
WELDON JOHNSON first tried caffeine as a performance enhancer in 1998. He was not a coffee drinker but had heard that caffeine could make him run faster. So he
went to a convenience store before a race and drank a cup of coffee.
"I remember being really wired before the race," he said in an e-mail message. "My body was shaking."
From then on, he was a convert. Mr. Johnson, a founder of LetsRun.com,
would avoid caffeine, even in soft drinks, for a few weeks before he
competed in a race, wanting to have the full stimulant effect.
Johnson said. "Having a cup of coffee exactly one hour before the race
was part of my routine."
Caffeine, it turns out, actually works. And it is legal, one of the
few performance enhancers that is not banned by the World Anti-Doping
Agency.
sprinters are pilloried for using performance enhancing drugs, one of
the best studied performance enhancers is fine for them or anyone else
to use. And it is right there in a cup of coffee or a can of soda.
every iteration: Does it help sprinters? Marathon runners? Cyclists?
Rowers? Swimmers? Athletes whose sports involve stopping and starting
like tennis players? The answers are yes and yes and yes and yes.
In fact, some experts, like Dr. Mark Tarnopolsky of McMaster University
in Canada, are just incredulous that anyone could even ask if caffeine
has a performance effect.
"It's just unequivocal that caffeine improves performance. It's been
shown in well-respected labs in multiple places around the world."
For many years, researchers thought the sole reason people could
exercise harder and longer after using caffeine was that the compound
helped muscles use fat as a fuel, sparing the glycogen stored in
muscles and increasing endurance. But there were several hints that
something else was going on. For example, caffeine improved performance
even in short intense bursts of exercise when endurance is not an issue.
or to go faster in the same length of time. Caffeine also affects the
brain's sensation of exhaustion, that feeling that it's time to stop,
you can't go on any more. That may be one way it improves endurance,
Dr. Tarnopolsky said.
20 to 25 percent, Dr. Tarnopolsky said. But in the real world,
including all comers, the improvement may average about 5 percent,
still significant if you want to get your best time or even win a race.
milligrams of caffeine per kilogram of body weight. An 80-kilogram, or
176-pound man, for example, would need about 400 milligrams of
caffeine, or 20 ounces of coffee.
department of the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra, reports
that athletes get the full caffeine effect with as little as 1
milligram of caffeine per kilogram of body weight. Instead of 20 ounces
of coffee, a 176-pound man could drink 4 ounces of coffee, or about two
12-ounce cans of Coke.
Terry Graham, chairman of the Department of Human Health and
Nutritional Sciences of the University of Guelph in Canada, found that
at 9 milligrams per kilogram, athletes actually did worse.
has tried to spread the word and gets frustrated when runners don't use
caffeine -- so much so, he said, that when he sees the team his brother
coaches at Cornell, he thinks, why aren't they all going to Starbucks?
and internationally, said that, with one exception, the rowers he knew
did not use caffeine.
"They would see it as against the spirit of the law, even though it's
not against the law."
retired from rowing last July, he decided to do a randomized, blinded,
placebo-controlled experiment on himself.
pills, allowing him to code the pills so that he would not know which
one he had taken. For eight months he tested himself once a week,
taking two pills an hour before working out on a rowing machine. Then
he worked as hard as he could for an hour, recording the results, also
recording his guess about whether the pills he took contained caffeine.
Mr. Perry, who also is a runner, said that an hour on the rowing
machine is the equivalent of an hour of very fast running on the road.
was astonished to see how much the caffeine had affected him. He was
stronger -- his power output was 3 percent greater -- and faster. In
fact, he said the average speed for his tests when he used caffeine was
faster than his fastest speed when he was not using caffeine.
took were caffeine or vitamin C. Mr. Perry said he is now sorry that he
never used caffeine when he was competing. "It would have been a pretty
harmless way to do better," he said.
He took a caffeine pill before a track workout that involved
running a mile very quickly, resting briefly, and running a mile again,
repeatedly. Like Mr. Johnson, he was wired and shaking. But, Stefan
said, he could not recover between miles. His heart was pounding and
just would not slow down. He said he has no desire to experience that
again.
We love coffee and probably have caffeine in our blood all the time
except during the middle of the night (it lasts for hours).
SO would we do better if we weaned ourselves from caffeine and then took a pill or two before a race?
I asked Dr. Tarnopolsky. It turns out, he said, that you get
habituated to two of caffeine's effects right away. Caffeine can make
you urinate, but only if you are not used to it.
And caffeine does increase the heart rate and blood pressure
in people who are not regular uses. "But after three or four days, that
potentially negative effect is gone," Dr. Tarnopolsky said.
a regular coffee drinker, if you have a cup of coffee before a workout
or a race, you will do better, Dr. Tarnopolsky said. "There is no
question about it," he added.
Dr. Tarnopolsky is an elite triathlete, ski orienteer and trail runner
who has competed at national and international levels. And, he said, he
loves coffee: "I love the smell. I love the taste. It's heaven."
Social Climbing at GWPC 6-9PM
Come climb with the CFEB crew. If you don't know how this is a great opportunity to learn to top-rope: you don't need to own equipment, but there is a nominal fee for harness and shoe rental.
Post routes completed or attempted to comments.
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Finished off my 16 oz from Starbucks as I got out of the car for the OPD workout...worked like a charm.
I typically have coffee twice daily (two shots each), plus green or black tea. I love the stuff so, so much. Sadly, it does absolutely nothing for me anymore - I can drink it and go straight to bed.
That whole month of January without coffee did pretty much suck, but tea definitely helped. That first week of February drinking coffee again was pretty awesome. If I had tracked any performance changes I would note them, but it wasn't too noticeable to me. I guess that was the point of the article though, that you might not notice the effect.
If I have an early morning tennis match I down some coffee and it absolutely makes me more focused and precise in my shots. It also helps me get an early lead which is mentally difficult for an opponent. There is a very fine line between just enough and too much caffeine. A furiously racing heart can be very distracting and impact hand-eye coordination. It can also make it a little hard to breathe which curtails the all important ability to focus. These days I go for a double latte - a nice balance of milk and caffeine.
I used to play with a goalie who would down 2 Red Bulls immediately before every game...it always amazed me that this didn't throw off his patience and focus. It seemed to work for him though, so maybe with a bit of caffeine tolerance that's just enough to maximize the benefits (anecdotally anyway)? Downing two of those would give me the shakes, but maybe that's the sugar.
Generally I do not post on blogs, but I would like to say that this post really forced me to do so, Excellent post!