By EdySutio
Believe it or not, sports nutrition and exercise have been
part of man's life and his culture since the earliest time. Of course, sports
during this time was known as athletics. Earliest forms of athletics, however,
were part of man's basic need for survival, either to gather food or protect
his family from physical harm.
To a simple cave man who knows nothing about martial arts, a
sturdy bone from his last dinner may serve as a weapon against wild animals.
This bone remnant, coupled with some sharpened stone chips from his cave, is
used for hunting. Eventually, his regular hunting activities had developed into
some form of physical acts, without so much need to hunt.
Athletics was thus born. Athletics eventually developed into
a contest of strength, speed, and other skills. Sports would later developed
out of this, with the simple contest developing into a more complicated form of
physical activity, and with it the need for sustenance, completing the equation
of sports nutrition and exercise.
But even during the earliest time, athletics or sports was
never a monopoly of the male sex. In the Heraen Games for instance, women raced
in honor of the goddess Hera. The Egyptians had their acrobatic gymnastics for
their temple related activities. And, of course, the sports dance had evolved
from religious related dance performed in every major temple in antiquity.
To the early Greeks however, belongs the honor of elevating
the sports into an art form. The Olympic
Games is the strongest argument for this. Also, the Greeks, apparently knows
that sports nutrition and exercise are two important factors in any physical
exercise. Even during this time, the Greeks had special set of foods for their athletes.
Nutrition patterns of the early Greeks
In the Mediterranean world, Greeks particularly, goats is
the most common source of meat, and occasionally, beef from sacrificed cattle.
Just like in the modern day, milk was also considered as a must for a good
meal, especially for the athletes. Sports nutrition and exercise among the
early Greeks meant also the inclusion of other source of protein, fish for
instance, which the seas of Mediterranean is known for in the ancient times.
Poultry was also part of the early Greeks' diet.
Vegetables and carbohydrates were also considered as
important element of sports nutrition and exercise among the ancient people.
Even among the soldiers of the Roman Empire, a balance diet is important to
maintain their strength, both in the battlefield and during exercise.
Alexander the Great was known to have discovered the
nutritional value of onions that from Egypt, he brought some specimens and had
these planted and later cultivated in other parts of his empire. The Romans,
just like the Greeks, used cabbage not only as food, but also as antidote for
their drunken soldiers. Beets, turnips, artichokes, and radishes also form the
long list of edible vegetables cultivated and used during this period.
The ancient athlete's diet
Just like today's coaches, trainers during the ancient times
occupied an exalted place among their people, and also among the athletes
themselves. They not only provide exercise regimen for their athletes but also
directly involve in the preparation of foods for their charges. Sports
nutrition and exercise apparently, is a concept not lost to the early coaches
and athletes.
From the foods that consisted the regular diet of the
ancient athletes, such as cheese, figs, and meal cakes, the attempt of the
ancient trainers to developed special meal for their athletes were apparent.
Though meat was not consumed in large quantities by the
athletes during originally, it was observed later that athletes who are given
regular dosage of meat for protein source, had more long lasting strength. It
was in the fifth century BC, when meat became a craze among the ancient
athletes.
During this time, Slymphalos, an Olympic champion in the in
the long-distance race, introduced the meat diet to help athletes in their
exercises. It was the earliest attempt of a professional athlete to come up
with a systematized sports nutrition and exercise. Milo of Croton, won five
Olympic awards from 536 to 520 B.C., was reputed to have consumed 9 kilogram of
meat during his training period.
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