Can athletes benefit from a raw food diet?
Many people have asked me this question. And my answer is a definite…
YES!
The problem is that most sports nutrition textbooks and resources tell athletes to eat lots of carbs like pasta, bread, and other grains as a way of maximizing their glycogen stores.
The problem with that, though, is that most people are sensitive to these food. In fact, there’s even debate as to whether the human body has sufficiently evolved to even digest grains.
I can tell you from my own experience that eating a big plate of pasta before a game makes me feel tired, lethargic, and even makes my body crave simple sugars within a few hours.
So how can a raw food diet benefit athletes?
Having played professional soccer and subsisting on pasta and bread, then transitioning to more of a raw food diet, I can tell you firsthand that eating more raw foods can make a huge difference in your performance and your ability to recover from exercise.
First, raw foods are packed with food enzymes. These enzymes facilitate digestion, which means that your body doesn’t feel bloated and lethargic after your meals. It also means that your body can spend more of its energy, not on digestion, but on recuperation and regeneration!
Second, eating more raw fruits and vegetables means that your body will be receiving a huge influx of needed alkalinity.
Why is alkalinity so important for athletes (let alone everyone else)? Well, an alkaline environment promotes high oxygenation. Considering that oxygen is needed for energy and body movement, the answer should be pretty clear.
Furthermore, diseases cannot flourish in an alkaline, oxygen-rich environment. This has been demonstrated by numerous Nobel Prize winners including Otto Warburg and Linus Pauling.
Oxygen is essential for performance. Alkaline foods (fruits and vegetables) oxygenate your body!
Third, you don’t need meat to be strong!
In a study published in the Yale Medical Journal, Professor Irving Fisher conducted a study in which he compared the strength and stamina of meat-eating athletes versus that of vegetarian (both athletic and sedentary) individuals.
The study concluded that of the 3 groups tested (meat-eating athletes, vegetarian athletes, and vegetarian sedentary subjects) the vegetarians’ (including the sedentary group) average stamina was double that of the athletic meat-eaters.
There is strong evidence that a meat-less diet is conducive to greater endurance.
Similar results have been demonstrated by several studies including that of Dr. Ioteyko from the Academie de Medicine de Paris, in which vegetarian athletes averaged 2 to 3 times more stamina and required one-fifth the time to recover from exhaustion compared to their meat eating rivals!
Here are just well-known athletes who are (or have been) vegetarian (or raw vegan):
- World Champion gymnast Dan Milman
- “Mr. International” bodybuilding winner Andreas Cahling
- Tennis great Martina Navratilova
- Olympian Carl Lewis
- Football Hall-of-Famer Art Still
- Four-time “Mr. Universe” title-holder Bill Pearl (described in more detail later)
- Swimming World Record Holder Bill Pickering
- World Class marathoner Gail Olinekova
- Canadian champion tri-athlete Brendan Brazier
If you’re an athlete (or recreation exerciser) and want to have more energy, more strength, greater endurance, and improve your overall performance, then adopting more raw foods into your diet will be greatly beneficial.
Try it for yourself and experience the difference!
References:
Fisher, I. (1907). The influence of flesh eating on endurance. Yale Medical Journal, 13(5): 205-221.
Ioteyko, J et al. Enquete scientifique sur les vegetarians de Bruxelles, Henri Lamertin, Brussels, p. 50.
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Hi,
Thanks so much for this information; I am a sixty year old male. I had a triple by pass done November last year and am just now feeling my chest has enough stability to start exercising. Weight is a problem for me and the best diets recommended are alkaline diets… in my search I discovered alkaline water… better known as kangen water… I have been doing this as well, and am noticing possitive changes…I am leaving a link to this infomation..Perhaps you might want to look at this.
http://www.drinklivingwaternow.com/
Regards
Dale
Hey Dale,
I have an alkalizing water filtration system at home and I would recommend that you and others look at similar approaches. Good living water is vital to your health. I rarely drink tap water and don’t really bathe in it either. We are roughly 70% water so it makes a difference which type you bring into your body.
Yuri
Hi Yuri,
You phoned me the other day and I really appreciated that. I am enjoying the things I am learning from you – especially about running as I am presently training for a marathon. I have found that adding oxygen to my water before a long run (or any run for that matter) makes a big difference.
I’m using a product called “Aerobic Oxygen” manufactured and distributed by “Good for You Canada” (www.goodfor you.ca). I add this to my already-oxygenated Nikken filtered and optimized water (I am a Nikken distributor but have no stake in the other company). I did a 7K run this morning and feel great. There is no “recovery” required but rather I feel energized and alert. Thanks for the encouragement. K
I am a 60 year old male training for a marathon in BC (Oct 11) and am thoroughly ejoying Yuri’s information.
Regarding ‘Aerobic oxygen”, I would like to understand how the mechanism works, for oxygen to enter through the stomach . . . since we mostly take it in via the lungs. I was fighting a fire this morning (volunteer fireman) and the paramedics tested me and told me my blood oxygen level was 94% (because when firemen are working hard, they tend to breath shallow I was told . . .).
Can you get the same effect by putting some hydrogen peroxide in water ? (like 6 drops or so in a glass of water)
Also, what are the effects of simply breathing in pure oxygen . . . does it help, such as the ‘oxygen bars’ I hear about . . .
Anybody who can shed light . . . thanks!
Henry, Lone Butte, BC
I actually put hydrogen peroxide in my water throughout the day and notice that it does make a difference for my energy and breathing. I have asthma so anything that can help is always good.
Pure oxygen could help in situation since your blood isn’t 100% saturated. Give it a shot and see if it helps out.
With regards to oxygen from food…it’s really about what’s going on in the blood. When the blood is acidic (from a poor diet) the red blood cells begin to coagulate and thus don’t transport oxygen to the cells as readily.
Hope that helps.
Thanks for the great info, Yuri! I have been enjoying your blogs and videos since discovering you on Youtube a few weeks ago, especially since you seem to be dealing with subjects that are right on point with what I happen to be doing at any particular moment. I need to read more about raw food diet, but i wanted to get your take on superfood/phyto food products like Green Vibrance and the like.
Rick, Cleveland Ohio USA
Hey Rick,
Any green food is going to do wonders for your body. Sure you can spend the money to buy all the “fancy” superfoods but really just eating more green leafies (ie. kale, spinach, parsley, etc…) will make such a huge difference. My personal favourite green superfoods are wheatgrass, barley grass, E3 live, and spirulina.