Burnout in Athletes
Title: Burnout in Athletes
Category: /Recreation & Sports
Details: Words: 2014 | Pages: 7 (approximately 235 words/page)
Burnout in Athletes
Category: /Recreation & Sports
Details: Words: 2014 | Pages: 7 (approximately 235 words/page)
Many athletes dedicate their lives to their sport; however, the human body cannot always handle the demands of sport. The general consensus among athletes is that you must work very hard in order to improve performance. For the most part, that assumption is true. Hard training places much stress on the body and makes a person weaker, and it is in the rest period where the gains are actually made. Overtraining is seen in athletes
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program should allow for flexibility, and when early warning signs of overtraining are evident, adjustments need to be made accordingly. In reviewing the literature to date on this topic, and realizing the disastrous consequences for athletes, it is safe to say that being undertrained is far better than being overtrained. Nonetheless, continued research on intensive training and tapering cycles, involving more subjects and a greater range of sports is necessary for the benefit of athletes.