Snacks for Football Players – How to Fuel Your Performance
When summer comes to an end in Texas, it means one thing – the start of football season. With practices underway, planning healthy snacks for football players is important.
Below are easy snack ideas that football players can use to stay fueled before, during, and after activity.
Planning Nutritious Snacks for Football Players
Having the right food available at the right time is key for promoting optimal sports performance. Taking the time to plan ahead and meal prep nutritious snacks can help set yourself up for success.
On the weekend, consider pre-making sandwiches, packing bags of trail mix, and creating post-workout snack bags that you can grab on your way to practice.
PreGame Snacks for Football Players
Prior to activity, athletes should aim to eat carbohydrate-rich snacks to fuel their workouts. Carbohydrates provide the energy the body needs to perform at its best.
In general, the more time athletes have prior to a football workout, the larger their snack can be.
Football Snack Ideas: 2-3 Hours Prior to a Practice or Game
When football players have more time to digest prior to their workout, a larger snack or “mini-meal” can be eaten.
Choosing a snack that is high in carbohydrates, contains moderate amounts of protein, and relatively low in fat can help ensure football players have the energy needed for the upcoming activity.
Pre-game snack ideas include:
- Peanut butter and jelly sandwich with a sports drink
- Turkey and low-fat cheese wrap with fresh fruit
- Bagel with nut butter and sliced banana
- Protein waffles, Greek yogurt parfait with berries and granola
- Breakfast bar with banana
- Fruit Smoothie
Football Snack Ideas: 1 Hour or Less Prior to a Practice or Game
In the hour before exercise, it is best to stick to carbohydrate-rich snacks that are low in fiber. The carbohydrates will provide football players with a source of quick energy to fuel their bodies on the field.
High-carb snacks athletes can enjoy in the 30-60 minutes leading up to the workout include:
- Banana, grapes, oranges, small piece of fruit
- Dried fruit, fruit leather, fruit snacks
- Applesauce squeeze pouch
- Low-fat granola bars, fig bars, mini bagels
- Pretzels, dry cereal, snack crackers
- Sports drink, chews, or gels
Halftime Snacks Ideas for Football Players
Nutrition priorities during activity nclude focusing on hydration and replacing the carbohydrates used for energy.
Football players should make sure to take advantage of the half-time break to refuel and rehydrate. The added carbohydrates, fluid, and electrolytes from half-time snacks can help keep football players going strong though the end of the game.
Halftime snack ideas for football players include:
- Fresh fruit, dried fruit, fruit snacks, applesauce squeeze pouch
- Pretzels, snack crackers – Salty snacks can help replace sodium and stimulate thirst to drink more.
- Carbohydrate based sports bar – Even eating a couple of bites can provide some added energy for the second half.
- Sports drinks – Provide hydration, electrolytes, and carbohydrates for energy.
- Sport chews or gels – Drink water when you consume chews or gels to help avoid an upset stomach.
Recovery Nutrition Snacks for Football Players
Following activity, it is time for athletes to focus on refueling, rehydrating, and resting.
To support their recovery nutrition needs, football players should focus on consuming the following:
- Carbohydrates: Refill energy stores used during the activity
- Protein: Build and repair muscles
- Fluid and Electrolytes: Rehydrate to replace fluid and electrolytes lost in sweat
Following a workout or game, drinking low-fat chocolate milk can help provide football players with the nutrients needed to promote recovery.
Chocolate milk contains carbohydrates, protein, fluids, and electrolytes, making it a great post-workout drink. Football players can eat some granola bars along with their chocolate milk to further increase their carbohydrate intake following activity.
Other recovery nutrition snack ideas for football players include:
- Ham sandwich with baked chips and fruit
- Peanut butter and jelly sandwich with low-fat milk
- Greek yogurt, fruit, and granola parfait
- Granola bars with nut butter
- Post-workout smoothie
- Trail mix with pretzels, dried fruit, nuts, and dry cereal
I encourage football players to pack snacks in their backpacks to have with available to eat after practice. They can then follow-up their recovery snack with a well-balanced meal containing carbohydrates and lean protein in the next couple of hours.
Hydration for Football Players
When planning your snacks for football workouts or games – don’t forget about the importance of hydration.
Dehydration negatively impacts performance and cognitive function. It also increases your chance of developing a heat illness, especially when exercising in a hot and humid environment (1).
Football players should be mindful about drinking plenty of water and other beverages throughout the day to ensure they go into practice well-hydrated.
Consuming fruits and vegetables that contain a high-water content can also assist with helping football players stay hydrated.
Foods such as watermelon, cantaloupe, oranges, strawberries, cucumbers, and celery all have a high-water content and make a great addition to an athlete’s meal plan.
Hydration for Football Players During Activity
When athletes sweat their bodies lose both fluid and electrolytes. Consuming a sports drink during activity can assist athletes with replacing both fluid and electrolyte losses.
Drinking a sports drink that contains carbohydrates (regular sports drink not a zero-calorie drink) can also assist with providing extra energy for their workout.
Following your workout, it is important for football players to replace the fluid and electrolytes lost in sweat. Weighing before and after a workout can help athletes determine how much fluid was lost. For each pound of weight lost during the activity, athletes should aim to drink 20-24 oz of fluid (2).
Consuming sodium, during the recovery period can help football players replace the sodium lost in sweat. In addition, the sodium will help their bodies better retain the fluid consumed after exercise (1).
Football players can consider adding salty foods such as jerky, deli meat, cheese, pickles, soups, and pretzels to their recovery nutrition snacks and meals (2).
*Note: Athletes should talk with their doctor or sports dietitian about staying hydrated in the heat if they have been advised to follow a low-sodium diet or are required to limit their fluid intake.
Energy Drinks
A final note on hydration is the importance of athletes avoiding energy drinks. Energy drinks contain caffeine along with a “proprietary blend” of ingredients claiming to increase energy levels.
The energy blends may include ingredients such as: taurine, B Vitamins, guarana, green tea extract, L-carnitine, ginseng, ginger root, and chromium. The combination of ingredients in the drink may have a synergistic effect in the body and lead to health concerns (3, 4).
Bottom line – consuming energy drinks, especially in combination with intense workouts and summer heat can be dangerous. If football players need more energy – they should make sure they are eating enough calories to support their workouts and daily activities, staying well-hydrated, and getting enough sleep.
Snacks for Football Players: Ready for Football Season!
You now have a sports nutrition game plan to keep football players fueled this season. Remember the importance of planning ahead, staying hydrated, fueling before activity, and recovery nutrition afterwards. It’s time for Friday Night Lights!
For additional suggestions on ways to meet your performance nutrition needs visit with a sports dietitian nutritionist who can work with you on developing a customized sports nutrition meal plan.
Also make sure to check out my blog, Healthy Snacks for Teenage Athletes, for additional snack ideas.
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About the Author
Mandy Tyler is a Sports Dietitian Nutritionist in the San Antonio, TX area. She is a Registered and Licensed Dietitian, a Board-Certified Specialist in Sports Dietetics, a Licensed Athletic Trainer, and is a Certified Exercise Physiologist through the American College of Sports Medicine. Mandy has experience working with athletes at the high school, collegiate, and professional levels. She believes the key to reaching one’s full potential, both in everyday life and in sports performance, relies on a healthy nutritional foundation.
If you are looking to take your performance to the next level, make sure to check out my new Sports Nutrition Game Day Guide. This downloadable guide is written to help athletes develop an individualized plan to achieve peak performance on game day.