Literature DB >> 20190355

Making the weight: a case study from professional boxing.

James P Morton1, Colin Robertson, Laura Sutton, Don P M MacLaren.   

Abstract

Professional boxing is a combat sport categorized into a series of weight classes. Given the sport's underpinning culture, boxers' typical approach to "making weight" is usually via severe acute and/or chronic energy restriction and dehydration. Such practices have implications for physical performance and also carry health risks. This article provides a case-study account outlining a more structured and gradual approach to helping a professional male boxer make weight for the 59-kg superfeatherweight division. Over a 12-week period, the client athlete adhered to a daily diet approximately equivalent to his resting metabolic rate (6-7 MJ; 40% carbohydrate, 38% protein, 22% fat). Average body-mass loss was 0.9 + or - 0.4 kg/wk, equating to a total loss of 9.4 kg. This weight loss resulted in a decrease in percent body fat from 12.1% to 7.0%. In the 30 hr between weigh-in and competition, the client consumed a high-carbohydrate diet (12 g/kg body mass) supported by appropriate hydration strategies and subsequently entered the ring at a fighting weight of 63.2 kg. This nutritional strategy represented a major change in the client's habitual weight-making practices and did not rely on any form of intended dehydration during the training period or before weighing in. The intervention demonstrates that a more gradual approach to making weight in professional boxing can be successfully achieved via a combination of restricted energy intake and increased energy expenditure, providing there is willingness on the part of the athlete and coaches involved to adopt novel practices.

Entities:  

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20190355     DOI: 10.1123/ijsnem.20.1.80

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab        ISSN: 1526-484X            Impact factor:   4.599


  15 in total

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3.  Weight-making strategies in professional jockeys: implications for physical and mental health and well-being.

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8.  Exercising in the Fasted State Reduced 24-Hour Energy Intake in Active Male Adults.

Authors:  Jessica L Bachman; Ronald W Deitrick; Angela R Hillman
Journal:  J Nutr Metab       Date:  2016-09-21

9.  No effect of weight cycling on the post-career BMI of weight class elite athletes.

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10.  Development of a specific index to detect malnutrition in athletes: Validity in weight class or intermittent fasted athletes.

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Journal:  Biochim Open       Date:  2016-11-23
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