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In this episode of the Keiser Human Performance Podcast, Dr. Laurent Bannock shares his expertise in strength and conditioning, offering a practical look at how performance training continues to evolve.
Drawing from his experience working with athletes across different levels, Laurent discusses the shift toward more individualized, data-informed training—while still emphasizing the importance of fundamentals like movement quality, intent, and consistency. He also breaks down common misconceptions in the industry and highlights how coaches can better bridge the gap between science and real-world application.
This episode delivers actionable insights for coaches, practitioners, and athletes looking to refine their approach and build more effective, sustainable performance programs.
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Hi Dr. Laurent Bannock. Thank you so much for joining me on the podcast today. How are we doing today?
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Good, Gabe. Thank you. Thank you for inviting me. This is fun to be on the other side of the
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podcast for once, you know. Yeah. Well, it's really exciting to have you here. And listen,
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if you want to take over at any point and, you know, run the show, then I'm happy to, you know,
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defer to you. So, no problem. Yeah. No, I uh after hundreds of episodes of podcasting, I can tell you
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it's an absolute pleasure to not actually be the host. Nothing wrong with being the host gate, but
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uh yeah, for once. For once. Well, I understand that you're going through quite the heat wave,
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maybe untraditional heat wave out there in the UK. Is that right? Yeah. The Yeah, the the the
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the term heatwave and UK doesn't normally combine, but we are having quite the time over here. And
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British people being British, we like to talk about the weather all the time. And uh yeah,
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we're we're crazy. Uh we're going crazy with the hot weather. But um you know we complain if
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it's cold, we complain if it's hot. So there you go. So question for you being on the performance
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nutrition side. You have you mentioned you know your kids are running around on a hot summer day
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like this. I imagine they're going to run in and they want some ice cream or some popsicles. Now is
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that something they're getting or are they getting a nice healthy alternative to that? So as a as a
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sports nutritionist and as an expert, a researcher and so on, I like to go by the uh rule that you
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know that we a lot of us tend to subscribe to, which is to do as I say but not as I do.
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Uh, no. They'd be they'd be getting their ice cream for sure. Anyway, there'd be a riot and
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it's just not worth it. Uh, but but when we talk about sports nutrition for athletes and elite
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performance and so on, we'll see that nothing is off the table. It's just a question of of when
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and how often. And so, so it goes with my with my kids who maybe have it more often than maybe they
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should, but not too much. You know, you got to keep the little critters happy, you know. Yeah.
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Well, I'm excited to dive into that today. And really to start us off with this conversation,
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I'd be curious, what drew you into this world of performance nutrition? Like, how did you even get
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to this point? It's a very good question. And because I've been doing this for decades now,
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my career in health and fitness, we shall say, is nearing 30 years. I can't believe I'm saying
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that. It's frightening. I'm 52 and I got into this in my early 20s. Um, I experimented with
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a few things before really dedicating myself to health and fitness, but ultimately performance
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nutrition or sports nutrition became bit of an obsession over the years. Um, but I didn't start
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as a sports nutritionist. So I actually started in health and fitness uh as a personal trainer uh and
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strength conditioning coach and uh for quite a few years actually uh for a good 10 years I worked in
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in that area in private sort of one-to-one stuff back in the days when people didn't really have
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PTS particularly in the UK in in the US it was in the big cities you know celebrities and so on
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were getting PT but in the UK you know we were we were just catching on and I was lucky to be doing
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that in London and um and elsewhere. Had my own gym. That didn't go so well after a few years of
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running my own gym. Uh a massive uh health and and rackets club opened up opposite me and basically
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took all the parking and that killed my business. So I quickly realized that running my own facility
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and having overheads and all those sorts of things was possibly not where I wanted to go. But,
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you know, on reflection, that ended up being a really good lesson to learn. And by that,
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I mean the concept of overheads. You know, a lot of practitioners, you know, we we get obsessed
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whether you're a PT or a strength conditioning coach or a nutritionist or whatever, we all get
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obsessed with with science and theory and and the stuff that links to our job title, right?
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Um but being a practitioner and being successful as a practitioner uh depending on how you define
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successful of course involves a lot more than that things like implementation operation and
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all sorts of things. So I I was lucky I guess I I mean I had a messy period of my early years
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shall we say where I'd experimented with a lot of things as a PT. I mean, for a start
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that there was no jobs. Um, so it was very much a self-employed gig, you know, so you got to get
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work and you would diversify. So I diversified a lot and I got into alternative medicine. I got
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into all sorts of weird stuff. Did all sorts of courses, certifications. Some were a little bogus,
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I think. Well, no, they were pretty bogus back in the day. You know, everything was available
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and all PTs are subjected to this. health care professionals. The more regulated there are, there
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tends to be stricter stuff in this regard. But when you're in the health and fitness industry,
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there's there's a lot um and nowadays we see that of course with influencers and coaches
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running their own courses and so on. So of course we've got the the bigger names that we know beyond
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university. You got your degrees obviously, but you've also got professional certifications and
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so on. So anyway, I'd explored a lot in that area back in those days and having owned my own
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business and trying to make a a few bucks here and there, you know, you you you you go through
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some interesting experiences, but ultimately what became obvious at that point in my life was I'm
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not going to get anywhere unless I get results, right? Results are what gets you the referrals.
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Results is what gets you repeat business from your clients, your customers. Results is your
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reputation at the end of the day. So that became my focus. And when I was a PT and an SNC coach
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in different environments, I often found because my clients were wanting to work with me primarily
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for body composition change. That's really common in the PT environment. You know, yes, people want
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to be healthier. People want stronger bones, more robust cardiovascular systems and other
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challenges they might be dealing with. But I mean almost always they want to look good um in their,
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you know, in their swimming outfits when on holiday or they just for their own personal state
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of mind, their emotional situation beyond just health and other, you know, factors like that.
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You don't get very far if you don't get results. And clients are an interesting species as we all
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know whether they're, you know, midlifers, whether they're parents, whether they're elite athletes,
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businessmen, they could be triathletes, so they're highly focused on one angle,
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or they're really reluctant exercisers and they just don't really want to be training. You have
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to find ways to get those results. So I think it's an underestimated skill set of practitioners to be
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highly effective as a practitioner, as a as a PT, as an SNC coach, getting results out of your your
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clients, you know, unless the unless your client's going to live with you all day and you literally
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just live in the gym and you know, it's really not that easy when you only see them once, twice,
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three times a week. And so it goes with athletes, too, you know. So, there's a huge amount in there
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that I found I needed to diversify. And like I say, some of those paths were a bit dodgy,
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I think, back, you know, alternative and so on. But I I did what I did. I was curious and I've
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always been that way. But I reset and decided to go on a path. But always found that nutrition was
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the big one. It was the, you know, the food, the alcohol, the wine, the cookies, the the big meals,
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the eating out, the dinners and so on, which had the biggest impacts on what their goals were.
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So I spent more time trying to influence their lifestyle, their nutrition, their habits, and that
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became my real big focus. So I retrained and you know earlier earlyish on into that part portion
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of my career actually, I had an opportunity to go to the States. went to the states,
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ended up doing my masters in exercise science and health promotion at California University
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of Pennsylvania. Then I've changed names to Pen West I think and that was my first sort of proper
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you know dive into proper education state side and then um I ended up doing other qualifications
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and other things but I always found myself coming back to nutrition but I didn't gravitate so much
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to people you know like the the sort of morbidly obese type clients. I always really enjoyed the
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ones that were really ambitious about their body composition, about their performance. So,
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I I worked in lots of different areas, but ultimately I kept coming back to the performance
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side and found myself pretty much working with two types of clients. And it will either be
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what we call recreational athletes. It's the, you know, the gym bros, the people looking for really
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quite serious body composition changes from amateur bodybuilders to triathletes, you know,
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all those sorts of things. And then you know once you're in that world and you get half decent at
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what you do your reputation gets out there and I started working with elite athletes. Anyway I did
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that for quite a long time states side came back to the UK and did the same thing. But throughout
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that period I just got more and more into um sport and exercise nutrition at the same time upskilling
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myself and so on so forth. But this is back early on. You know sport science is a relatively young
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discipline. Strength conditioning is a young discipline. Sports nutrition is a really young
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discipline. Um, and we're still playing catch-up, I feel, with um, other allied areas, you know,
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whether it's obviously medicine's been around a long time, nursing practice and so on. And by
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catchup, I mean it's the it's it's less about the theory and more about the practice bit. You know,
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to circle back on what I was saying, it's about getting results. Getting results is a lot more
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than just having knowledge about metabolism, knowledge about exercise physiology. You've
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got to be able to understand how to interpret evidence, science, research. You got to understand
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your clients. And there's a there's a lot in there which we can get on to uh get into deeper later on
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in our conversation. But like I said, ultimately it just kept coming back to for me at least I
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found nutrition was the biggest lever I could pull uh effectively to help my clients get the results
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that they wanted and that just kept getting me more and more obsessed with with nutrition and
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and performance nutrition in general. Okay. Awesome. So, as a strength conditioning coach
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or a personal trainer, you mentioned that you started to think about operations, right? It's
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much more than just the education piece. A lot of it is operations. You have to also run a business,
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right? It's not just, hey, you know what to do and when to do it, but you have to now put this into
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practice and actually run the business. So, as you started to pivot into nutrition, did you see
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this opportunity to have um a better performing operational, you know, uh system in place, feeling
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that you could reach more people and also not have to be on the floor for 10 to 11 hours a day
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in order to run your business? Yeah, absolutely. I think if what you have is a job with somebody
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else, you're working in a facility, right? You don't always appreciate what it takes to get
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clients in front of you, get clients to part with money, right, and to stay. It's a big deal. And
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the bigger businesses obviously have a big machine behind them. They've got marketing, they've got
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all sorts of stuff going on. But if you're a in a small group coaching environment, small group PT,
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small, you know, you're a single operator, you got to do it all yourself and that's intimidating. And
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nowadays, I think that's the bigger likelihood you're going to find yourself in. You know,
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there's less and less opportunities to find work um as an employee or at least it's going to be
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very transient that role. you know, you might have a a job in a gym or a health and fitness facility
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or what in the UK we call a leisure center or whatever or even in a sports team, you know, I
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mean, from from one season to the next, you know, you're highly likely to find yourself looking for
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work. It's a really difficult scenario. Um, which is why you've got to be able to learn
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how to diversify your skill set as as a coach and as a a practitioner and be your your own employer,
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your own marketing machine, networking, all these sorts of things are critical. Uh, and they all
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they all form the successful practitioner, the elite practitioner, shall we say. And by elite,
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by the way, I just mean literally what that term means is is better better than most, right? You're
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better better than most at getting results. You're better at most. I used the phrase reputation
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earlier. If if you don't have the reputation for getting results, then people aren't going to look
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for you. They're not going to recommend you. And so, you want to be the best of the best,
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don't you? In whatever environment, it's something that's in your best interest. And of course that
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will influence not just your ability to train and coach people. It's like how do you package
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yourself? How do you market yourself? What do people see and that influences things like
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buying gape? I don't know in your experience be interesting for you to say but when you're working
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with somebody like for example if you're dressed badly if you look like a hot mess if you're always
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on your phone if you're just you're you're giving nutrition handouts that are just hands scribbled
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notes on a bit of paper. I mean, it's going to be kind of difficult to get buy in. It's not going to
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be that convincing that you're good. Right now, obviously, you learn these things over time,
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but obviously you learn from other people like listeners to this podcast. You learn it from your
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teachers, your mentors. It's not the sort of thing though that they tend to teach in our educational
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program sadly. And that's a problem because people then realize they need to upskill in some of these
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areas. And of course, they go go and find this information from all sorts of crazy places,
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you know. Yeah. So I'm curious. So Laurent, the nutritionist, now started on this journey, right?
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And you still may have been involved with fitness, health, exercise, of course, but now you mentioned
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that you were working with ambitious people. You had these two pillars. You had these recreational
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athletes um that were super motivated gym bros, but then you also had these elite athletes. So
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take us through those early years of now working in performance nutrition and how that profession
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and those experiences started to evolve with time. Well, I mean, so going from a more private sort of
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practice, you're working onetoone with athletes, uh, sorry, with clients, right? These are people
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who are paying you. They're it's a very intimate relationship you have with these people. You know,
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you get to know them. You spend quite a lot of time with them. Often, you know, like I'd go to
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their homes. I'd go check out their kitchens. I was also training them and or I would go and be
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there with their trainer or some of them would have personal chefs if they were wealthy. I mean
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there's all sorts of scenarios there, right? But you've got a different environment than being in a
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um professional team situation. Firstly, the athlete in a team isn't paying you. So
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right there you've got a bit of a problem because there's a different level of buyin. Now they might
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know that they've been told to work with you. They might know that they're expected to work with you,
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but that doesn't mean that they're invested in the idea of working with you. So, all those things I
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talked about go up even higher levels. You know, your reputation, if you're new, if you're a newbie
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to the team, you've just qualified. You know, you got to you got to work hard to get that those
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things that are going to get you some respect out of the athletes. And it can be quite intimidating.
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I remember some horrendous experience even though I was really experienced in the private sector.
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And I was at the time in my I was of an age where I wasn't a kid. Um and I was working in
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um football as in soccer teams and and rugby teams and sort of like a a pack mentality.
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They they you know they can ri you a lot as in make jokes and you know you got to have a
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very thick skin and you know there are some social skills that you need to get into that environment.
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That could be that could be that could be interesting. And you know, you learn things like
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just cuz you're sitting there with your laptop and a clipboard in the cafeteria or the training room,
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it doesn't mean they're going to come up and talk to you. So, you have to learn different
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ways of navigating those environments and how to get yourself in front of an athlete and have them
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share and buy into you because like I said, if they're not paying you, if they haven't, you know,
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done their research, found you online, booked in and have an appointment and so on, you know, those
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are many levels of of um of of buying decisions if you like that they make whereas with the athletes
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is very different. So I I did find it difficult and I I remember my first team presentation was uh
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so I this was a rugby team. I I was sitting there. They all came in and um there was 20 guys massive
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like your American football players like just I'm not I'm you know 6 foot 200 lb sort of thing but
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these guys are monsters you know. So anyway you get past that initial shock of gez these
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guys are big and you got a whole room of massive athletes. Um, so what did I do? I did a PowerPoint
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presentation, took them through uh all the theory I thought that they should know about, you know,
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sports nutrition, hierarchy of evidence, uh, you know, the importance of carbohydrates and how that
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influences adaptations uh, to training and protein needs and leucine thresholds and all that stuff.
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So, they saw me doing that. What did I see? I saw a bunch of uh players on their phones looking out
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the window, all that sort of stuff. And um yeah, and then um I was a bit naive, so I didn't realize
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I wasn't quite getting the engagement, you know, but I went and sat down with them. I did at least
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do this in the cafeteria and they were like, "Boy, that's the worst pres. That is the worst
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presentation. Like, I don't think I anything you said, you know." Uh, so what I learned from
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that though was I did at least get feedback. I did listen and I did understand that that that was the
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first and only time I'm ever going to give that kind of presentation. So I then just sort of got
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in. I took the jokes. I took the uh the criticism from them all and uh started asking them, okay,
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well what you know how how do you want me to talk to you? Because no one had taught me this stuff,
00:18:42.800 --> 00:18:49.680
you know, right? No one, right? Um, so, so asking, but getting myself out there and going,
00:18:49.680 --> 00:18:54.160
do you know what? I'm going to pick myself up from this mess I'm in. Uh, and I'm going to at
00:18:54.160 --> 00:18:59.360
least go into this scenario and get some feedback. So, instantly, the first thing you learn is is you
00:18:59.360 --> 00:19:04.640
need to start learning about the people you're going to work with. Listen to them. Listen to
00:19:04.640 --> 00:19:10.080
what they want to hear because they will tell you. They will tell you. And they've had team
00:19:10.080 --> 00:19:16.640
nutritionists or dieticians or whatever before. Often you'll learn why they why they didn't keep
00:19:16.640 --> 00:19:21.760
those practitioners, right? And that can be pretty scary. They will give you all sorts of interesting
00:19:21.760 --> 00:19:26.320
feedback about what they did and didn't like about that person and why they didn't, you know,
00:19:26.320 --> 00:19:29.600
respect them and so on, which is, you know, you think, oh my god, I've got to, you know, I've got
00:19:29.600 --> 00:19:37.280
to deal with this. But what you're learning to do is to communicate and engage and talk to people.
00:19:37.280 --> 00:19:44.320
So from that point I then started to operate on that basis of listening first you know working
00:19:44.320 --> 00:19:50.080
out how to communicate and then after a bit of trial and error shall we say you start to learn
00:19:50.080 --> 00:19:55.840
how to communicate. It's like any relationship whether it's regular people your buddies you
00:19:55.840 --> 00:20:00.240
know uh in a in a classroom environment when you first do your presentations or
00:20:00.240 --> 00:20:04.480
whatnot you you know I think everyone kind of knows what I'm talking about here. Yeah,
00:20:04.480 --> 00:20:09.680
I mean a few things that you said really resonated with me. Number one, as a young practitioner,
00:20:09.680 --> 00:20:13.040
as a strength condition coach getting into the team environment, you're so excited to finally
00:20:13.040 --> 00:20:17.120
have the opportunity to share everything that you've learned to prepare for this moment. So, I'm
00:20:17.120 --> 00:20:21.120
kind of laughing alongside you when you're telling this story because I've been in that situation,
00:20:21.120 --> 00:20:26.480
not giving a PowerPoint, but going through all this information and overexlaining because I'm so
00:20:26.480 --> 00:20:31.360
excited to share it. Meanwhile, the players, it's great, Gabe. Good job. Like, thank you. Okay, what
00:20:31.360 --> 00:20:37.040
are we doing today? Like, you know, and important guy. It's really important because Go on. Sorry.
00:20:37.040 --> 00:20:42.160
Yeah. And and I think I went through that over time. I started meeting people, new players, new
00:20:42.160 --> 00:20:48.640
teams with questions, right? Hey, let me just ask before I even start. Let me just figure out what's
00:20:48.640 --> 00:20:52.640
been going on here. Let me talk to the people who have been here before. Let me talk to the people
00:20:52.640 --> 00:20:57.520
who have been here for a long time, for a short time, and start to understand the dynamic before I
00:20:57.520 --> 00:21:02.160
maybe try to insert anything that I want to bring into this program. Well, I think what happens is
00:21:02.160 --> 00:21:06.720
in most cases, we've all got years of education behind us, right? And we love this stuff. We're
00:21:06.720 --> 00:21:11.840
a interesting breed in the health and fitness industry. We're all pretty obsessed by the whole
00:21:11.840 --> 00:21:17.520
thing. So, of course, you you know, you land there and you're likeun, you know, everyone's sitting
00:21:17.520 --> 00:21:22.160
there and you just open your mouth and out just spews all the stuff that you're interested in,
00:21:22.160 --> 00:21:28.160
right? And of course, what you don't realize is they're not interested in what you're interested
00:21:28.160 --> 00:21:32.160
in. At least not at the level, you know? So this is like just just shut up and tell me
00:21:32.160 --> 00:21:36.800
what to do. I don't care about all the science. And that's important because you then realize
00:21:36.800 --> 00:21:43.600
that that you as in the coach, the practitioner, you do need to understand the science, but you
00:21:43.600 --> 00:21:50.880
also need to understand how to translate that information into what is meaningful, impactful,
00:21:50.880 --> 00:21:56.960
and my favorite word currently, relevant for them to know. And that requires quite a lot of
00:21:56.960 --> 00:22:02.000
thinking. And that's something that my team and I spend a lot of time working on in our own research
00:22:02.000 --> 00:22:07.840
and our own educational activities is is how do we how do we actually address this stuff because
00:22:07.840 --> 00:22:12.800
that there's a big gap. There's a translational gap which is one issue but there's just a massive
00:22:12.800 --> 00:22:17.840
gap between science and practice for reasons that we've already started to delve into.
00:22:18.400 --> 00:22:23.520
So you discussed being ingrained in the team environment and I'm really excited to talk about
00:22:23.520 --> 00:22:27.200
that a little bit later in our conversation and what you know more about what that was
00:22:27.200 --> 00:22:34.000
like. However, the other thing you had mentioned was translating knowledge into practice. So my
00:22:34.000 --> 00:22:39.680
question for you was what inspired you to create the Institute of Performance Nutrition? Right. I
00:22:39.680 --> 00:22:46.000
understand this was founded around 2011. So really in the field of performance nutrition, it seems
00:22:46.000 --> 00:22:51.600
like that translation into practice was one of the things that was missing. So was that really the
00:22:51.600 --> 00:22:58.320
impetus for creating the IOPM? Absolutely. Yeah. I mean basically I'd come back from the states and
00:22:58.320 --> 00:23:04.080
um I had my masters in exercise science and health promotion. I had a masters in nutrition
00:23:04.080 --> 00:23:10.480
and lots of experience working onetoone in a more recreational setting. But as I started to work
00:23:10.480 --> 00:23:17.440
with more and more elite athletes, I was working with professional boxers, UFC fighters, a lot of
00:23:17.440 --> 00:23:23.280
soccer players privately, various rugby teams. I mean, all sorts of stuff. The military did a lot
00:23:23.280 --> 00:23:27.520
of work with the military, special forces, stuff like that. But what I was finding was just, well,
00:23:27.520 --> 00:23:33.440
hang on, a lot of the stuff that was in the textbook wasn't really relevant to all these
00:23:33.440 --> 00:23:38.960
different contexts that I'm working in. And I'm like, man, I completely understand how important
00:23:38.960 --> 00:23:44.160
results are in these scenarios, but frankly, what I've just read in this book isn't really helping
00:23:44.160 --> 00:23:50.400
me, you know, like what do I do? So, um, I've always been good at asking other people, hey, how
00:23:50.400 --> 00:23:56.000
would you do this? You know, and that was actually one reason why I started my podcast was it was an
00:23:56.000 --> 00:24:02.320
opportunity to have a chat with somebody who is an expert on a topic. So, it' be like, well, hey,
00:24:02.320 --> 00:24:08.960
um, I need to understand more about protein needs, right? So, I'm going to get Stu Phillips on or I
00:24:08.960 --> 00:24:14.080
need to understand more about nutrition, you know, iron metabolism in athletes. So, okay,
00:24:14.080 --> 00:24:18.160
I'm going to talk to Pete Peeling, Professor Pete Peeling in Australia, or I mean, I could,
00:24:18.160 --> 00:24:22.880
you know, I don't want to list millions of names on the podcast. So, that alone was eye opening,
00:24:22.880 --> 00:24:27.600
right? And I was like, hang on, but what these people are saying is not the generalized stuff
00:24:27.600 --> 00:24:32.880
that was in the textbook. So I was in London and I was like, you know what? I'm just going to pull
00:24:32.880 --> 00:24:38.000
together some se seminars and we started doing sort of seminars. I'd get my my mates working
00:24:38.000 --> 00:24:45.840
in teams and I'd I'd invite experts to come and deliver little weekend lecture sessions and that's
00:24:45.840 --> 00:24:52.800
kind of how that started at the time. also because in the states I had got involved with the ISS,
00:24:52.800 --> 00:24:57.200
the International Society of Sports Nutrition back in those days and we started running some courses
00:24:57.200 --> 00:25:05.680
for them as well. And ultimately what happened was the sort of regular CPD lecture weekends started
00:25:05.680 --> 00:25:11.200
to morph into something more serious and the little the little sort of day trainings the one
00:25:11.200 --> 00:25:18.400
day sort of seminar events uh at weekends started to morph into a training program that developed
00:25:18.400 --> 00:25:24.640
over a period of time that became more and more formal and basically is when I was stateside at
00:25:24.640 --> 00:25:30.320
an ISSN conference actually I was uh sitting at a bar with Brad Sherfield, Professor Brad Sherfield,
00:25:30.320 --> 00:25:34.080
who I'm sure all your listeners will know. And I was telling him about all this stuff
00:25:34.080 --> 00:25:38.800
and it was him that told me I was like, I'm not quite sure what to do. And he said, well,
00:25:38.800 --> 00:25:43.280
why don't you start your own institute? And it's one of those conversations you have over wine, but
00:25:43.280 --> 00:25:49.360
I did it. So I turn when I interviewed Brad on one of my podcasts, I said, Brad, you basically you it
00:25:49.360 --> 00:25:55.680
was your idea. It was your idea, but I went with it. Um and it it had various iterations and it
00:25:55.680 --> 00:26:01.600
wasn't really until I was doing my own doctorate at Middle Sex University in London that it became
00:26:01.600 --> 00:26:07.280
much more serious where my own doctoral research which was in bridging the gap between science and
00:26:07.280 --> 00:26:13.280
practice and this is over 10 years ago now and really what happened there is that my doctoral
00:26:13.280 --> 00:26:20.560
research ended up becoming the blueprint for what is now the IOPN and the those talk sort of
00:26:20.560 --> 00:26:28.800
seminar sessions are Now a uh what we now run is a series of professional and post-graduate training
00:26:28.800 --> 00:26:34.320
programs. We've just launched our new master of science degree which is done in partnership
00:26:34.320 --> 00:26:39.520
with the University of Portsmouth here in the UK. It's our program but we work with them to
00:26:39.520 --> 00:26:45.200
have it validated as a degree. Very proud of our journey and where we've come. It's not just me,
00:26:45.200 --> 00:26:52.480
it's my team. Most of my team are former students of mine. So I'm quite loyal to my my students,
00:26:52.480 --> 00:26:59.280
former MSE students when I ran the MSSE at Middle Sex University in London and former IOPM students.
00:26:59.280 --> 00:27:03.520
We've rebranded over time from various names, but that's where we are now as the Institute
00:27:03.520 --> 00:27:09.600
of Performance Nutrition, but everything we do, Gabe, is focused on this concept of applying the
00:27:09.600 --> 00:27:15.680
science into practice. And we're very unique in how we approach this. Um, but that was really the
00:27:15.680 --> 00:27:20.480
impetus. I mean, you know, it's over a decade of time to narrow down to a couple of minutes
00:27:20.480 --> 00:27:26.160
conversation, but that's what happened. It's like a snowball that just kept going and grew into this
00:27:26.160 --> 00:27:31.280
thing that we are now. And we now got students in 60 countries. Like I say, we've got various
00:27:31.280 --> 00:27:36.080
professional programs that we run, including our new master's degree. You mentioned that the IOPN,
00:27:36.080 --> 00:27:40.640
the way you do things by connecting the bridge between science and practice is unique. Well,
00:27:40.640 --> 00:27:45.840
what makes it unique? Yeah, we're we're unique because we we've had an opportunity to develop
00:27:45.840 --> 00:27:51.040
everything we do from the ground up. We started from scratch. So most academic programs follow
00:27:51.040 --> 00:27:56.080
a fairly traditional format in sports science, strength conditioning and so on, there will be
00:27:56.080 --> 00:28:01.120
similar formats to how they run. I should say strength conditioning is much more practice
00:28:01.120 --> 00:28:06.640
focused, right? Whereas typically if you're just going to do an exercise science degree,
00:28:06.640 --> 00:28:10.240
it's less practice focused. It's more about the science or the physiology. You know,
00:28:10.240 --> 00:28:14.960
you might be doing in the lab some fitness tests and so on, but you're not really taught how to
00:28:14.960 --> 00:28:18.800
work with people. Whereas, at least in strength conditioning, you are taught a lot more about how
00:28:18.800 --> 00:28:24.080
to coach people. That's not something that really exists in the sports nutrition environment. The
00:28:24.080 --> 00:28:28.000
dieticians will say, well, we're taught how to do that. And of course, they are. Dieticians is a
00:28:28.000 --> 00:28:32.880
very specific area, but dieticians aren't trained in performance nutrition. They will upskill. We
00:28:32.880 --> 00:28:39.120
have lots of dieticians in the state uh doing our course in Europe and internationally. Of course in
00:28:39.120 --> 00:28:45.520
the states you've got certified sports dieticians, highly trained dieticians in sports dietetics,
00:28:45.520 --> 00:28:51.280
but you know sports nutrition, performance nutrition falls into many scopes of practice
00:28:51.280 --> 00:28:54.800
all the way down to PT, strength conditioning coaches. We all have different levels of
00:28:54.800 --> 00:29:02.480
involvement and what we can do within that area. But again, most educational programs are much more
00:29:02.480 --> 00:29:08.160
theory focused than they are in terms of applying the science into practice. So our program is very
00:29:08.160 --> 00:29:16.720
much about contextualizing the knowledge, how to go through the whole process of sourcing evidence,
00:29:16.720 --> 00:29:23.520
filtering that evidence and then applying that evidence to inform your practice all the way
00:29:23.520 --> 00:29:30.240
through to communication strategies and techniques and so on to help deliver sort of confident
00:29:30.240 --> 00:29:35.360
competent practitioners is kind of our approach. There just isn't anyone else doing that. There are
00:29:35.360 --> 00:29:40.400
many great graduate programs out there in sports nutrition. I'm not saying they're not. However,
00:29:40.400 --> 00:29:45.040
ours is very unique. Right. Even looking at some of your social media, which anyone listening can
00:29:45.040 --> 00:29:51.200
follow on Instagram at the IOPN on Instagram, I could see some of the posts that were created,
00:29:51.200 --> 00:29:56.400
right? Case study challenge. It seems like there are these very real world examples
00:29:56.400 --> 00:30:00.880
that you're trying to generate conversation around. We love a case study, but you know,
00:30:00.880 --> 00:30:06.640
that's the thing. That's what you deal with. You don't deal with generalized stuff. You know,
00:30:06.640 --> 00:30:13.360
one thing that's important about working with athletes, even in a team setting, ultimately
00:30:13.360 --> 00:30:18.800
it's still N of one. You're still working with individuals. And we've got to stop this, you know,
00:30:18.800 --> 00:30:25.120
applying generalized information just to anyone. you know, they're the the even even, you know,
00:30:25.120 --> 00:30:31.120
if you look at your sort of the broad section of your client base or within a team, they're
00:30:31.120 --> 00:30:36.880
still individuals and they, you know, they're ver they will all vary in in many different ways from
00:30:36.880 --> 00:30:44.640
needs, preferences, ethnicity, metabolism, likes, dislikes, economical issues, wants, desires,
00:30:44.640 --> 00:30:49.600
you know, responders, non-responders, although that's an interesting conversation in itself. But
00:30:49.600 --> 00:30:54.720
all this stuff is at the core of evidence-based practices. You've got to bear in mind all of
00:30:54.720 --> 00:31:01.600
these individualized contexts that an a person will have. If you look at science research is is
00:31:01.600 --> 00:31:07.520
you know scientists publish published averages if you like publish means that's absolutely fine but
00:31:07.520 --> 00:31:13.600
you need to learn how to read and interpret that science to try and tease out how meaningful this
00:31:13.600 --> 00:31:20.080
information is to your athlete. So, for example, if a research study was done on a bunch of college
00:31:20.080 --> 00:31:27.040
students, you know, how applicable is is are those findings to an Olympic athlete or to, you know,
00:31:27.040 --> 00:31:33.760
a 250 pound linebacker or whatever when, you know, your research was done on an on a on a, you know,
00:31:33.760 --> 00:31:41.440
a 65 kg college student. Yeah. How relevant is this stuff? So, it's really complicated. There
00:31:41.440 --> 00:31:45.920
are so many ways I want to go with this. So, I'm just gonna try to chew it off bite by bite here,
00:31:45.920 --> 00:31:50.400
which is good. Like, I have so many ideas. So, okay, I kind of just want to hop into real world
00:31:50.400 --> 00:31:55.280
examples because I that caught my eye on your social media and we're kind of in this discussion
00:31:55.280 --> 00:32:01.760
right now of individualization. So, um, all right. I'm an 18-year-old, you know, football, soccer
00:32:01.760 --> 00:32:10.160
phenom with a ton of talent, but no real sense of what like performance or nutrition performance
00:32:10.160 --> 00:32:16.160
even is. I don't hydrate much. Like where do you even start with your approach? I meet you. You're
00:32:16.160 --> 00:32:19.840
working for the team. You and I are having our first conversation. Like obviously you're trying
00:32:19.840 --> 00:32:23.440
to get to know me, my background, things like this. Maybe trying to tease out challenges or
00:32:23.440 --> 00:32:29.680
like roadblocks of my life. But tell me about how you just approached that. Well, so whether this
00:32:29.680 --> 00:32:37.200
is your 18-year-old, you know, football athlete, college superstar, whatever, or whether it's, you
00:32:37.200 --> 00:32:44.480
know, your soccer mom, right? often it's the same issue. The first thing is is once you discover
00:32:44.480 --> 00:32:49.280
what they're doing, typically you'll discover they're doing everything except for the basics,
00:32:49.280 --> 00:32:55.600
right? So, you know, you've got sort of a a top down strategy or a bottom up sort of strategy. And
00:32:55.600 --> 00:33:00.080
everyone's focus is things like, well, you know, they they can tell you what supplements they take.
00:33:00.080 --> 00:33:05.200
They can tell you that they've stopped eating carbohydrates. They can tell you that, you know,
00:33:05.200 --> 00:33:09.360
they're doing this, they're doing that. But when it comes down to it, you ask them really basic
00:33:09.360 --> 00:33:13.840
questions, you know, like are you focusing on and it's not very sexy. I have to say this is like
00:33:13.840 --> 00:33:19.360
one of the challenges that the nutritionist will have is is you've got to just go hang on. Hey,
00:33:19.360 --> 00:33:23.440
yeah, yeah, okay. Right, that's all great, but are you mastering the basics? And what even are
00:33:23.440 --> 00:33:28.800
the basics before you start getting all fancy and complicated? particularly with your 18-year-old,
00:33:28.800 --> 00:33:33.440
you know, he's like, "Oh, man. I'm smashing the protein shakes and, you know, I'm doing my
00:33:33.440 --> 00:33:38.800
benches and my deadlifts and like I'm making sure that I have my post-workout recovery, you know,
00:33:38.800 --> 00:33:44.800
1 second after the, you know, the weights return back to the stack, and I'm on my my creatine,
00:33:44.800 --> 00:33:48.960
I'm on my beta alanine, I'm on this, I'm on that." And they're like, "Well, how many vegetables did
00:33:48.960 --> 00:33:57.040
you eat?" Uh, carrots. Is that a vegetable? know do you you know you once you start delving into
00:33:57.040 --> 00:34:04.160
what they do you realize that it's what they don't do that it's the bigger more challenging issue. So
00:34:04.160 --> 00:34:12.160
if you think about foundations like a foundations of a building, foundations of pretty much any any
00:34:12.160 --> 00:34:16.640
kind of concept you want to get into, there's going to be a set of foundations. For nutrition,
00:34:16.640 --> 00:34:20.800
it's going to be things like, are you eating roughly the right amount of food in a given
00:34:20.800 --> 00:34:28.080
day? Not so easy to answer in a podcast because it's very individualized, but you start to look
00:34:28.080 --> 00:34:33.440
and see, you know, are they getting enough food? Is it spread across two, three, four
00:34:33.440 --> 00:34:39.360
meals a day? Are they getting enough fruits and vegetables? Is there enough colors in there? Is
00:34:39.360 --> 00:34:45.520
there enough fiber? Is the nutrient quality of the food good? Or are they eating a lot of processed
00:34:45.520 --> 00:34:54.000
refined foods commonly a problem? You know, it all tends to be fast foods. They're eating maybe
00:34:54.000 --> 00:34:59.200
they're smashing the protein, but the protein is not from good sources. So you start to find
00:34:59.200 --> 00:35:06.720
all sorts of stuff out. So you have to you have to correct those issues first because as you start to
00:35:06.720 --> 00:35:13.120
work your way up this hierarchy of of need right in terms of nutrition at the very basis of this is
00:35:13.120 --> 00:35:19.600
is enough energy roughly the right distribution of macros proteins fats carbohydrates the quality of
00:35:19.600 --> 00:35:26.080
those proteins fats and carbohydrates spread over enough meals doesn't matter so much yet in this
00:35:26.080 --> 00:35:30.880
conversation about timing or anything are they just getting it roughly right in any given Okay,
00:35:30.880 --> 00:35:36.480
normally the answer is no. So, you've got to focus on that because they're all the other way around.
00:35:36.480 --> 00:35:41.280
They're all about, like I say, their supplements and they're taking loads of supplements and
00:35:41.280 --> 00:35:46.640
uh you know, uh their focus is is very much about the stuff that is what's on social
00:35:46.640 --> 00:35:51.840
media and and so on so forth. So, that's the first thing you have to focus on. So,
00:35:51.840 --> 00:35:56.640
how much time do you allow for change for somebody, right? I this isn't an overnight thing,
00:35:56.640 --> 00:36:01.680
right? Like I'm a I'm a young 18-year-old athlete who's eating fast food. Laurent, you see me
00:36:01.680 --> 00:36:05.600
walking in with McDonald's breakfast sandwich the next day into the facility. And I mean,
00:36:05.600 --> 00:36:11.840
is this about creating small wins and knowing that this is going to take time? Um, and then
00:36:11.840 --> 00:36:19.200
als Right. Right. Yeah. The the reason I'm jumping in with yes is because again an early lesson I had
00:36:19.200 --> 00:36:30.000
to learn is one of the quickest ways to shut down the buy in the belief the willingness of your your
00:36:30.000 --> 00:36:35.040
client your athlete to engage with you is if you just walk in there as the food police and you're
00:36:35.040 --> 00:36:40.000
like you shouldn't be eating this, you shouldn't eat that. This is bad. That's horrible. Firstly,
00:36:40.000 --> 00:36:45.040
no one really likes to be criticized, right? The other thing is is is you're just coming in with a
00:36:45.040 --> 00:36:51.200
whole load of negatives and just generally that doesn't work. So, like I said, I use the phrase
00:36:51.200 --> 00:36:55.040
the biggest lever to pull, but you've just got to look at what they're doing. The first thing is
00:36:55.040 --> 00:37:01.120
just listen. What are you doing? Interesting. They might already be benching, you know,
00:37:01.120 --> 00:37:05.920
huge weight. They might already be the fastest athlete on the pitch. You got to bear in mind some
00:37:05.920 --> 00:37:11.840
of the realities of where this athlete already is. But either which way, you're looking at everything
00:37:11.840 --> 00:37:17.120
that they do, and then you're looking at all the things that you could manipulate and change. Some
00:37:17.120 --> 00:37:24.320
of which are worth changing and manipulating. Some of which are not worth changing if they're really
00:37:24.320 --> 00:37:30.400
married to that practice, which we can talk about in a minute. Um, but either which way, you need to
00:37:30.400 --> 00:37:34.160
just chip away at things. And the first thing you're going to have to do is work out, well,
00:37:34.160 --> 00:37:37.280
what what's the most important area? What's going to have the biggest bang for the buck? you know,
00:37:37.280 --> 00:37:43.840
what's the biggest lever I can pull? And often that is actually just getting the basics right.
00:37:43.840 --> 00:37:48.400
Um, and not worrying about, okay, they might be taking supplements they don't need, but largely
00:37:48.400 --> 00:37:54.720
the supplements, they're probably not harmful unless they're a professional athlete and they're
00:37:54.720 --> 00:37:59.520
not tested for banned substances and various other things. They're unlikely to contain substances
00:37:59.520 --> 00:38:04.560
that are going to be massively detrimental to their athlete. However, it's probably a waste
00:38:04.560 --> 00:38:10.640
of money and or a distraction from all the other things that they should do. But yeah, going in
00:38:10.640 --> 00:38:16.000
saying, "Stop this, stop that, stop this," can have very negative psychological effects on your
00:38:16.000 --> 00:38:22.560
athlete. And they tend to not listen to you at that point. They tend to move on. Uh, and another
00:38:22.560 --> 00:38:27.600
thing I should while I'm thinking about it is if you're going to, let's say, and this is common,
00:38:27.600 --> 00:38:33.520
let's say your athlete is following some rather questionable practices that they've learned
00:38:33.520 --> 00:38:39.760
about on social media, which is really common, right? Their heroes are not you. Their heroes
00:38:39.760 --> 00:38:46.080
are people on social media. I used to have this problem all the time. like my my particularly my
00:38:46.080 --> 00:38:49.280
Premier League football players, Premier League soccer players, and we're talking, you know,
00:38:49.280 --> 00:38:55.440
they're all multi-millionaires, they're extremely famous, extremely good at what they do, and you're
00:38:55.440 --> 00:39:00.080
the team nutritionist. You're not their superhero, right? But they are listening to people. Uh
00:39:00.080 --> 00:39:05.760
whether it's their, you know, their girlfriend's trainer or their best buddy is, you know,
00:39:05.760 --> 00:39:11.920
Ronaldo or somebody. So Ronaldo's got some pretty crazy nutrition things that he's into, but he's an
00:39:11.920 --> 00:39:16.880
like epic football player. You know, if it works for him, it must work for somebody else. Or so
00:39:16.880 --> 00:39:24.880
it could be uh stop eating carbs, uh or I'm taking this pill or this potion or I'm vegan or whatever.
00:39:24.880 --> 00:39:32.960
They'll it's a trend. It's a fad maybe, but um you just got to be careful with what you tell them not
00:39:32.960 --> 00:39:38.240
to do because if it's something they believe in, you're messing with their belief system and that's
00:39:38.240 --> 00:39:42.960
a pretty serious problem, too. So, what advice do you have for giving like positive reinforcements,
00:39:42.960 --> 00:39:48.160
right? talked about maybe avoiding this negative feedback immediately, but I feel like at the same
00:39:48.160 --> 00:39:53.760
time in the position that you're in, sometimes it can almost be like like it's not genuine cuz
00:39:53.760 --> 00:39:57.040
they know that you're the nutritionist, you know, and that's what you're there for. So, how do you
00:39:57.040 --> 00:40:02.880
really create like a positive reinforcement that feels very genuine? No. And this is a so this is
00:40:02.880 --> 00:40:08.240
this may not sound exciting to the listeners, right? But this is a this is a serious problem
00:40:08.240 --> 00:40:14.160
you can run into, right? It it doesn't matter what piece of paper you've got framed, you know,
00:40:14.160 --> 00:40:19.200
on the wall. The athletes don't care about this stuff. There's going to be something about you
00:40:19.200 --> 00:40:28.240
and the way that you communicate information that is either going to turn them on or off. Okay. Now,
00:40:28.240 --> 00:40:32.720
you you used the phrase earlier, which is, is this an instant thing or is it something that's going
00:40:32.720 --> 00:40:39.200
to take a bit of time? I found what worked for me was not getting into sports nutrition advice
00:40:39.200 --> 00:40:44.720
recommendations as soon as I got into the team. The first thing I would do is build relationships.
00:40:44.720 --> 00:40:50.640
I'd build not just relationships with the athletes. That can be difficult to begin with.
00:40:50.640 --> 00:40:57.200
I would find one or two athletes that I felt were the influencers on the team. the people that maybe
00:40:57.200 --> 00:41:03.920
if I get closer to them and work with them, maybe I can have them help me spread the message. It's a
00:41:03.920 --> 00:41:09.680
lot easier to get close to one or two players than it is to get in with the entire team. You know, go
00:41:09.680 --> 00:41:15.040
back to my presentation. It it ain't going to work if you're trying to influence a whole team, but
00:41:15.040 --> 00:41:20.880
you can on a one-to-one basis. You know, there are many opportunities that you will have to spark up
00:41:20.880 --> 00:41:25.920
conversations. And I would have I've got a little black book and in that black book I would make
00:41:25.920 --> 00:41:31.440
notes um a player's nickname, the the name of his wife, girlfriend, his kids, his favorite sports
00:41:31.440 --> 00:41:39.200
team, just stuff, things that are opportunity they provide you with. It's like a key to the door to
00:41:39.200 --> 00:41:44.560
that opportunity to engage with them. And you go, how's your, you know, your brother wasn't well
00:41:44.560 --> 00:41:48.320
last week. You know, it's like, what's that got to do with sports nutrition? has got everything to do
00:41:48.320 --> 00:41:54.560
with it because you're a human trying to interact with another human. If you can't be a human,
00:41:54.560 --> 00:41:58.720
you're not going to be able to take it to the next level and have them actually follow any advice
00:41:58.720 --> 00:42:02.880
you've got because they don't like you. They don't want to know you. You know, these barriers,
00:42:02.880 --> 00:42:07.040
you might have to get them in the corridor, sit next to them on the on the coach, you know,
00:42:07.040 --> 00:42:12.000
on the plane, wherever. You've just got to work at developing these relationships. So, that's
00:42:12.000 --> 00:42:18.000
one thing. The other thing is being an SNC coach. This was an advantage I had. I think because I had
00:42:18.000 --> 00:42:25.360
already been an SNC coach, I knew how to talk to other SNC coaches. But that was very important was
00:42:25.360 --> 00:42:30.960
develop those relationships um with what's called your community of practice. So your community of
00:42:30.960 --> 00:42:38.800
practice is your other coaches, team doctor, the chefs, uh the kitmen, everyone, right? Everyone.
00:42:38.800 --> 00:42:45.920
Everyone is on everyone is either on your side or against you basically. So being the nutritionist,
00:42:45.920 --> 00:42:50.720
you're probably the least embedded member of the team or at least that's been my experience. It's
00:42:50.720 --> 00:42:56.400
very there are now many full-time practitioners and so on, but ultimately you're not as part of
00:42:56.400 --> 00:43:02.320
the in crowd typically as the SNC coaches are. Um get in with them and they will understand the
00:43:02.320 --> 00:43:08.640
athletes. They'll know some of the stuff. Now, of course, you might find the SNC coaches are also
00:43:08.640 --> 00:43:13.920
singing from the wrong hymn sheet. SNC coaches will have their own ideas about what's right
00:43:13.920 --> 00:43:17.520
and wrong from nutrition and so on. So, you've also got to make sure that you're all saying
00:43:17.520 --> 00:43:24.560
the same thing. You all have the same belief and you can gently help people to understand
00:43:24.560 --> 00:43:31.200
um your perspective and help you know provide some evidence as to why you feel you know people should
00:43:31.200 --> 00:43:36.800
do things. Um and you know ultimately in fact there was um at Middle Sex University we got
00:43:36.800 --> 00:43:43.280
a a very well-known SMC professor Anthony Turner. You you guys might know who he is. He's constantly
00:43:43.280 --> 00:43:50.160
publishing in the NSCA journals. And um I remember him in a class I was listening to. He made a point
00:43:50.160 --> 00:43:55.360
of saying you you you got to justify your role on the team. Uh you got to justify your role to
00:43:55.360 --> 00:43:59.840
the athletes. You've got to justify your role to your colleagues and obviously to your bosses and
00:43:59.840 --> 00:44:05.120
you know your chain of command so to speak and also to yourself. So there's these little things
00:44:05.120 --> 00:44:11.440
that you can do but it will initially come down to just having conversations listening. It's like
00:44:11.440 --> 00:44:17.360
they say you've got two eyes, two ears, one mouth. Watch, listen. Do a little less talking and a lot
00:44:17.360 --> 00:44:23.840
more observing. Observation is hugely important to the next step of learning what to do and how
00:44:23.840 --> 00:44:28.720
to do something. Oh, that's great. Thank you for that. And what I'm thinking here is how do you
00:44:28.720 --> 00:44:36.480
find the balance between evidence-based practices and what an individual says or feels is working
00:44:36.480 --> 00:44:40.880
really well for them. I imagine you're but I've always done this Laurent. I've always done this
00:44:40.880 --> 00:44:44.480
and it's really worked well for me. Where's the balance for you? Even though if you know
00:44:44.480 --> 00:44:50.480
this may not be the best method. So Gabe, that's why I was saying, well, let me just go firstly,
00:44:50.480 --> 00:44:57.440
although I use the word evidence-based practice a lot, as a practitioner, I prefer to take it to the
00:44:57.440 --> 00:45:03.680
next level where it's evidence informed practice. So I'm using evidence to inform my practice,
00:45:03.680 --> 00:45:11.200
my advice, my recommendations. And I like to take that to the athlete, the client who will have
00:45:11.200 --> 00:45:17.200
ideas, beliefs, as we've already discussed. And those ideas and beliefs might well be and often
00:45:17.200 --> 00:45:24.640
are based on amongst other things the fact that they feel it's already working for them. Right?
00:45:24.640 --> 00:45:29.600
That's a really difficult position to shift if they're like, "But it already works. I'm already
00:45:29.600 --> 00:45:34.080
doing well on this, so why should I change my path?" So that's why I say you got to listen
00:45:34.080 --> 00:45:40.480
first. Don't just smash their perspective. you know, you're you're uh you're you you know, you're
00:45:40.480 --> 00:45:45.040
you're you're on to a loser if you're going to have a go at their belief system, right? However,
00:45:45.040 --> 00:45:49.840
you can sit there and go, "Right, okay, I hear you. This is all great. However, there is another
00:45:49.840 --> 00:45:56.400
perspective here and what you're doing is working for you, but I believe that there's a better way."
00:45:56.400 --> 00:46:00.400
Okay? I'm not saying what you're doing isn't working, but there is an even better way. Now,
00:46:00.400 --> 00:46:06.560
aren't you interested in that? if I if I could help you do something even better than what you're
00:46:06.560 --> 00:46:09.680
doing, would you be interested in talking about that? And and they always are. They're always
00:46:09.680 --> 00:46:14.880
like, "Okay, I'll give it a listen." And it might take a few conversations. That doesn't mean you
00:46:14.880 --> 00:46:20.240
start holding up peer-reviewed publications to the athlete. And I don't have a magic bullet
00:46:20.240 --> 00:46:25.760
because it is very individualized how you learn to communicate with each and every individual.
00:46:25.760 --> 00:46:33.520
But it's a conversation that starts somewhere and it is not likely to be resolved in one engagement
00:46:33.520 --> 00:46:38.960
with your athlete. It's going to take a little bit of time. And again, the more they believe in you
00:46:38.960 --> 00:46:45.120
and the more confidence they have in you, then the more likely they are to move into slightly
00:46:45.120 --> 00:46:52.800
more uncomfortable places because they trust you. If they know that you have their best, you know,
00:46:52.800 --> 00:46:58.080
their best, you know, whatever it is, you you you are you are 100% interested in what's right for
00:46:58.080 --> 00:47:03.360
them and you genuinely want to help them be the best that they can and you genuinely have put a
00:47:03.360 --> 00:47:08.880
lot of time and effort into determining what's right for them, you'll often find that they'll
00:47:08.880 --> 00:47:14.720
give you a shot. Yeah. I love Yeah. I love I love the term you use, right? The switch from
00:47:14.720 --> 00:47:21.040
evidence-based to evidence informed. Yeah. which is great because it doesn't have to be so rigid,
00:47:21.040 --> 00:47:25.600
but we can use this evidence to help inform and make these decisions, make these processes
00:47:25.600 --> 00:47:30.320
we already accustomed to even better, which I really like. Now, continuing the conversation
00:47:30.320 --> 00:47:35.120
with working with athletes, I'm curious about your perspective on working with athletes and
00:47:35.120 --> 00:47:39.440
the challenges that come with athletes from different countries and cultures who might be
00:47:39.440 --> 00:47:45.440
really accustomed to different types of foods. Yeah. and coming to a new environment and all
00:47:45.440 --> 00:47:52.640
of a sudden saying the food that I always knew and and love is no longer here. So I I wasn't naive to
00:47:52.640 --> 00:47:59.600
this issue in as far as I was raised my father was British of Scottish origin. My mother was French,
00:47:59.600 --> 00:48:05.040
right? I was raised in a British French household. I was already accustomed to different cuisines,
00:48:05.040 --> 00:48:11.280
different approaches to to eating food. British cuisine being awful, French cuisine being amazing,
00:48:11.280 --> 00:48:16.560
but concepts like the quality of food presentation, the importance of meal times
00:48:16.560 --> 00:48:22.800
as not just an opportunity to eat, but it's also an opportunity to be with people. We're social
00:48:22.800 --> 00:48:27.760
creatures. And in a team setting, for example, that's critical. you know, yeah, you might have
00:48:27.760 --> 00:48:33.040
feeding strategies that are very individualized that you have, you know, outside the weight room,
00:48:33.040 --> 00:48:38.960
on an airplane, on pitch or whatever, but it's very important to have athletes sit together and
00:48:38.960 --> 00:48:44.000
eat or clients to eat with their family or youth athletes to sit with. You know, there's all sorts
00:48:44.000 --> 00:48:50.080
of stuff there, but but you know, we've already mentioned individual needs and preferences. And
00:48:50.080 --> 00:48:56.080
there's no greater example than that is when you have international athletes in a team. And I've
00:48:56.080 --> 00:49:01.200
had many experiences of that, not just in US or UK professional team settings where you often
00:49:01.200 --> 00:49:10.080
will have multi- lingual, multi-ethnic people, but for example, in a typical Premier League,
00:49:10.080 --> 00:49:15.040
English Premier League soccer team, the joke being hardly anyone's actually English. They're they're
00:49:15.040 --> 00:49:19.200
from everywhere, right? Including the manager. The manager might be the German. The average
00:49:19.200 --> 00:49:25.440
teams are everywhere from, you know, Europeans, Chinese, Americans, even whatever. I mean,
00:49:25.440 --> 00:49:29.680
it's all sorts. Every single one of them came from a different part of the world. They're used
00:49:29.680 --> 00:49:34.080
to different foods. They all gravitate to eating different things in different ways. And a lot of
00:49:34.080 --> 00:49:40.240
it is it's reminds them of of home. It's a comfort thing. It's not just fuel. We got to, you know,
00:49:40.240 --> 00:49:48.400
problem with nutrition is we go on about calories, macros. No, it's food. Food is much more than
00:49:48.400 --> 00:49:53.200
just calories and energy. It is something that makes you happy. It's something that makes you
00:49:53.200 --> 00:49:59.120
sad if you miss it, right? Something that brings communities together. It's really important stuff.
00:49:59.120 --> 00:50:05.440
But nonetheless, it's a huge challenge when you've got 10, 15, 20 different nationalities sitting at
00:50:05.440 --> 00:50:12.800
the table and you've got to come up with with with foods to suit everyone and yet still tick
00:50:12.800 --> 00:50:18.880
the well, this is what the athletes need to, you know, fuel up on. It's match day, game day minus
00:50:18.880 --> 00:50:24.160
one. They're going to need higher carbohydrate. They're going to need recovery meals afterwards.
00:50:24.160 --> 00:50:30.160
It's offseason. It's on season. And that again requires you to spend some time learning about
00:50:30.160 --> 00:50:34.640
your athletes. They're not just athletes, by the way. We keep calling them athletes. They're
00:50:34.640 --> 00:50:40.720
human beings. I think that's the first thing is they're they're humans. And humans have crazy
00:50:40.720 --> 00:50:46.240
likes and dislikes, prejudiced, fads that they're into. You've got all sorts there. So, you have to
00:50:46.240 --> 00:50:53.760
learn to identify what people like, don't like, and work with the the chef or the team chefs. and
00:50:53.760 --> 00:50:59.760
you've got to try and find a happy medium, that can be certainly challenging. And it's been very
00:50:59.760 --> 00:51:06.320
different in every environment that I work with. But if you don't bother to get some feedback from
00:51:06.320 --> 00:51:12.240
your athletes, if you don't bother to work out what people like and don't like, doesn't matter
00:51:12.240 --> 00:51:18.400
how well designed your performance nutrition strategies are. I I used the term earlier it
00:51:18.400 --> 00:51:26.560
you know it's all very well having information but if you can't have implementation and application
00:51:26.560 --> 00:51:31.280
it doesn't go anywhere and often times you'll have athletes who won't eat certain foods because
00:51:31.280 --> 00:51:37.040
they don't like them or it doesn't meet their religious or ethnic beliefs or or whatever you've
00:51:37.040 --> 00:51:41.920
got a problem because you've then got an athlete who's underfueled or has gastrointestinal problems
00:51:41.920 --> 00:51:47.200
because they're being made to eat things they just don't tolerate. Um, under fueling is becoming
00:51:47.200 --> 00:51:51.360
more and more of a problem where athletes aren't eating enough food. But that all, you know, again,
00:51:51.360 --> 00:51:56.880
it's the listen and observe and then you keep adapting. We have to keep adapting like you do
00:51:56.880 --> 00:52:04.400
as an SNC coach. You know, you keep adapting your training program based on the actual realworld
00:52:04.400 --> 00:52:08.320
situations that your athletes find themselves in. Yeah, I thought it was really cool. We had
00:52:08.320 --> 00:52:14.160
the opportunity to go visit Liverpool and go see their new facility and yeah, you could see and I
00:52:14.160 --> 00:52:21.840
I went I went with Keiser and you could see in the cafeteria they had the the nutritionist there. So,
00:52:21.840 --> 00:52:25.840
we just visited the cafeteria. We didn't visit specifically with the nutritionist, but you could
00:52:25.840 --> 00:52:31.600
see even in that area when you walk through the facility, you get there and I believe there were
00:52:31.600 --> 00:52:37.040
the flags of all the different players, you know, home countries, and it made for a really welcoming
00:52:37.040 --> 00:52:40.880
and inviting place because these people are not home. They're from all these different areas,
00:52:40.880 --> 00:52:45.360
and what makes everybody different ultimately brings them together. But like you mentioned,
00:52:45.360 --> 00:52:50.640
food and the culture surrounding food is so impactful for everyone. Everyone has their
00:52:50.640 --> 00:52:54.800
own unique experience whether that reminds them of home or or growing up. So I thought it was
00:52:54.800 --> 00:52:59.840
really cool and it really struck me that they brought that into the cafeteria area which I
00:52:59.840 --> 00:53:05.520
thought was really really cool. Yeah. I mean you know an obvious challenge to that is I mean in
00:53:05.520 --> 00:53:12.160
that scenario you're talking about a club with massive resources financially and a lot of the
00:53:12.160 --> 00:53:16.000
teams I've worked for been you know they've been the best teams on the planet. They've got massive
00:53:16.000 --> 00:53:21.520
resour I mean they put huge amounts of money. the the chefs are Misheland starred chefs. I mean,
00:53:21.520 --> 00:53:27.040
this is serious, you know, and we fly ingredients. Uh we go to the best markets, we get, you know,
00:53:27.040 --> 00:53:32.000
a huge sums of money are spent on that food. However, if you do not have those resources,
00:53:32.000 --> 00:53:40.480
you can still adapt anything toward to to to better suit the needs and preferences of your
00:53:40.480 --> 00:53:45.600
athletes. You just got to observe and talk and watch. See in the states one thing I when I was
00:53:45.600 --> 00:53:50.400
in the states of course it goes all very well I was talking about international but of course in
00:53:50.400 --> 00:53:54.800
countries like the US which is such a big country you got lots of people from different parts of the
00:53:54.800 --> 00:54:01.120
US and of course you've got very different food likes and dislikes in your country and that alone
00:54:01.120 --> 00:54:08.160
is an issue you know um I spent a lot of time down in in New Mexico for example and got to love all
00:54:08.160 --> 00:54:13.840
the chili and the you know New Mexican cuisine but of course that was radically different from when I
00:54:13.840 --> 00:54:19.120
was uh up north, you know, in New York and places like that. Completely different types of cuisine,
00:54:19.120 --> 00:54:22.240
but you can still adapt. That's the great thing about the modern world we live in. Most
00:54:22.240 --> 00:54:26.320
things are available, you know, but if you don't actually know what people like and don't like,
00:54:26.320 --> 00:54:29.840
you can't do anything about it. Absolutely. I'm starting to get hungry as our conversation goes,
00:54:29.840 --> 00:54:36.320
but I don't know how you do so many podcast episodes. Um I'm like, that sounds good. You
00:54:36.320 --> 00:54:43.360
you said chili. I was like, okay. Oh my god. Um, so pivoting from these scenarios in which you
00:54:43.360 --> 00:54:49.360
can't necessarily always observe, you can't always talk and watch. We talked a lot about working in
00:54:49.360 --> 00:54:54.480
a team environment and with athletes. Now, I want to pivot into working with individuals,
00:54:54.480 --> 00:54:58.640
your gym bros, your weekend warriors athletes where you're talking with them and having
00:54:58.640 --> 00:55:03.200
check-ins and conversations, but you're not always there. You're not observing from afar. They have
00:55:03.200 --> 00:55:07.840
their own lives. So talk to me about kind of your approach or some of the challenges of working
00:55:07.840 --> 00:55:14.320
with one-on-one or really the private sector with consulting. Yeah, and that's I've done if anything
00:55:14.320 --> 00:55:19.600
I've done more of that, you know, that's for many years and that's actually where my focus now is in
00:55:19.600 --> 00:55:25.280
helping nutritionists and uh nutrition coaches and health and fitness professionals work more either
00:55:25.280 --> 00:55:30.080
in group coaching or nutrition coaching type environments because this is this is where more
00:55:30.080 --> 00:55:34.720
people are going to find themselves. you know, very few people will end up advising nutrition
00:55:34.720 --> 00:55:40.160
to elite sports teams. So, the challenges are huge when you're working with individuals because out
00:55:40.160 --> 00:55:45.440
of sight is out of mind. So, you know, if you're not there, which you're not going to be for the
00:55:45.440 --> 00:55:52.080
most part, you've got to find different ways of developing accountability with your client. Um,
00:55:52.080 --> 00:55:57.840
and nowadays, you know, there are great ways to do that. You can have people do anything from using
00:55:57.840 --> 00:56:03.680
things like My Fitness Pal to track, although I'm not such a fan of tracking in the usual sense
00:56:03.680 --> 00:56:09.840
of the term for various reasons, including the perceived accuracy of that. It's not particularly
00:56:09.840 --> 00:56:13.200
accurate. You know, you think it's accurate, but it's not very accurate. We can get into that if
00:56:13.200 --> 00:56:18.320
we have time later. But people can take photos, they can write food diaries, there's all sorts
00:56:18.320 --> 00:56:24.880
of things. But the more disengaged that they are from the process, the more wild and crazy they
00:56:24.880 --> 00:56:30.000
go with things. So you need to have degrees of accountability. Now there you mentioned check-ins.
00:56:30.000 --> 00:56:34.480
Check-ins is a powerful thing. Once a week you can, you know, you should always have a weekly
00:56:34.480 --> 00:56:39.440
check-in. Invariably, it's not going to be face to face in your office. That can be expensive. It's
00:56:39.440 --> 00:56:44.320
impractical. But you can do that on WhatsApp. You can do it using coaching applications. There are
00:56:44.320 --> 00:56:50.480
many that exist out there. But a weekly check-in is extremely powerful. But over and above your
00:56:50.480 --> 00:56:55.600
weekly check-in, which is an opportunity for you to see how they're doing, they know that at the
00:56:55.600 --> 00:56:59.040
end of the week, they've got to report back and tell you something. Whether they tell you what you
00:56:59.040 --> 00:57:03.520
want to hear or what they think you should hear is another conversation. But nonetheless, it's that
00:57:03.520 --> 00:57:10.240
weekly weekly follow-up situation. What I like to do though is have a a sort of a a test don't
00:57:10.240 --> 00:57:16.320
guess scenario. And depending on the way your practice is set up, your office is set up, the
00:57:16.320 --> 00:57:23.360
technology you have available, there are various additional layers of this sort of test don't guess
00:57:23.360 --> 00:57:28.480
and accountability that you can introduce. Very basic one of course is daily weigh-ins. You can
00:57:28.480 --> 00:57:33.520
just have them weigh first thing in the morning every day. Um that'll provide you with some degree
00:57:33.520 --> 00:57:39.280
of trend on total body weight which can be pretty useful depending on what you're trying to achieve.
00:57:39.280 --> 00:57:45.280
um all the way through to they might have access to much more sophisticated methods of body
00:57:45.280 --> 00:57:52.000
composition analysis which you know again I said if it's recreational athletes nine times out of 10
00:57:52.000 --> 00:57:56.320
that's going to be a huge thing they're interested in is their body composition yes their performance
00:57:56.320 --> 00:58:00.800
will be important if they're triathletes or whatever they're already using a thousand
00:58:00.800 --> 00:58:05.920
million metrics gadgets and technology to look at their you know their fitness and their power
00:58:05.920 --> 00:58:10.480
and their all bits and bobs they have from their from their smartwatches to their power meters and
00:58:10.480 --> 00:58:15.200
all sorts of things. That's usually not what the nutritionist has to get involved in. Body fat,
00:58:15.200 --> 00:58:22.080
muscle mass. These are the things that tend to be more interesting. So, you might have access to um
00:58:22.080 --> 00:58:28.400
clinics that provide DEXA body comp assessments, which you might do say once a quarter, every 3
00:58:28.400 --> 00:58:34.000
months. Not so easy. In the UK, we have much more restrictions on being able to do these things, but
00:58:34.000 --> 00:58:38.720
we do have private clinics now doing DEX tests. In the States, I found it much easier to get
00:58:38.720 --> 00:58:44.960
my clients to get DEXA assessments. Um, you got people that are highly trained in using skinfold
00:58:44.960 --> 00:58:50.800
calipers, using the Isaac methodology. Got to be careful with skin folds. You need to know how to
00:58:50.800 --> 00:58:55.200
use them and where to put them on the body. That isn't just a case of I've got skin folds and let's
00:58:55.200 --> 00:59:01.280
measure. Uh, that can be wildly inaccurate and misleading. Bio impedance analysis is where you
00:59:01.280 --> 00:59:07.200
stand on a scale or hold some handles and it gives you some information about body composition. I
00:59:07.200 --> 00:59:16.960
would say very very varied results can be taken from that. There's different bits of kit out
00:59:16.960 --> 00:59:21.440
there. Some are much more accurate than others. That's not really the purpose of my chat today,
00:59:21.440 --> 00:59:27.040
but you just have to bear in mind evidence informed. Well, how reliable and robust is
00:59:27.040 --> 00:59:33.360
that evidence? I.e. my weight, my body fat level that I'm using to inform my understanding of where
00:59:33.360 --> 00:59:37.840
I am today. Am I am I making improvements? Am I making gains? Am I going backwards?
00:59:37.840 --> 00:59:42.480
Like what's going on? You know, the accuracy of this information is highly influential.
00:59:42.480 --> 00:59:48.560
But it's very powerful as a motivating tool to have this information whether it's body comp data,
00:59:48.560 --> 00:59:57.040
blood work, weighins, all of which are presented at these check-ins, whether it's in office or via
00:59:57.040 --> 01:00:03.280
some remote methodology. That way both you as a practitioner and your client is constantly
01:00:03.280 --> 01:00:08.320
focused on the outcome and the outcome is for example losing body fat, gaining on a
01:00:08.320 --> 01:00:13.280
regular basis. You need to understand, am I going in the right direction? And if I'm not,
01:00:13.280 --> 01:00:19.840
I need to discuss that with my client because they're going to need some counseling. They're
01:00:19.840 --> 01:00:26.240
going to need some troubleshooting. They're going to often need some calming down. Often times,
01:00:26.240 --> 01:00:30.880
you'll find, "Oh my god, it's not working." And they'll blame anything but themselves, right? And
01:00:30.880 --> 01:00:35.680
it might be that you gave them the wrong advice. Often it's because they're not following your
01:00:35.680 --> 01:00:42.000
advice regularly or properly or whatever. uh and that needs observation. You got to listen. You got
01:00:42.000 --> 01:00:49.040
to observe. Uh and there's a big skill set there because you will often find that understanding
01:00:49.040 --> 01:00:54.560
what people are actually doing is not so easy to understand. Particularly in nutrition, you know,
01:00:54.560 --> 01:00:59.280
it's much easier in the weight room. You can see, you know, you can measure and observe how much
01:00:59.280 --> 01:01:03.760
somebody's lifting, what they're doing. Nutrition is way more complicated, but those weekly
01:01:03.760 --> 01:01:10.480
check-ins are absolutely critical, but constant feedback and refining and fine-tuning often will
01:01:10.480 --> 01:01:15.360
get you in the right direction. Big mistake I made early in my career is I'd give somebody a
01:01:15.360 --> 01:01:19.920
nutrition plan and 3 months later I'd say, "Come back and see me." You wouldn't see them 3 months
01:01:19.920 --> 01:01:24.400
later because they didn't get the results that they wanted. So, you need to have that constant
01:01:24.400 --> 01:01:30.160
feedback mechanism. Um, it's like flying a plane, you know, you got that constant, you know,
01:01:30.160 --> 01:01:35.520
you're being pulled in a different direction, so you constantly correct and eventually you you'll
01:01:35.520 --> 01:01:40.480
land where you want to land. Otherwise, you get massively deviated on your path. Yeah. And it goes
01:01:40.480 --> 01:01:45.280
back to this idea of buying too, right? The the hey, come back and see me in three months or hey,
01:01:45.280 --> 01:01:49.280
Laurent is checking in with me once a week and I have time in the schedule because he cares,
01:01:49.280 --> 01:01:57.120
you know? Yeah. Car completely. You know, Gabe, that is such an important part of the puzzle,
01:01:57.120 --> 01:02:04.400
particularly in things like nutrition. You've got got to demonstrate that you genuinely care about
01:02:04.400 --> 01:02:09.280
the troubles and strives that your client's going through. And you genuinely care about finding a
01:02:09.280 --> 01:02:13.360
solution to those problems. And you need to you need to illustrate the fact that it's not going
01:02:13.360 --> 01:02:18.000
to be perfect to begin with. We're going to have some things that work. We're going to have some
01:02:18.000 --> 01:02:22.480
things that don't work. And that's just normal. But if you don't have regular check-ins, if you
01:02:22.480 --> 01:02:29.120
don't have regular chats, conversations, whether it's messaging, you're never going to develop that
01:02:29.120 --> 01:02:34.640
um that sort of care buying practitioner patient relationships. Absolutely critical to get the
01:02:34.640 --> 01:02:39.920
outcomes that you're after. We have time for a couple more questions. And earlier you mentioned
01:02:39.920 --> 01:02:44.640
supplements, right? I believe you said people actually talk more about what they are doing
01:02:44.640 --> 01:02:49.680
and it's really about what they aren't doing. And that kind of led into you mentioning supplements.
01:02:49.680 --> 01:02:53.200
So supplements are always a hot topic, right? Me as a strength and conditioning coach, I get people
01:02:53.200 --> 01:02:57.120
all the time, what should I be taking? What should I, you know, and I go back to, okay, well, like
01:02:57.120 --> 01:03:01.600
I go back to like, you know, are you sleeping? Are you eating breakfast? Are you hydrating? Um,
01:03:01.600 --> 01:03:06.880
let's start there, maybe. But everyone's always curious, do we really need them? So,
01:03:06.880 --> 01:03:13.520
how do you help athletes or individuals that aren't maybe even athletes separate what's useful
01:03:13.520 --> 01:03:19.520
from what's just noise? Great question. So, this is complicated because it depends on what question
01:03:19.520 --> 01:03:25.040
you're asking and how in what context, you know, how many gray areas do we want to have in this,
01:03:25.040 --> 01:03:31.760
right? So, do you need supplements? Almost certainly no. You don't need them. Define
01:03:31.760 --> 01:03:37.520
supplement. Firstly, define need. Um, a lot of this will depend on who you are and what you know,
01:03:37.520 --> 01:03:43.680
what level you're at. The average person rarely needs supplements, right? However,
01:03:43.680 --> 01:03:54.480
if they are vegan, if they are vegetarian, if they are have some reason to heavily restrict their
01:03:54.480 --> 01:04:01.600
intake of food, if they're extremely fussy, if they are unable to access quality foods. I mean,
01:04:01.600 --> 01:04:09.760
there are many places in this world, US, UK even, where access to highquality produce is not an
01:04:09.760 --> 01:04:15.440
option. They might not be able to afford these things. Sometimes it's cheaper to supplement.
01:04:15.440 --> 01:04:20.480
Sometimes it's more practical to supplement. There's all sorts of scenarios there. But if
01:04:20.480 --> 01:04:28.640
we can differentiate, you know, um, need from what works and what doesn't work, right? So,
01:04:28.640 --> 01:04:32.480
we've already got that hierarchy of need, you know, if you get all the basics right, chances
01:04:32.480 --> 01:04:36.960
are you probably don't need the supplements. They're like sprinkles on the cake more than
01:04:36.960 --> 01:04:42.480
the cake itself. Um, there's one or two that you could argue are way more important than others,
01:04:42.480 --> 01:04:48.320
like creatine monohydrate. In fact, the more we learn about creatine, the more exciting it gets
01:04:48.320 --> 01:04:56.400
beyond its capacity to improve outcomes for strength and conditioning, cognitive health,
01:04:56.400 --> 01:05:01.920
cognitive health, cognitive function. Other areas that I found interesting with creatine,
01:05:01.920 --> 01:05:08.560
for example, is the impact it has on glycogen um replenishment strategies. All sorts of cool stuff
01:05:08.560 --> 01:05:14.640
you can do with with creatine. Um you know, yeah, you got your vitamin D for people who
01:05:14.640 --> 01:05:19.440
for various reasons, either due to ethnicity or due to where they live on the planet, you know,
01:05:19.440 --> 01:05:25.920
there's no sunshine sort of scenario. There's an argument there. uh protein supplements is uh
01:05:25.920 --> 01:05:31.840
and carbohydrates tend to be the two biggies that people just completely misunderstand that you can
01:05:31.840 --> 01:05:39.120
almost always get enough protein through food. You know, again, is a protein supplement food or is it
01:05:39.120 --> 01:05:43.520
a supplement? You know, like where does that one go? You know, uh certain foods are very high in
01:05:43.520 --> 01:05:51.280
protein, meat, fish, eggs, some dairy like cottage cheese, Greek yogurt, stuff like that. You know,
01:05:51.280 --> 01:05:57.600
you can normally meet your needs. Even the biggest of football players etc. rugby players I have
01:05:57.600 --> 01:06:04.960
found can meet it through food. It just may not be practical to do that due to travel. You can't
01:06:04.960 --> 01:06:10.240
cook a steak whilst you're in an airplane. You know uh you you know you're on the coach,
01:06:10.240 --> 01:06:14.880
you can't travel on the train necessarily, you know. So there's different scenarios and
01:06:14.880 --> 01:06:21.040
it just depends on the situation you're at. Maybe because you're not at home, you're not in the team
01:06:21.040 --> 01:06:28.960
cafeteria or whatever, maybe it's a strategy as a comp to compensate for the challenges that you
01:06:28.960 --> 01:06:35.280
have. Particularly large athletes and bodybuilders who might be augmented, you know, they're using
01:06:35.280 --> 01:06:40.960
um steroids, etc., there may be an increased argument for them to have additional supplemental
01:06:40.960 --> 01:06:49.600
protein. It just depends on your needs. um you know uh fish oils if you don't eat fish ever
01:06:49.600 --> 01:06:57.600
um or rarely if you're vegan vegetarian and you're not eating enough foods um you know that provide
01:06:57.600 --> 01:07:03.360
you with the substances that will enable your body to manufacture essential fatty acid you know
01:07:03.360 --> 01:07:10.960
it all gets very challenging these are arguments for some supplements but on the whole um I would
01:07:10.960 --> 01:07:15.360
say more often times than not you don't actually need supplements which is quite an interesting
01:07:15.360 --> 01:07:20.880
conversation to have. Question for you. I have a severe fish allergy and as well as shellfish.
01:07:20.880 --> 01:07:27.760
Fish oil to me is essentially a cyanide. So I have heard people recommend like algae or krill
01:07:27.760 --> 01:07:33.360
or something like not krill algae maybe. Is that a reasonable substitution? I don't know. And the
01:07:33.360 --> 01:07:37.360
reason why I don't know is because the evidence doesn't really answer that question very well.
01:07:37.360 --> 01:07:42.000
What is interesting is if you properly look at all the evidence, you know, it's it's not very
01:07:42.000 --> 01:07:46.080
convincing that any of these supplements are actually of any particular value. You know,
01:07:46.080 --> 01:07:50.160
it's it there's a lot of bad science out there, I'm afraid. And by bad science,
01:07:50.160 --> 01:07:54.960
it's like if you really learn how to read and interpret the quality and relevance of science,
01:07:54.960 --> 01:08:01.680
it's really scary how bad a lot of it is. Um, a lot of interpretations are made from very weak
01:08:01.680 --> 01:08:09.600
data andor completely awful, terribly conducted studies. Um it's got nothing to do with who funded
01:08:09.600 --> 01:08:14.560
the study and all those sorts of things that people might argue. It's just you know it's very
01:08:14.560 --> 01:08:20.960
difficult to conduct science. You know researchers get a lot oftick for the quality of their science.
01:08:20.960 --> 01:08:27.440
You know particularly in sports science strength conditioning we can't get the sort of numbers
01:08:27.440 --> 01:08:33.360
of people into our studies that public health studies will have you know hundreds of thousands
01:08:33.360 --> 01:08:38.960
of people. We're lucky to get a dozen. You know, an epidemiologist is going to look at that and go,
01:08:38.960 --> 01:08:43.040
you have nowhere near enough data to draw any conclusions. And to a certain extent, they're
01:08:43.040 --> 01:08:48.960
right. Hence, I love case studies. You see, so you yourself are a case study. You can't do fish.
01:08:48.960 --> 01:08:55.360
You can't do your fish oil omega-3 cyanide pills. And yet, here you are. You look to me like you're
01:08:55.360 --> 01:09:00.960
a healthy individual. You seem to be doing okay. What What is it you're doing is maybe the question
01:09:00.960 --> 01:09:04.640
I should be asking. And maybe you're not doing anything. And therefore that illustrates well
01:09:04.640 --> 01:09:08.960
maybe it's not actually as important as we once thought. Oh I appreciate the insight. You can
01:09:08.960 --> 01:09:16.240
send me an invoice after the episode. So there you go. Just quickly while we're there, there's
01:09:16.240 --> 01:09:23.280
a there's all this energy. There's all this noise out there. We should all be, you know, consuming
01:09:23.280 --> 01:09:29.680
huge amounts of protein. We should all be cutting carbohydrates. We should all be doing supplements,
01:09:29.680 --> 01:09:34.720
fish oils, and so on. But actually, should we? It's a very individualized situation and
01:09:34.720 --> 01:09:41.040
you can argue either which way. Normally, even for elite athletes, it comes down to it depends. Yeah,
01:09:41.040 --> 01:09:46.080
it's really hard to have this should we and it's really like should you and because the you part
01:09:46.080 --> 01:09:51.520
really requires a ton of context for somebody's situations going back to the N equals one kind of
01:09:51.520 --> 01:09:56.400
um always N equals one. Yeah. Yeah. No question. So, you talked about research, you talked about
01:09:56.400 --> 01:10:01.040
quality research, poor research. for anybody listening where what are some of the you know
01:10:01.040 --> 01:10:06.720
resources you like to turn for turn to excuse me for quality research. Well we have things
01:10:06.720 --> 01:10:12.640
called consensus statements and if there's enough evidence on a given topic or a range of topics
01:10:12.640 --> 01:10:20.160
like in sports nutrition for example for topics that we have a lot more confidence in you'll
01:10:20.160 --> 01:10:24.720
find there's a consensus statement. So there are a variety of bodies that produce consensus
01:10:24.720 --> 01:10:33.440
statements and in sports nutrition that will be things like the ACSM IOC consensus statements on
01:10:33.440 --> 01:10:41.120
things like nutrition and sports nutrition but also supplements. Um um you know there's all
01:10:41.120 --> 01:10:45.520
sorts of bodies out there. The ISSN I've mentioned earlier, they've done a whole bunch of position
01:10:45.520 --> 01:10:51.040
sound statements. I've co-authored a few of those like on um diets and body composition for example
01:10:51.040 --> 01:10:58.800
is one that I've done but I've done quite a few those consensus papers are based on very robust
01:10:58.800 --> 01:11:08.640
data um that's been interpreted appropriately and has had multiple layers of filtering by people who
01:11:08.640 --> 01:11:13.520
actually know what they're talking about. Right? Hence the large numbers of people often involved
01:11:13.520 --> 01:11:19.520
in the production of these consensus statements. A consensus statement is relevant, for example,
01:11:19.520 --> 01:11:25.200
to sports nutrition rather than just being a randomized controlled study that's for, you know,
01:11:25.200 --> 01:11:30.720
an entire nation. It's very hard to tease out what's relevant. Remember my favorite words,
01:11:30.720 --> 01:11:36.640
relevant, Gabe. Right. So, there's a lot there um that you can see in consensus statements.
01:11:36.640 --> 01:11:43.920
That would be my first place to go. The other place to go, of course, is to a well-trained,
01:11:43.920 --> 01:11:51.280
well- educated individual like you or me. um who can then help further contextualize this
01:11:51.280 --> 01:11:57.360
and hopefully they are a person who beyond their training and education is also able to know when
01:11:57.360 --> 01:12:06.080
they don't know the answer and are then able to further refer to the relevant expert andor
01:12:06.080 --> 01:12:13.120
sources of information because it is a little bit complicated. There obviously places like our
01:12:13.120 --> 01:12:22.160
podcasts and various other things. They are not specific to your own personal needs is the point.
01:12:22.160 --> 01:12:29.040
Um but there are degrees of consensus but anyone can do a podcast obviously. Um of course I'm
01:12:29.040 --> 01:12:36.560
doing one. However, um anyone can do an Instagram post, anyone with a six-pack, anyone that calls
01:12:36.560 --> 01:12:41.840
themselves a nutrition coach or whatever, anyone can do these things. So I think ultimately the
01:12:41.840 --> 01:12:50.240
individual needs to have a responsibility also to try and differentiate quality from flawed sources
01:12:50.240 --> 01:12:55.200
of information and just have a think where's this stuff coming from and are they really the right
01:12:55.200 --> 01:13:00.640
people for me to learn from? Just because they look the part, just because what they're saying
01:13:00.640 --> 01:13:06.880
sounds right, does it really mean that that, you know, that they're the person I really should
01:13:06.880 --> 01:13:11.760
listen to and follow all of their advice and recommendations? Because at the end of the day,
01:13:11.760 --> 01:13:17.440
changing your lifestyle, changing your nutrition can have real influences on your health and
01:13:17.440 --> 01:13:21.440
well-being and can be pretty serious. Not just your performance. Okay, you don't win the race.
01:13:21.440 --> 01:13:26.160
Okay, you don't lose weight. It could be much worse than that. you could end up with a serious
01:13:26.160 --> 01:13:32.000
health condition um by following the wrong advice. So, it does matter where you get your information
01:13:32.000 --> 01:13:36.160
from. Absolutely. And a great place to find that information, I'll plug it as the Institute of
01:13:36.160 --> 01:13:43.040
Performance Nutrition. So, yes, indeed. And me, of course, I'll I'll caveat there's um I also have my
01:13:43.040 --> 01:13:48.400
own channel, Dr. Banak. You just put in my name, Lauron Banak. Uh you'll find me on there. at the
01:13:48.400 --> 01:13:55.760
IOPN um we're more focused specifically on the training and of educa training and education of
01:13:55.760 --> 01:13:59.920
um current and aspiring sport and exercise nutritionists. One question for you and then
01:13:59.920 --> 01:14:07.040
just a couple of fun ones to finish up here. So as you look at nutrition, you've been involved
01:14:07.040 --> 01:14:10.800
in nutrition for a very long time and health and performance for a very long time. What I'm going
01:14:10.800 --> 01:14:14.880
to ask this in kind of two different ways. So either one, what excites you most about the
01:14:14.880 --> 01:14:19.280
future of performance nutrition, you know, over the next 10 to 20 years, or perhaps is there an
01:14:19.280 --> 01:14:24.320
area of this of nutrition that is not well studied or really underappreciated that you think will
01:14:24.320 --> 01:14:31.440
take form um in the later years? Questions. Uh 20 years from now, Gabe, I'm going to not be doing
01:14:31.440 --> 01:14:37.120
any of this. I'm going to be sitting in my second home in the south of France drinking wine going, I
01:14:37.120 --> 01:14:41.680
used to do this stuff and I don't care about body composition anymore. So, I'm not thinking 20 years
01:14:41.680 --> 01:14:50.400
ahead, but I I love this topic because nutrition is such an important part of what influences
01:14:50.400 --> 01:14:55.200
health performance, training, adaptations. You think health performance, training adaptations,
01:14:55.200 --> 01:15:00.000
that's a big deal. Is it the most important thing? No. Um, you know, but in the same way,
01:15:00.000 --> 01:15:03.520
you know, what's more important, your left leg or your right leg? I mean, this is kind of a silly
01:15:03.520 --> 01:15:09.520
question. It's part and parcel of what we do. So, I love nutrition. It's evolving, constantly
01:15:09.520 --> 01:15:16.160
evolving. And what are the areas that I think are really exciting? I think as technology improves
01:15:16.160 --> 01:15:24.720
and we start to learn how to understand what the individual body what the individual body's needs
01:15:24.720 --> 01:15:31.280
are things like you know if we could truly learn glycogen levels if we could truly learn
01:15:31.280 --> 01:15:37.520
uh nutritional status at the cellular level I mean properly particularly on the pitch in your office
01:15:37.520 --> 01:15:42.960
you know without involving big labs and various other things I you know like genetics um you
01:15:42.960 --> 01:15:50.080
know I there are tests and so on for genetics and nutrition and so on. I don't believe they're there
01:15:50.080 --> 01:15:57.040
yet, but we're going to get there. And very soon, our ability to provide truly personalized advice
01:15:57.040 --> 01:16:02.640
based on evidence to inform our recommendations will just get better and better and better and
01:16:02.640 --> 01:16:07.200
better as time goes by. And that's the wonders of where we're at. You know, technology keeps
01:16:07.200 --> 01:16:12.720
going in the right direction and so will what we learn and what we can apply. And that will give
01:16:12.720 --> 01:16:17.920
us more and more buying. There's nothing like a set of test results and you go, "Okay, you know,
01:16:17.920 --> 01:16:22.240
I shouldn't have fish oil because it might kill me." You know, you don't have to actually try
01:16:22.240 --> 01:16:26.480
it to find it out. That's really cool. I, you know, I know there are a lot of companies now,
01:16:26.480 --> 01:16:30.560
especially with a lot of genetic companies, a lot of biomedical companies out there.
01:16:30.560 --> 01:16:40.560
So I am curious to see where maybe this study of um and um investment in genetics and understand
01:16:40.560 --> 01:16:47.200
genetics better will take us and I'm thinking about you um 20 years from now sitting you know
01:16:47.200 --> 01:16:52.640
in the south of France and I wrote this down now I wrote down the phrase taste informed drinking
01:16:52.640 --> 01:16:57.040
with your wine and I'm going to have a vineyard gape so I will be and then this is what I wrote
01:16:57.040 --> 01:17:01.760
here and then now you're going to be lecturing or telling are going to be passionate about what's
01:17:01.760 --> 01:17:10.960
relevant to the production of wine. I'm I'm going to become a Yeah, I think uh I think uh I think
01:17:10.960 --> 01:17:17.440
that's going to be my next career, Gabe. Why not? You know, evidence evidenceinformed wine drinking.
01:17:17.440 --> 01:17:22.480
There you go. Yeah. There you go. So, and then just like you know your friend who had who
01:17:22.480 --> 01:17:26.640
had mentioned something to you Brad about about creating something like this, you will look back
01:17:26.640 --> 01:17:32.800
to me and say Gabe actually said that I should be doing this, you know, in my vineyard. So,
01:17:32.800 --> 01:17:38.560
um yeah. Well, I'll dedicate a um special edition of wine with your name on it. All right. So,
01:17:38.560 --> 01:17:42.480
this is a really tough question for me to always answer, so I'm going to ask it a different way.
01:17:42.480 --> 01:17:46.880
What are some of your favorite foods, dishes that you really, really love and enjoy? Well,
01:17:46.880 --> 01:17:54.080
depending on pair, so genuinely I I I do like my wine and I will often think about the wine that I
01:17:54.080 --> 01:17:59.120
want and then I'll pair the food with the wine. So, for example, you know, like a good steak,
01:17:59.120 --> 01:18:06.400
you know, will match very well with a wine. I love all kinds of cuisine. I love I love I do love what
01:18:06.400 --> 01:18:12.240
in France is a basic staple of steak fruit, you know, steak and chips with a a good wine. I mean,
01:18:12.240 --> 01:18:17.280
it just, you know, with a really good salad, it's just just epic. all the right macros are
01:18:17.280 --> 01:18:22.640
met. High protein, appropriate carbohydrate, you know, it's all there. Definitely stimulates the
01:18:22.640 --> 01:18:29.200
lucine threshold. You know, I get my uh I get my protein synthesis comes off the back of that. Um
01:18:29.200 --> 01:18:34.960
we mentioned chili. I'm I have a massive weakness for chili gate. Love chili, spicy chili food,
01:18:34.960 --> 01:18:40.960
whether it's like in the UK, we're obsessed with Indian food, good good curry, but yeah, chili,
01:18:40.960 --> 01:18:45.840
anything with chili in it. I love chili. The hotter the hotter the better, frankly. I was just
01:18:45.840 --> 01:18:48.720
talking about steak fruits last night with some friends. We were actually getting ready to go to
01:18:48.720 --> 01:18:52.240
dinner in Chicago. We have a really great Italian food. That's where I'm based out of right now. So,
01:18:52.240 --> 01:18:57.520
we had a nice big Italian meal last night. Still thinking about it. But yeah, steak
01:18:57.520 --> 01:19:02.800
fruits to me. We we were telling each other how perfect like that dish is. Like it just there's
01:19:02.800 --> 01:19:08.320
nothing there's no weakness. There's no weakness in that dish. The first time I went to Chicago,
01:19:08.320 --> 01:19:13.600
it's a few years ago now. I I can't remember where it was, but it was some famous place for getting
01:19:13.600 --> 01:19:20.080
the ultimate deep pan pizza. It was epic. I mean, it was No, I'd never heard of pizza like it,
01:19:20.080 --> 01:19:24.960
you know. I'm sure there's other things in uh in Chicago, but I do remember that. It sticks in my
01:19:24.960 --> 01:19:29.680
mind 20 years later. Yeah, there's some famous ones. There's Peekquads, there's Gino's East,
01:19:29.680 --> 01:19:35.200
Lumladis, there's those are kind of like the classic ones. Which one? But yeah, but you know,
01:19:35.200 --> 01:19:41.440
in all seriousness, that that's the power of food, right? We love food. So, it's not protein,
01:19:41.440 --> 01:19:45.600
it's not carbohydrates. We, you know, we we talk about pizza, we talk about steak. And
01:19:45.600 --> 01:19:52.240
the feelings that it draws for us is epic, isn't it? That's nutrition, man. That's nutrition. Well,
01:19:52.240 --> 01:19:57.200
that and you were talking earlier about the impact of food and having meals with other people. And,
01:19:57.200 --> 01:20:01.120
you know, I was with eight friends or so and you, it's this old school Italian restaurant with the
01:20:01.120 --> 01:20:04.640
red and white papercloth. all the photos of all the famous people, Michael Jordan,
01:20:04.640 --> 01:20:08.320
all that stuff. You see it on the wall and like that is part of the dining experience. It's like
01:20:08.320 --> 01:20:12.560
look at all of these people who have come here to enjoy this like amazing Italian comfort food. So
01:20:12.560 --> 01:20:18.080
my mind was definitely thinking about that. Well, it's not just my mind. I am now hungry. So yeah,
01:20:18.080 --> 01:20:23.840
it's time for me to go eat. All right. Well, we can end it. So thank you Dr. Laurent Bennock of
01:20:23.840 --> 01:20:27.520
the Institute of Performance Nutrition. Thank you so much for joining me on the Keiser Human
01:20:27.520 --> 01:20:32.000
Performance podcast. If you're listening today, you want to learn more, like I mentioned,
01:20:32.000 --> 01:20:40.240
you can visit ww.theiopn.com. You can follow the IOPN on Instagram. And then Laurent, for you, you
01:20:40.240 --> 01:20:47.280
have your own channels as well. Where can people follow you? If you just put in Lauron Banick, L A
01:20:47.280 --> 01:20:53.600
R N T Banick, you'll find me on Instagram, etc. Uh, I'm pretty easy to find. Dr. Lauron Banick.
01:20:53.600 --> 01:20:58.080
There's only one Dr. Lauron Banick on the planet, so that's kind of handy for me. Uh, and I'd be
01:20:58.080 --> 01:21:02.400
glad to share what I have to share with anyone that wants to listen. Awesome. And for those
01:21:02.400 --> 01:21:08.000
that did listen in today, we hope you're not too hungry right now. Thank you and have an awesome
About Our Guest
Performance nutritionist, educator, researcher, entrepreneur, and founder of The Institute of Performance Nutrition (IOPN). For more than 30 years, Laurent dedicated his professional life to one mission: advancing evidence-based sports nutrition and helping practitioners translate science into meaningful, real-world results.
IG @theiopn
IG @laurent_bannock
Visit the IOPN: https://theiopn.com/
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