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SHANE RICE: The truth about recovery – Forget gadgets, focus on the fundamentals

But here’s the reality: those tools, while useful at times, are not the magic fix we’ve been led to believe.

In fact, the biggest misconception in Gaelic football recovery is treating it like a 30-minute ‘tick-the-box’ session, rather than a 24/7 lifestyle choice.

Recovery isn’t a single session

“Have you done your recovery?” is a common question from coaches. But true recovery isn’t just foam rolling after training or sitting in an ice bath. It’s everything you do when you’re not training – what time you go to bed, what you eat, how much mental stress you’re under, and whether you give your body real downtime.

If you nail your post-training recovery routine but then spend the rest of the day on your feet, skipping meals and glued to your phone until 2am, you haven’t actually recovered.

Real big rocks: Sleep, nutrition and hydration

According to leading experts across elite sport, sleep, nutrition and hydration are the foundation of proper recovery. These are your non-negotiables. If these aren’t in check, no amount of massage guns or compression boots will save you.

Yet, these basics are often skipped in favour of fancy gadgets because they’re less visible or don’t look as impressive to coaches or teammates. But a well-fed, well-rested player will outperform the best-stretched, most massaged athlete every time.

Mind matters too: Don’t forget mental recovery

Another huge recovery mistake is forgetting the brain needs rest too. Players juggle jobs, family, studies and sport. That stress piles up. So, social time, hobbies, downtime and mental breaks are just as important as stretching. This is called psycho-social recovery, and it’s a powerful but often ignored part of staying fresh.

That doesn’t mean scrolling on TikTok until 1am – it means reading, relaxing, having a laugh with friends or walking your dog in peace. Mental recharge directly impacts physical performance.

One size doesn’t fit all

Another myth is that every player should do the same recovery. But what works for one might not work for another. Some lads swear by sea swims, others prefer sleep-ins and a good feed. The key is finding what you believe in and will stick to. Research shows that when players enjoy their recovery strategy, it actually works better.

Recovery should be flexible. If your team trains late at night, don’t drag the squad in the next morning for a recovery session on five hours of sleep. Let them recover where it counts – in bed.

Final thoughts: Keep it simple, do it well

The recovery world is full of gadgets and trends, but don’t let that distract from what truly matters. Get your sleep, eat properly, drink enough water and switch off your mind now and then. Focus on long-term habits, not short-term hacks.

In GAA, where the physical and mental load is high, true recovery happens in the choices you make all day, not just in the 30 minutes after training. Keep it simple. Do it well. And your body will thank you come championship season.

Shane Rice
Gaelic Athletic Academy

 

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