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EXCLUSIVE: How Tim wants you to train
SPORTS GURU TIM REVEALS HIS PIONEERING RESEARCH

YOUR BRAIN DETERMINES WHETHER YOU WIN OR LOSE
Professor Tim Noakes’ latest research findings are
bound to cause a stir – they herald a new approach
to exercise that could change the way champions
train and even help people off the sports field.
By Mari Hudson
Fatigue doesn’t originate in a sportsman’s muscles, as scientists have believed for many years. It originates in their brain . . .
The latest research by
world-renowned sports
scientist Professor Tim Noakes shows the brain
has far greater control over sports performance
than sports scientists have ever realised. And you
can condition your brain to achieve success.
Noakes, co-founder of the Sports Science
Institute of South Africa (based in Newlands,
Cape Town), is making his surprise findings
known for the first time in this issue of YOU
Pulse. At the same time he and his team have
submitted their study to a top American medical
journal for publication. His findings cut against
the grain of existing scientific opinion – that an
athlete’s muscles become tired because lactic acid
accumulates during exertion.
Noakes has turned conventional scientific
wisdom on its head before. The first time was
when he demonstrated that fitness doesn’t make
people immune to heart attacks. Then he showed
neck injuries were a serious – and preventable
– problem at all levels of rugby in South Africa.
Thirdly, he provided proof the amount of water
US experts recommended marathon runners
should drink (1,2-1,8 litres of water an hour) was
far too much and could lead to water intoxication
rather than prevent dehydration.
In each case his findings were questioned and
discredited – and in each case they were adopted
worldwide some years later.
For years scientists have thought runners get tired
during a race because of a build-up of lactic acid in
the muscles. The more lactic acid in the muscles the
more tired muscles become and the more difficult it
is for the athlete to keep going.
But how can your muscles feel tired when you’re
activating only 40 per cent of your muscle mass?
Noakes wondered. And why do athletes run faster
at the end of a race when their muscles are at their
most tired? Why are they not even close to as tired
after 42 km of the Comrades as they were after the
marathon they ran five weeks earlier?
These questions encouraged Noakes to test
marathon runners. The research showed the level
of lactic acid in one’s muscles has nothing to do
with one’s perception of tiredness. ‘‘Fatigue is
simply a sensation the brain invents so you don’t
overreach yourself,’’ he explains. ‘‘The human
brain is a marvellous but selfish mechanism that
reacts to its environment to ensure its survival in
the easiest way possible.’’
The brain controls the body. It interprets all the
body’s signals. If, for example, you’re an athlete
the brain interprets how you react to hot or cold
conditions, how well rested you are, how fit you are, how well prepared you are physically, how far you’ve run before, how far you now plan to run, whether your body harbours a disease or is experiencing pain – as well
as your mental condition and confidence in or doubts
about your own abilities. It uses all this information to
programme your muscles to prevent your body from doing
anything that may put it at risk.
So if you’re unfit, have slept badly or want to run 90 km in
blazing heat your brain will make your legs feel tired and stiff
to avoid potential heart failure that could put your life at risk
– the brain knows it can’t survive in a dead body.
Noakes’ study also shows a banned stimulant that boosts
performance can completely override the brain’s decisions.
It could make you carry on training even when it’s harmful
to your body. If you switch off your brain – your body’s
defence mechanism – you put your body at risk of total
collapse. And it may prove fatal.
Noakes’ study provides a new understanding of the
immense influence the brain has on our performance
levels. And in many cases it’s not physical factors
such as heat, lack of fitness or injury that affects
your brain but your doubts or lack of confidence,
he says.
The brain isn’t just a finely tuned machine but also
a sensor that can detect and react to self-doubt and
hesitation. It interprets doubt as a signal that the body
isn’t up to the task. If you worry about completing a race
before it begins you’ve already lost – your legs will feel tired
from the start even if you’re fit.
If you really believe you can win – not just think it but
deeply believe it because you’re fit, at the peak of physical
preparation and know you’re capable – your brain takes
this confidence and programmes your body for optimal
performance. If you visualise your victory, ‘‘taste’’ it before
the race begins and train with victory foremost in your
mind, chances are excellent you’ll produce your best
possible performance.
That’s exactly how the Springboks won the 2007 Rugby
World Cup, Noakes says. ‘‘That trophy was won before the
team left for France. We worked with Jake White and saw
how he convinced each player the team was going to win
the final and that every match was a hurdle in the race to
the trophy. He convinced them the only way to clear each
hurdle was to play for the full 80 minutes and to put in
100 per cent as there were no second chances.’’
There are other examples. One is the excellent season
the Cape Town University rugby team (the Ikeys) had
in the university tournament earlier this year. The team
wasn’t physically as strong or skilful as some of the other
teams and was ranked last in the universities’ club rugby
competition in March, yet thanks to Noakes’ empowering
ideas they reached the final.
‘‘When two fit athletes compete one shouldn’t be surprised
if the one whose mind is better conditioned wins, even if he’s not physically quite as strong as his opponent,’’ Noakes
says. ‘‘Good physical training is important. But what goes
on in your head will determine whether you’ll win or lose,
whether you’ll be able to break through a psychological
barrier or not – and whether you’ll hold a medal in your
hands and smile with satisfaction at the end.’’
Turning scientific theories on their head
Noakes first went against accepted scientific theory in
the mid-’70s when he disputed the idea marathon runners
were so fit and healthy they were 100 per cent immune to
heart attacks while competing.
In 1976 a brave 26-year-old Noakes addressed a
medical conference in New York, quoting research that
refuted the findings of one of America’s most respected
sports scientists. By 1979 the world had accepted Noakes’
findings – being fit can greatly improve your heart’s health
but it can’t magically cure an underlying heart condition.
The second issue related to neck injuries in rugby. In
1980 Western Province fullback Chris Burger broke
his neck during a match in Bloemfontein. According
to Noakes something was amiss because Burger wasn’t
insured for a sports injury, nor did he receive adequate
treatment on the field (he was carried off after a long
delay because no stretcher was available). He was also
convinced the accident could have been prevented.
Rugby legend Dr Danie Craven argued Noakes was
overstating the case but the number of neck injuries in
rugby was increasing.
The following year the first study of its kind showed
school rugby injuries were much more serious than rugby
bosses said. In 1991 Craven admitted Noakes was right –
neck injuries can be prevented. The rules of the game were
changed and today rugby is safer. SA Rugby has invested
more than R8 million to help prevent neck injuries.
Next Noakes tackled the issue of how much water
marathon runners should drink. When a number of
Comrades competitors collapsed with nausea and vomiting
in the 1981 race it was assumed dehydration was the
cause. No, said Noakes – the runners suffered from water
intoxication because they’d drunk too much water.
His recommendations were introduced gradually in
South Africa and no serious cases of water intoxication
have been reported in the Comrades or any other ultramarathon
since 1991.
Nevertheless American experts refused to accept
Noakes’ findings. However, after an unacceptable
13 per cent of the participants in the 2002 Boston
Marathon suffered from water intoxication Noakes’
water consumption recommendations were slowly introduced
in US marathons. By 2005, almost 25 years later,
world consensus had been reached and today Noakes’
advice – drink when you’re thirsty – is regarded as the
international norm.
Tim’s lore of living
- Be honest with
yourself at all
times because you
have to live with
your conscience.
- Don’t do
anything half-heartedly,
whether
in a relationship,
in sport or in your
job. Do everything
you do to the best
of your ability
and not as if you’re
going to pull out
all the stops later
– do everything as if
there are no second
chances.
- Spend your
younger years
thinking about
where you want
to be when you’re
50. Visualise it
and then work
out the steps you
have to take to
make your dream
a reality. Then
start working at
it step by step.
- Learn to ask the
right questions.
That way you’ll find
the right answers.
- Everyone
needs a
partner in life.
When you find
your soulmate
make an effort
with this special
person.
- Have a goal
in life that’s
about something
more than yourself
– it’ll give your life
meaning.
WHAT MAKES TIM TICK
He analyses everything and
gets sports scientists to sit
up and take notice – what
motivates this man?
TIM NOAKES, outspoken
and world-renowned
sports science guru,
has written hundreds
of research papers for
the sake of science
– but he wrote Lore
of Running, an essential guide to running,
for his father.
He wrote it in the hope his strict father
would finally understand why his son
enjoyed running. He wanted to explain
how good it made his body, and especially
his head, feel; to explain how he could
order his thoughts, tame his demons and
calm his heart – or sometimes simply listen
to the rhythm of his feet and breath.
These are the reasons the running bug
bit him when he was a medical student in
his twenties and why, at 58, he still runs
for an hour three or four times a week
– seven Comrades marathons (90 km) and 70 marathons (42 km or more) later.
His resting heart rate is still a healthy
58 beats per minute. ‘‘I wanted my father
to share the joy and peace that running
gives me,” Noakes says.
His father was a man who always
expected to see immediate results and
could never understand why his son
would go running on his own weeks
or months before a race. And the
shy, introvert son just wanted to be
understood by his father.
Tim was born in 1949 in Harare, Zimbabwe,
and was five when the family moved
to South Africa. At age seven he was sent
to boarding school, first to Monterey prep
school and then to Diocesan College
(Bishops) in Cape Town. The boy experienced
leaving home as a traumatic separation
from his mother. ‘‘One doesn’t give
a child strength by abandoning him,’’ he
says. ‘‘One gives a child strength by letting
him feel loved and cared for. I became even
more shy and quiet.’’
That feeling of abandonment and
melancholy at boarding school on Sundays
remained with him for many years.
‘‘Tim’s energy and
passion for life are contagious,’’ Marilyn
says, sitting in her large, beautiful garden.
‘‘But it was his shyness and friendliness
that won me over. He has the same wide
smile as the friendly Shona man who
worked for his family during Tim’s years
as a toddler in Harare. I think the memory
of that smile remained with him.”
The couple go for long walks every
weekend and Kirstenbosch Botanical
Gardens is one of their special spots.
‘‘That’s where I asked her to marry me
when I was a student,’’ Tim says. ‘‘I’m still
in love with her.”
In his spacious office in the Sports
Science Institute in Newlands there are
plenty of photographs and souvenirs.
He’s clearly proud of his children
and shares a special bond with both of
them. He runs with Candice (32) in the
mornings and they both competed in
the 2006 Chicago marathon. Meanwhile
Travis (35) excels in karate.
Travis and Candice say their father
gives advice but lets them make their
own decisions – and they know he’s
always there for them.
Tim is an avid reader and loves books
about sports science, training and the
remarkable medical breakthroughs made
by pioneering researchers in the field. He
and Marilyn often sit for hours reading, he
says. And on long flights to conferences
in other countries he listens to recordings
– on a flight to Dublin it was Winston
Churchill’s speeches that kept him
enthralled. ‘‘Possibly because my mother
talked a lot about British history.’’
And he’s always thinking – at night,
during the day or when he runs. That’s
how he figures things out and thinks
through his research theories.
He says he has become calmer over
the years but there was a time when it
frustrated him no end when his theories,
based on scientific evidence, fell on
deaf ears for years before they were
taken seriously.
‘‘How many neck and other serious
rugby injuries could have been prevented
years ago!’’
We hope sportsmen and women won’t
have to wait that long to benefit from his
latest discoveries.
YOU Pulse June 2008.
Fitness Centre
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