
Aspire guide
Specific Populations
Specific Populations manual
The 'Bridge' Meal: Overnight Recovery from Day 1 to Day 2
The most critical meal in multi-events: what to eat in the 12-hour window between the final event of Day 1 and the first event of Day 2.
Why this matters
The single most critical nutritional window in a decathlon or heptathlon occurs the moment the athlete crosses the finish line of the 400m (or 200m for females) on Day 1.
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3 min
Audience
Athlete + Parent
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Specific Populations
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The most critical meal in multi-events: what to eat in the 12-hour window between the final event of Day 1 and the first event of Day 2.
Coach prompt
Use "The 'Bridge' Meal: Overnight Recovery from Day 1 to Day 2" as the one-page recap for this topic.
Quick reference
Topic snapshot

Key action
The 'Bridge' Meal: Overnight Recovery from Day 1 to Day 2
Read time
3 min
Audience
Athlete + Parent
Start here
The most critical meal in multi-events: what to eat in the 12-hour window between the final event of Day 1 and the first event of Day 2.
Best next move
Use it this week
Use "The 'Bridge' Meal: Overnight Recovery from Day 1 to Day 2" as the one-page recap for this topic.
Quick reference map
Use the topic like a clear checklist
Protocol
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Jump to this section and use it like a coaching quick reference.
Overview
Phase 1: Immediate Resynthesis (Trackside)
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Timeline
Phase 2: The Bridge Meal (Dinner)
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Read the topic here, then download the PDF only when you need an offline copy.
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Open the sections you need, then share the same topic link with coaches, parents, or athletes.
Quick start
Start here
The most critical meal in multi-events: what to eat in the 12-hour window between the final event of Day 1 and the first event of Day 2.
Key points
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- title: "The 'Bridge' Meal: Overnight Recovery from Day 1 to Day 2"
- category: Specific Populations
Phase 2: The Bridge Meal (Dinner)
Two hours later, the athlete must consume the true "Bridge Meal." The stomach is still…
- | The Recovery Macro | The Clinical Target | The Day 2 Application |
- |---|---|---|
Context
Phase 1: Immediate Resynthesis (Trackside)
[!IMPORTANT]
### The 30-Minute Liquid Re-Entry
Do not wait to walk back to the hotel.
Coach line
[!IMPORTANT]
Phase 2: The Bridge Meal (Dinner)
Two hours later, the athlete must consume the true "Bridge Meal." The stomach is still partially ischemic (blood-restricted) from the intense metabolic demand of the final…
The Recovery Macro
The Clinical Target
The Day 2 Application
**The Massive Carb Load**
**100-150 grams** of easily digestible complex carbohydrates (pasta, white rice, baked potatoes).
Mathematically tops off the muscle glycogen required to violently explode out of the blocks for the 110m Hurdles on morning of Day 2.
**The Lean Protein Block**
**30-40 grams** of an ultra-lean protein source (chicken breast, white fish, or turkey).
Halts the massive catabolic (muscle-wasting) processes caused by 10 straight hours of impact and sprinting.
**The Rehydration Target**
**32+ ounces of water** paired with severe, high-sodium electrolyte replacement protocols.
Replaces the catastrophic sweat and sodium losses incurred from standing in the sun all day, preventing Day 2 cramping.
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What to do next
Use it this week
Use "The 'Bridge' Meal: Overnight Recovery from Day 1 to Day 2" as the one-page recap for this topic.
Source topics
decathlon recovery • day 2 track meet • overnight recovery nutrition • heptathlon day 2 • glycogen resynthesis overnight
