Fuel to Win.
Eat to Recover.
The high school runner’s blueprint for recovery. Real science, zero fluff, built for the next generation of fast.
Calories & Macros
Think of calories as the fuel your engine runs on. A car that runs out of gas stops. It doesn’t matter how good the driver is. Same with your body. Distance runners burn significantly more fuel than non-runners their age, and under-eating is the #1 mistake young athletes make.
Use the calculator below to estimate how many calories you need on a training day. This is a baseline, so bump it up if you’re doing two-a-days or racing.
Why so many carbs? When you run, your muscles burn glucose, a sugar that comes from carbohydrates. If you don’t load enough carbs, you’ll “bonk” mid-run and feel completely empty. Carbs are your primary race fuel. Don’t be afraid of them.
| Macronutrient | What It Does | How Much Per Day | If You Skip It… |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carbohydrates | Primary running fuel. Fills muscle glycogen stores. | 6–8 g per kg of body weight on hard days | You bonk. Legs feel like concrete after mile 2. |
| Protein | Repairs muscle tears from training. Builds strength. | 1.4–1.7 g per kg of body weight | Slow recovery, longer soreness, injuries pile up. |
| Fat | Slow-burning backup fuel. Supports hormones, brain, joints. | ~25% of total calories | Hormonal problems, poor focus, increased inflammation. |
Under-fueling is dangerous. Eating too little causes stress fractures, hormonal disruption (especially in female athletes), mood problems, iron deficiency, and tanked performance. If you’re losing weight without trying to, tell a coach or parent immediately. This is known as Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S).
What to Eat
Good nutrition isn’t complicated. It’s mostly about eating real food, consistently. Here’s what to build your plate around and why each one earns its spot.
| Carbohydrates — Fill Half Your Plate | Why It Works | Best Time |
|---|---|---|
| Oatmeal | Slow-burning fuel, keeps blood sugar steady for hours | Breakfast, pre-run |
| White or brown rice | Easy to digest, loads muscles with glycogen fast | Pre-run, dinner |
| Pasta | Classic endurance food with high carb density that’s easy to prepare | Night before a race |
| Bread / bagels | Portable, practical, easy to portion | Any time |
| Bananas | Fast carbs + potassium. Easy on the stomach. | Pre-run snack |
| Sweet potatoes | Carbs + Vitamin A + potassium in one food | Dinner |
| Fruit (berries, oranges, apples) | Carbs + antioxidants that reduce post-run inflammation | Snacks, recovery |
| Protein — A Portion at Every Meal | Why It Works | Best Time |
|---|---|---|
| Chicken / turkey breast | Lean, high-quality protein without heavy fat load | Lunch, dinner |
| Eggs | Cheap, complete protein. Fast to prepare. | Breakfast, any time |
| Greek yogurt | Protein + calcium + probiotics in one package | Breakfast, recovery snack |
| Chocolate milk | 4:1 carb-to-protein ratio, making it an ideal post-run recovery drink | Within 30 min after running |
| Tuna / salmon | Protein + omega-3s that reduce muscle inflammation | Lunch, dinner |
| Beans & lentils | Plant protein + iron + fiber, great for vegetarian athletes | Any meal |
| Milk / cheese | Protein + calcium, both critical for growing bones under training stress | Any time |
| Healthy Fats: Don’t Avoid Them | Why It Works |
|---|---|
| Avocado | Healthy monounsaturated fat + potassium |
| Peanut butter / almond butter | Fat and protein together, great on toast or a banana |
| Nuts & seeds | Easy portable snack; healthy fats + magnesium |
| Olive oil | Anti-inflammatory omega-9; cook with this |
| Salmon / sardines | Omega-3 fats that accelerate muscle recovery |
Fried food, heavy greasy meals, soda, energy drinks, and large amounts of raw fiber (salads, raw broccoli) in the 2 hours before running. These cause stomach cramps, bloating, or energy crashes mid-race. Save the pizza for after the meet.
When to Eat
Nutrition timing is almost as important as what you eat. Your body needs time to convert food into usable fuel. Get the timing wrong and you’ll either feel sluggish with a full stomach or flat with nothing in the tank.
Never try new foods on race day. Your pre-race nutrition routine must be practiced in training first. Find what works for your stomach and repeat it exactly. The worst race-day stories almost always involve someone who “tried something different” that morning.
Regular Practice Days
Breakfast, then lunch, then a pre-run snack 1 to 2 hours before practice, then practice, then a recovery snack within 30 minutes, then dinner. Don’t skip the recovery snack. It’s the meal most athletes miss and the one that matters most.
Race Day Structure
Big carb-heavy dinner the night before. Morning race: eat 2–3 hours ahead with light, familiar foods. Bring a banana for the warmup window. Eat a recovery meal immediately after finishing.
Drink to Perform
Your blood is mostly water. It carries oxygen from your lungs to your working muscles. When you’re dehydrated, your blood thickens, your heart works harder, your pace drops, and you feel terrible. Even 2% dehydration can reduce performance by 10–20%.
By the time you feel thirsty, you’re already behind. Hydration is a daily habit, not something you catch up on in the hour before practice.
The simplest real-time hydration check available to you — and it costs nothing:
Heat + humidity dramatically increases your sweat rate. On hot race days, start loading water the day before. Drink an extra 20 oz in the morning before an afternoon meet. Your body cannot catch up on hydration in the last hour before a race starts.
The Spark Plugs
Electrolytes are minerals dissolved in your blood that carry electrical signals — they keep your muscles firing, your heart beating in rhythm, and your nerves communicating with your brain. When you sweat, you lose them.
Think of electrolytes like spark plugs in an engine. Even a full tank of fuel won’t fire correctly without them. Drinking plain water during a long run replaces fluid but does nothing to replace the minerals your muscles need to contract and relax properly.
| Situation | Water Enough? | Use a Sports Drink? |
|---|---|---|
| Easy run under 45 min, mild weather | Yes | Not necessary |
| Hard workout, 60+ minutes | Not ideal | Yes — sodium + carbs needed |
| Hot and humid day (80°F+) | Not ideal | Yes |
| Race day (any distance) | Supplement only | Yes |
| Two workouts in one day | No | Yes — both sessions |
If you cramp consistently mid-race, sodium is usually the problem. Drinking plain water without replacing sodium actually dilutes the sodium still in your blood — which makes cramping worse, not better. The fix: saltier foods the day before and morning of a race, and a sports drink (not plain water) during any event over 45 minutes.
Signs you’re low on electrolytes: muscle cramps mid-run, headache after practice, dizziness or nausea, unusual fatigue that doesn’t match your training load, or a general feeling of being “off” when your legs should feel fresh.

What should a high school distance runner eat before a race for peak performance?
To maximize race day performance, high school runners should consume a meal high in easily digestible carbohydrates (50% of the daily plate, or 'The Engine') two to three hours before a race. Example foods include oats, whole-wheat bread, bananas, or sweet potatoes. Avoid high-fat or high-fiber foods immediately before a race, as they delay digestion, according to guidelines from the Mayo Clinic Health System. The science-based goal is to fully replenish muscle and liver glycogen stores for sustained power without causing gastrointestinal distress.
How does proper hydration affect race times, and is water sufficient?
Proper hydration is critical because a loss of as little as 2% of body weight in fluid can significantly decrease endurance performance and power output, a standard emphasized by the National Athletic Trainers' Association (NATA). While water is necessary, it is often not sufficient for high school endurance athletes during intense training or racing, as electrolytes are lost in sweat. Runners must utilize a dedicated "Hydration Station" strategy: consuming both water and electrolytes to maintain optimal plasma volume, improve heat management, and prevent muscle cramping, particularly in hot conditions where sodium loss is high, as noted by Johns Hopkins Medicine.
What is the ideal fueling window for recovery after a long run or hard practice?
The most effective fueling window is within 30 to 60 minutes immediately following a long run or intense workout. High school distance runners must prioritize a combination of rapid-acting carbohydrates and lean protein (the 25% 'Repair' section). Example combinations include Greek yogurt with berries or lean turkey on a whole-wheat roll. Guidelines from sources like Gatorade Sports Science Institute (GSSI) and pediatric nutrition experts recommend targeting a 3:1 or 4:1 carbohydrate-to-protein ratio. This timing maximizes muscle protein synthesis and accelerates the replenishment of depleted glycogen stores.
Why is protein crucial for distance runners, and how much is needed?
Protein is essential for teenage distance runners not as a primary fuel source, but to facilitate muscle protein synthesis, repair tissue damaged during training, and support immune function. High school distance runners require significantly more protein than sedentary teens to support growth alongside intense athletic demands. The consensus among sports nutrition organizations, including the International Society of Sports Nutrition (ISSN), is that endurance athletes should target a range of 1.2 to 2.0 grams per kilogram of body weight daily, depending on training intensity. The Coach Saltmarsh performance plate simplifies this requirement by recommending 25% of each meal consist of high-quality proteins such as eggs, grilled chicken breast, lentils, or lean salmon.
Can nutrition impact a high school athlete’s ability to PR over a four-year career?
Yes, consistent, science-based nutrition is a massive differentiator in a high school runner's four-year development curve. Proper fueling allows for higher training volumes with better quality, prevents iron deficiency anemia and burnout, and optimizes recovery. Research highlighted by the Gatorade Sports Science Institute suggests that inadequate energy availability (chronic low fueling) is a primary risk factor for injury and performance plateaus in developing athletes. A diet optimized for micronutrients and antioxidants (found in the 25% 'Maintenance' or produce section) reduces metabolic stress and supports year-over-year improvement.