In elite athletes, shifting the clock to reach peak performance at the right time could make the difference between winning and losing.

TOP INSIGHT
In elite athletes, shifting the clock to reach peak performance at the right time could make the difference between winning and losing.
Finals
She decided to investigate this idea by analysing the times of Olympic swimmers who reached the finals of their particular stroke and distance. 'This meant that they had to swim three rounds: the heats, the semi-finals and the finals.' Results for both male and female athletes were obtained from websites that listed the official results of the Games that took place in Athens (2004), Beijing (2008), London (2012) and Rio de Janeiro (2016).
'We chose swimming because the external situation is very similar: the water temperature is well-regulated and hardly any equipment is used.' To rule out any confounding factors, such as the sharkskin swimsuits worn in Beijing, results for each participant were normalized. The mean individual time over the three rounds was calculated and each round was subsequently compared to the average.
Biological clock
A second observation was that the difference between the semi-finals and the heats was smallest in Beijing. 'This was very interesting since in the other venues, heats were scheduled in the morning, while semi-finals and finals took place in the evening. In Beijing though, the heats were scheduled in the evening, while semi-finals and finals were in the morning and in the afternoon.'
'The performance was not so good in the morning, better in the afternoon and worse again in the late evening.' The fastest times were predicted for late afternoon, just after five o'clock. The size of the effect (represented by the amplitude of the sinus function) was considerable: it exceeded the time difference between a gold and silver medal in 40 per cent of the finals, between a silver and bronze medal in 64 percent, and between a bronze medal and no medal in 61 per cent.
Daylight
Of course, all swimmers are in the pool at the same time for the finals. 'Yet not all swimmers will have the same chronotype,' says Lok. Individuals show variation in the time at which they perform best. And this could therefore affect the chances of winning an Olympic medal.
Lok believes that athletes can use this knowledge. 'It is possible to shift your biological clock by exposing yourself to extra daylight at the right time of day. If you do this over the course of several days, you could shift the time of peak performance towards the time of a race.'
It is not yet clear whether the effect of the biological clock has an impact in other sports. 'In cycling, for example, the quality of the bike is also important,' says Lok, who is now a postdoctoral researcher at Stanford University's Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences.
The biological clock that was investigated in the paper affects both arm and leg muscles and, therefore, it seems logical to translate these results to other sports. 'Furthermore, these elite athletes train all day, and we have shown that this does not overrule the effect of the circadian rhythm.'
Source-Eurekalert
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