Sleep & Recovery

Recovery is not a “recovery tool” problem. It’s mostly a sleep + load management problem. Tools (cold plunge, sauna, massage) can help at the margins, but sleep is where the biggest gains—and biggest losses—live.

The big shift: sleep regularity is now a top‑tier metric

A large prospective study using objective sleep data found sleep regularity predicted mortality risk more strongly than sleep duration, pushing regularity into the “non‑negotiable” category for health and long‑term performance. A consensus statement also reinforces that regular sleep timing matters for health and performance.

The “Recovery Stack” (in order)

  1. Regular sleep window (same wake time most days)
  2. Sufficient duration (most adults do best around 7–9 hours)
  3. Circadian alignment (light/dark cues, timing)
  4. Training load control (hard/easy pattern, deloads)
  5. Targeted modalities (cold, heat, massage/rolling) used strategically

Performance framing: choose recovery based on your goal

If your goal is readiness tomorrow (tournament, multiple training sessions/day), some acute recovery tools can help. If your goal is adaptation (hypertrophy, long‑term gains), some tools used too aggressively or too often may blunt signals your body uses to adapt.

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