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Nutrition and Fitness for Archers

Archery is a precision sport, not a contact sport — but make no mistake, the physical demands are real. A full 144-arrow outdoor round can take 4–6 hours and requires sustained upper body endurance, postural stability, and mental concentration throughout. Neglecting fitness and nutrition puts a ceiling on how well you can perform.

Archery-Specific Physical Training

Strength: Focus on the Posterior Chain

The muscles that matter most in archery are the rhomboids, rear deltoids, rotator cuff, and lats — all in the upper back and shoulder region. Recommended exercises:

  • Resistance band draws: Mimic the archery draw motion to build sport-specific strength
  • Face pulls: Build rear deltoid and rotator cuff strength critical for draw stability
  • Rows (cable or dumbbell): Build rhomboid and lat strength for back-tension shooting
  • Planks and core work: Rotational stability is the foundation of consistent stance

Endurance: Shooting More Arrows

The most archery-specific endurance training is progressive arrow volume — gradually increasing your practice volume over weeks. Start at 60 arrows per session and build toward 120+ for competitive preparation. Never add more than 10–15% volume per week.

Nutrition for a Competition Day

  • Day before: Eat normally, stay well hydrated, avoid alcohol
  • Competition morning: A moderate-carbohydrate meal 2–3 hours before shooting. Nothing heavy. Oatmeal, eggs, or toast with nut butter are excellent options.
  • During the round: Small snacks every 2–3 hours (nuts, fruit, granola bar). Never shoot on a completely empty stomach — blood sugar drops impair focus and fine motor control.
  • Hydration: 500ml of water before shooting and consistent sips throughout. Dehydration significantly impairs concentration — even mild dehydration (2% body weight) reduces cognitive performance.

Recovery

Archery creates repetitive stress on one shoulder significantly more than the other. Shoulder mobility work and regular massage of the rhomboids and rotator cuff are essential for long-term injury-free performance. Minimum one full rest day between heavy practice sessions.

Train Like an Elite Archer

Book a session with Lalit Jain — M.Ed. Coaching Leadership and NFAA National Champion — for sport-specific performance coaching.

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