Calgary Herald

To Russia with travel fatigue worries

Experts advise hockey team going overseas

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The puck drop for Canada’s first three games at the world junior hockey championsh­ip in Russia is 4:30 a.m. ET.

Host city Ufa is 10 to 14 hours ahead of the Canadian players’ body clocks, depending on what part of the country they’re from. A Canadian junior team hasn’t travelled this far, or crossed this many times zones, since the 2001 tournament in Moscow. Ufa is another 1,160 kilometres and two time zones to the southeast.

Jet lag and travel fatigue will be major challenges, barriers as significan­t on the road to gold as the Russians, Swedes and Americans.

Hockey Canada enlisted the expertise of Calgary sleep specialist Dr. Charles Samuels to draw up a plan to combat jet lag and sleep deprivatio­n.

“I’ve met with sleep doctors, sports psychologi­sts, neuropsych­ologists,” Canadian head coach Steve Spott said. “I’ve met with just about every doctor possible.”

Anyone who flies across time zones has experience­d the sleep disturbanc­es, fatigue, impaired concentrat­ion and digestive problems that occur until the body adapts to the new environmen­t. The accepted rule is it takes a day for every hour of time difference to adapt. Samuels aims to accelerate the adjustment by a few days.

Travel fatigue gets less attention than jet lag, he says, but for athletes who travel to far-flung places a lot, it can be damaging to performanc­e. The cumulative effects of extensive travel fatigue the body and mind. The sheer distance and time spent on planes can catch up with them later.

Samuels drew up Canada’s plan from a template he created for the Vancouver Canucks in their 2011 Stanley Cup final against the Boston Bruins.

“That’s an extreme example because you’re coast to coast, Boston to Vancouver,” Samuels said. “We take that experience and translate it to this, which is even more extreme.

“It’s basically a survival situation if you look at the frequency of games, the time of the games and then the fact there’s virtually no time to recover before the finals.”

The Canadian team is in pre-competitio­n training in Finland, which is a four-hour time difference from Ufa. The players were on a strict schedule from the moment the wheels went up on their flight from Calgary on Saturday.

One of the worst things a team can do, says Samuels, is get on the plane exhausted. But it was inevitable the players would feel some fatigue after a stressful selection camp.

“We really talked about on the flight, eye shades, earplugs, noise cancellati­on headphones, all the pillows and comfort you need and the plane is for rest. No screwing around,” Samuels said. “You’re not watching movies, you’re not playing cards, you’re not doing anything. You’re either sleeping or your eyes are closed and you are resting.”

Taking synthetic melatonin supplement­s, scheduled exposure to light and dark, and shifting meal times towards the destinatio­n are all elements of the Canadian team’s plan.

If it’s time for light exposure and there isn’t any, the team has handheld lights called Litebooks with them.

The company’s website cites NASA research that shows scheduled exposure to a specific type of light, as well as timed avoidance of light, can speed the shifting of the body clock.

“We’re using these Litebooks because there’s limited light in Ufa and in Helsinki,” explained Scott Salmond, senior director of hockey operations. “We’re planning on one Litebook per three players and players have to spend a set amount of time around that light.”

“When it is light outside, we plan on getting outside and we’re going to go for walk. Our schedule in Finland is based very much on what our schedule will be like in Ufa and we’re trying to change our clocks, even though we’re in Helsinki and we’re four hours different,” Salmond said.

“We’ve got a day-by-day plan on how we deal with jet lag and that includes what kind of activities we’re doing and what times of the day we’re going to meet and what time we’re actually scheduling rest for players.”

Canada plays the host Finns in an exhibition game Thursday and another against Sweden on Saturday before travelling to Ufa the following day. Their first game is Dec. 26 versus Germany.

Canada’s opening three games are at 3:30 p.m., local time, which means no pre-game skate in the morning. Samuels is pleased about that because he sees those skates as simply draining players of precious energy they’ll need later in the tournament.

Compact tournament­s like the world juniors are an emotional roller-coaster as a country’s fortunes can change on one goal. The players’ brains will be in overdrive during games and they’ll feel wired and unable to sleep when they return to the hotel.

 ?? Colleen De Neve/calgary Herald ?? Ryan Nugent-Hopkins will lead Team Canada’s world junior team into battle in Russia next week.
Colleen De Neve/calgary Herald Ryan Nugent-Hopkins will lead Team Canada’s world junior team into battle in Russia next week.

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