Recovery Guide

Recovery Nutrition for Padel Players

What and when to eat to accelerate muscle repair, reduce soreness, and get back on court faster.

P
The PadelRevive Team
Written by players, for players — built in Zanzibar
20–40g

protein needed post-session

30 min

optimal post-match window

2:1

carb-to-protein ratio for recovery

In short: recovery nutrition is the most underused performance tool in amateur padel. Most players eat whatever is convenient after a match — but what you eat in the 30-minute window after play determines how fast your muscles repair, how quickly glycogen replenishes, and whether you wake up stiff or ready to go again. Getting protein and carbohydrates into the body within that window is the single most actionable recovery upgrade most players are missing.

Why Recovery Nutrition Is a Performance Tool

The physiology behind the post-session window

A typical 90-minute padel session depletes 40–60% of muscle glycogen, creates micro-damage in fast-twitch fibres, generates oxidative stress, and causes fluid and electrolyte losses. Your body can repair all of this — but only if you give it the right materials at the right time.
The research is clear: players who optimise post-session nutrition recover measurably faster — less soreness at 24 hours, better power output in the next session, and lower injury risk over a full season. For amateur players who train 3–4× per week, the cumulative effect is significant.

Protein: How Much and When

Timing the muscle repair signal

Muscle protein synthesis (MPS) — the process of repairing and rebuilding muscle tissue — is elevated for 24–48 hours after exercise, but the window immediately post-session is when it’s most responsive to protein intake.

Protein Guidelines Per Session

20–30g
Within 30 minutes
Fast-digesting source: whey, eggs, Greek yoghurt, cottage cheese. This triggers MPS while muscles are maximally sensitive.
30–40g
Recovery meal (1–2 hours)
Complete protein with leucine: chicken, fish, beef, legumes + grain. Sustains MPS for the next 4–5 hours.
30–40g
Before bed (evening session)
Casein protein (cottage cheese, Greek yoghurt, casein powder) — slow release sustains overnight MPS while you sleep.
1.6–2.2g
Daily total (per kg bodyweight)
Distribute evenly across 4–5 meals. Higher end (2.2g) for heavy training weeks or players over 40.
Leucine is the key amino acid that triggers MPS. You need roughly 3g of leucine per serving to maximally stimulate repair — achieved automatically when you hit the 25–30g protein targets above with quality sources.

Carbohydrates: Refuelling Glycogen

Replenishing your primary performance fuel

Glycogen is the primary fuel for the lateral movement, explosive sprints, and smash mechanics that define padel. After a full match, glycogen stores are substantially depleted. Fail to replenish them and your next session begins from a deficit.
The post-session window is when muscles are most efficient at absorbing glucose and converting it back to glycogen. Carbohydrate intake combined with protein also amplifies the insulin response, which accelerates nutrient delivery to muscles.

Carbohydrate Recovery Protocol

TimingAmountBest sources
0–30 min0.8g / kg bodyweightBanana, sports drink, rice cakes, date balls
1–2 hours1.0–1.2g / kg bodyweightRice, pasta, potatoes, oats, sourdough bread
Tournament (back-to-back)1.2g / kg per hourHigh-GI options between matches — white rice, sports gels, banana

Example: 75kg player needs 60g carbs in the first 30 minutes. That is 2 medium bananas + a sports drink, or a large bowl of rice with the recovery meal.

Anti-Inflammatory Nutrition

Foods that accelerate the resolution of exercise-induced inflammation

Exercise-induced inflammation is normal and necessary — it triggers the repair process. But chronic, unmanaged inflammation from poor diet slows recovery and increases injury risk. Anti-inflammatory foods help resolve inflammation faster without blunting the adaptive response.

Prioritise These

  • Tart cherry juice — reduces muscle soreness (250ml post-session)
  • Oily fish (salmon, mackerel, sardines) — omega-3 EPA/DHA
  • Turmeric + black pepper — curcumin absorption enhanced 20x by piperine
  • Berries (blueberries, strawberries) — anthocyanins and polyphenols
  • Leafy greens (spinach, kale) — vitamin K, folate, antioxidants
  • Ginger — gingerols reduce inflammatory markers post-exercise
  • Olive oil — oleocanthal has ibuprofen-like anti-inflammatory properties

Limit or Avoid Post-Session

  • Alcohol — impairs MPS by up to 37%, disrupts sleep architecture
  • Ultra-processed foods — high omega-6 linoleic acid drives inflammation
  • Added sugars (outside the immediate post-session window)
  • Fried foods — oxidised fats increase oxidative stress
  • Excessive caffeine — fine pre-session, but disrupts sleep if taken too late

Note: high-dose antioxidant supplements (more than 1000mg vitamin C or 400 IU vitamin E) can blunt adaptation — food sources are preferred.

Hydration: The Recovery Multiplier

Replacing fluid and electrolytes after play

Even mild dehydration (2% body weight loss) impairs both physical and cognitive performance in subsequent sessions. Rehydration is not just about replacing fluid — it is about replacing electrolytes lost in sweat, which are critical for muscle contraction and protein synthesis.

Post-Match Rehydration Protocol

Step 1
Weigh yourself
Body weight before vs after session tells you how much fluid to replace.
Step 2
1.5x multiplier
Drink 1.5L of fluid for every 1kg lost. Excess is excreted; under-replacing is the problem.
Step 3
Add electrolytes
Sodium (key), potassium, magnesium. Plain water rehydrates slower than electrolyte solution.

Practical check: urine should be pale yellow within 2–3 hours of finishing. Dark yellow means still dehydrated.

Key Micronutrients for Recovery

The deficiencies most likely to limit your recovery

Micronutrient deficiencies are surprisingly common in active players and directly impair recovery. These four are the ones most likely to be limiting factors:
Vitamin D3

Directly regulates muscle protein synthesis and calcium absorption. Most indoor/northern-latitude players are deficient. Target: 40–60 ng/mL (test annually). Supplement 2000–4000 IU/day with K2 for optimal absorption.

Magnesium

Involved in 300+ enzymatic reactions including protein synthesis and muscle relaxation. Depleted by sweat. Magnesium bisglycinate is best absorbed. 300–400mg before bed — also improves sleep quality.

Iron

Oxygen delivery to muscles depends on iron. Explosive court-sports can deplete iron stores over time. Symptoms: persistent fatigue, poor session-to-session recovery. Test ferritin annually — target above 40 ng/mL.

Zinc

Critical for immune function and protein synthesis. Exercise increases losses. Good sources: red meat, shellfish, pumpkin seeds, legumes. Supplementation only if dietary intake is genuinely low — more than 25mg/day can impair copper absorption.

You know the feeling — you finish a tough session, grab whatever is convenient, and by the next morning you are stiff as a board. Most players don’t realise how much of that soreness is a nutrition problem, not just a training load problem. What actually works is treating the post-match window as non-negotiable: protein and carbs within 30 minutes, every time.
37%
reduction in MPS from post-session alcohol
48h
window when glycogen synthesis is most efficient
24h
soreness reduction with tart cherry juice

Keep Reading

Frequently Asked Questions

How long do I have to eat after a padel session?

The most beneficial window is within 30 minutes of finishing — this is when muscle cells are maximally sensitive to glucose and amino acids. However, MPS remains elevated for up to 2 hours post-exercise, so a full recovery meal within 2 hours is still highly effective if you cannot eat immediately.

Do I need protein shakes or can I eat whole foods?

Whole foods are equally effective if you can hit the protein targets (25–30g) in the post-session window. Whey protein shakes are useful when convenience is a barrier — not because they are superior to chicken breast or eggs, but because they are fast and easy at the court. Choose based on what you will actually do consistently.

Should I eat after a late evening padel session?

Yes — especially protein. Skipping post-session nutrition because it is late leaves your muscles without repair materials overnight. A light snack (Greek yoghurt, cottage cheese, a protein shake) is better than nothing. If total calories are a concern, adjust an earlier meal rather than cutting the post-session window entirely.

Does nutrition timing matter more than total daily intake?

For recovery, both matter. Total daily protein (1.6–2.2g/kg) sets the ceiling on adaptation. Timing determines how efficiently you use what you eat. If you can only focus on one, daily totals have the larger effect — but the post-session 30-minute window is the single most impactful timing target to hit.

Can I drink alcohol after padel?

Occasional moderate intake (1 standard drink) has minimal impact on recovery. Regular post-match drinking — especially more than 2 units — measurably impairs MPS, disrupts sleep architecture, and prolongs muscle soreness. If results matter to you, keep post-session alcohol to a minimum, especially before training-heavy periods or tournaments.

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