Search icon

World of Sport

10th Aug 2016

Michael Phelps went through a LOT of food between his gold medal wins

Burning up calories

Patrick McCarry

Swimmers need a stack of calories to fuel their Olympic ambitions.

Michael Phelps is three medals off Ireland’s ALL-TIME Olympic haul. He is one man, but what a man.

The 31-year-old claimed his 19th gold medal, in Rio, on Sunday night and followed it up with No.20 and 21 last night.

In between, Phelps went through a lot of food. Then he snacked. He then ate some more, swam, and ate again.

After his late finish, and press interviews, on Sunday night, Phelps knew he would not return to the Olympic Village until the early hours of Monday morning [it ended up being 3am]. He would be back at the swimming venue for 8am for the 200m Butterfy preliminaries.

So, after wrapping up his press briefing, Phelps headed back to get the grub in. He told Associated Press:

“I think I had a pound of pasta and spaghetti. And I’m not a spaghetti fan but I forced myself to eat it.”

Fusilli

The pound of pasta is all part of a 12,000-calories-a-day diet that has helped Phelps to 21 Olympic golds and 26th medal in total.

That heap of pasta is the norm for Phelps – part of a dinner plan that includes a whole pizza and IOC-approved energy drinks. As for breakfast and lunch, this is what the New York Post reported he put away at Beijing in 2008…

Breakfast: Three fried-egg sandwiches loaded with cheese, lettuce, tomatoes, fried onions and mayonnaise. Two cups of coffee. One five-egg omelette. One bowl of grits. Three slices of French toast topped with powdered sugar. Three chocolate-chip pancakes.

Lunch: One pound of enriched pasta. Two large ham and cheese sandwiches with mayo on white bread. Energy drinks packing 1,000 calories.

We reckon it’s the bowl of grits that works the treat.

Listen to the GAA Hour football show – Wooly is joined by Paul Galvin, Aidan O’Shea, Senan Connell and Conán Doherty. Subscribe here on iTunes