AT NIKE'S OREGON PROJECT, a training program for elite distance runners at the company鈥檚 sprawling Beaverton campus, athletes have access to pretty much every recovery aid imaginable: a liquid-nitrogen-fueled cryosauna, an antigravity treadmill, an inflatable pneumatic compression tube, and on and on. So when 24-year-old , an NCAA champ from the聽University of Tennessee, last May, she was looking forward to the advantage she鈥檇 get from ramping up her postworkout routine with the project鈥檚 state-of-the-art techniques.
Instead, her new coach, exercise physiologist Steve Magness, told her to do exactly the opposite. 鈥淲henever I鈥檇 mention things that I used to do in college, he鈥檇 be like, 鈥極h yeah, don鈥檛 do that anymore,鈥欌夆 says Areson, who will be chasing an Olympic spot in the 5,000 meters this summer. As Magness explained to her, 鈥淵ou want your body to learn how to recover on its own.鈥
That theory runs counter to the聽pill-popping, ice-tubbing, massage-getting habits of most amateur athletes. We鈥檝e become addicted to enhanced聽recovery, obsessed with erasing as quickly as聽possible the pain, fatigue, and inflammation that come from a hard workout. But some top scientists and coaches have adopted a new line of thinking: stress is a good thing, because it forces the body to adapt, repair itself, and come back stronger.聽

The roots of the approach go back to 2006, when researchers at in Japan published a small study in which volunteers who took ice baths after training made smaller strength gains than a control group. 鈥淚t got everyone thinking that maybe too much tubbing can actually inhibit recovery,鈥 says Trent Stellingwerff, a physiologist at the in Victoria, British Columbia. And if that was true, what other postworkout remedies might be doing more harm than good?
Many of them, actually. For example, trainers have long viewed exercise-induced inflammation as an enemy that should be eliminated. But it鈥檚 actually a crucial part of the recovery process. Exercise聽stresses and sometimes聽damages tissue, and the inflammation afterwards is caused, in part, by white blood cells rushing to the area to help begin healing. So while ibuprofen or ice baths might reduce swelling in the short term, they could also inhibit your long-term adaptation, says Jonathan Leeder, a physiologist at the . 鈥淵ou need that damage and inflammation for the body to repair itself.鈥
A similar trade-off shows up with antioxidant supplements. Endurance athletes use a lot of oxygen during workouts and generate high levels of potentially damaging 鈥渞eactive oxygen species,鈥 explains Jeff Coombes, a professor at the in Australia. The conventional view is that antioxidants can help neutralize these molecules, limiting damage. But when Coombes reviewed the literature, he found 23 studies suggesting that antioxidants can actually interfere with training adaptations. One study found that an antioxidant cocktail delayed muscle recovery in elite kayakers; another found that vitamins C and E blocked gains in insulin sensitivity.
Coaches and scientists caution that the takeaway shouldn鈥檛 be that all recovery is bad.聽Rather, it鈥檚 a question of allowing the body鈥檚 recovery processes to take their natural course, not accelerating them so much that the repairs are compromised. That means considering which types of recovery techniques are most helpful and when each one is most effective.
Stellingwerff, Magness, and Leeder all advise the athletes they work with, depending on their training stage, to 鈥減eriodize鈥 their recovery. During periods of heavy training, the main goal is to push the body hard, so anything that interferes with training adaptations should be avoided. As you get closer to a competition, the聽focus shifts from gaining fitness to feeling good, so that鈥檚 when you ramp up recovery. For example, marathoner used Nike鈥檚 high-tech cryosauna for the first time just two weeks before the Olympic marathon trials in January, after her final hard training session. 鈥淏y that time, we鈥檙e not too worried about losing long-term adaptations,鈥 Magness says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just focused on the race.鈥
Of course, even during heavy training there are times when your body needs help鈥攍ike after going harder than you鈥檝e ever gone before, when the benefits of an ice bath might outweigh the lost adaptation. Ultimately, the trick is to learn how many聽recovery aids you聽really need. That goes double for weekend warriors, who are often more obsessed with recouping than elite athletes are. 鈥淚s there too much recovery for an聽Olympic rower training three times a day?鈥 asks Stellingwerff. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think so.鈥 But for recreational athletes, recovery (and the fear of overtraining) has been 鈥渟hoved down their throats,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e running three times a week, you don鈥檛 need to worry about recovery so much. You might be sore and tired, but sore and tired isn鈥檛 overtraining.鈥 In fact, the new research suggests, it鈥檚 the whole point.
The Postworkout Plan

Mix it up. Too much pampering can erode performance gains. But scientists still aren鈥檛 clear on the most effective short-term methods. For now, your best bet is to offset intense training with standard recovery techniques and use enhanced measures before race day.
Standard Techniques to Use Year-Round
Sleep: A regular schedule of seven to nine hours will help ensure you reach the deepest, most restorative phases of the sleep cycle.
Postworkout nutrition: Down a drink with a 4-to-1 ratio of carbohydrates to protein; for most people, this is the ideal balance for refilling energy stores and building muscle.
Enhanced Measures to Prepare for Race Day
Ice tub: Soak for 15 minutes at 50 degrees Fahrenheit to put the brakes on postworkout muscle inflammation, one of the primary causes of sore muscles.
Compression garments: Don kneesocks or leggings with medical-grade graduated compression, which help ward off inflammation after long runs.
Supplements to Think Twice About
Anti-imflammatory drugs: Ibuprofen and other remedies are ideal for relief of short-term acute pain but ongoing use may slow healing of聽nagging pain and reduce聽tissue adaptation.
Antioxidants: Recent studies suggest that some supplements, such as vitamin E and quercetin, pose a possible cancer risk.