Why Going to Bed Might Be Your Secret Weapon Let’s clear something up: Sleep is not what happens after training. Sleep is part of training. You don’t get faster, stronger, or sharper during practice. You get better while you’re asleep. Yes. Really. If you’re serious about squash (or even just enjoying it more), sleep matters as much as court time. What Sleep Actually Does for Junior Players While you’re sleeping, your body is busy doing important stuff: Repairing muscles 💪 Restoring energy...

Let’s clear something up:
Sleep is not what happens after training.
Sleep is part of training.
You don’t get faster, stronger, or sharper during practice.
You get better while you’re asleep.
Yes. Really.
If you’re serious about squash (or even just enjoying it more), sleep matters as much as court time.
While you’re sleeping, your body is busy doing important stuff:
That drop shot you worked on?
Your brain files it away at night.
Miss sleep and you miss progress.
Simple.
Short sleep doesn’t just make you tired.
It affects:
Ever feel slow on court?
Ever get cranky for no clear reason?
Ever forget tactics you know?
That’s often sleep talking.
Even losing one hour a night adds up fast over a week.
Most kids and teens need:
8 to 9+ hours per night
Not on weekends.
Not “when there’s time.”
Every night.
Elite juniors don’t treat sleep as optional.
They protect it.
Competition days bring:
That’s exactly when sleep becomes hardest and most important.
Tips:
You can’t control draws.
You can control bedtime.
Nothing fancy. Just consistency.
These small habits compound.
Just like reps.
Sleep is not laziness.
It’s development.
Late nights + early training = tired brains and tight bodies.
If your child is training hard, they need rest to match.
That’s how athletes grow.
If you want:
Start with sleep.
You don’t need magic.
You need a pillow.
Train hard.
Sleep harder.
