IB Syllabus focus: 'Non-functional overreaching and overtraining are possible consequences of poorly designed or poorly maintained programmes. Monitoring can inform an athlete's readiness for training.'
Overreaching and overtraining occur when training stress exceeds an athlete’s capacity to recover. Recognizing early warning signs and monitoring readiness helps protect performance, health, and long-term development.
Understanding overreaching and overtraining
Training is intended to create adaptation, but excessive or poorly managed stress can produce the opposite effect: a drop in performance. The key issue is not simply training hard, but whether the athlete can recover from the stress being applied.
Non-functional overreaching: A state in which training stress causes a noticeable decline in performance and recovery takes longer than expected, without a useful improvement in fitness.
Practice Questions
FAQ
No. It can also result from too little recovery relative to the training being done.
Other contributors may include:
academic or work stress
emotional stress
repeated competitions
poor eating habits
inadequate sleep
An athlete may therefore enter a hard session already fatigued, even if the planned training load is reasonable on paper.
Its symptoms overlap with many other problems, including illness, poor sleep, low energy intake, and psychological stress.
There is also no single test that confirms overtraining in every case. Diagnosis usually depends on:
a history of prolonged underperformance
persistent symptoms
exclusion of other causes
observation over time
This is why early monitoring matters so much.
Yes, especially early on. Some athletes continue training because they are highly disciplined or do not want to appear weak.
This can delay recognition of the problem. In such cases, falling performance, unusual fatigue, or repeated poor recovery may appear before the athlete admits anything feels wrong.
Motivation alone is therefore not a reliable sign of readiness.
Recovery time varies widely. Mild cases may improve with a substantial reduction in training and better recovery practices.
More severe cases can take months, especially if symptoms have been ignored for a long period. Return to full training is usually gradual, because trying to rush back may recreate the same problem.
Medical or professional supervision is often helpful in prolonged cases.
The first step is to reduce or stop the training stress that may be causing the problem.
A coach should also:
review recent training load
ask about sleep, mood, and outside stress
look for performance decline over time
refer the athlete for medical assessment if symptoms are severe or prolonged
The goal is not just to rest the athlete, but to identify why the problem developed so it does not happen again.
