How Poor Sleep Can Crash Your Taper Before It Even Starts ...Middle East

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By Olivier Poirier-Leroy on SwimSwam

Ahh yes—tapering!

On the one hand, volume is dropping, the excitement of competition has us all fired up, and it’s time to fine-tune all our hard work.

On the other, there’s the uncertainty about whether we are tapering correctly, the nerves of competition replacing the mental fatigue of hard training, and all this new free time to overanalyze every feeling, ache, and pace.

While most swimmers are focused on what’s happening in the water during taper, there’s also something else that plays a massive role in whether taper works or not:

How well you sleep.

Tapering offers up more time to get rest and sleep, but how well you sleep in the weeks and months leading up to the taper matters just as much as what happens during the taper itself.

Here’s why swimmers need to be sleeping like champions long before taper kicks off.

Sleep and Performance

Swimmers who sleep longer and sleep better go faster.

A study by Lundstrom et al. (2026) with male and female NCAA Division I swimmers tracked their sleep patterns in the six weeks leading up to a 200-yard time trial.

Longer sleep duration was strongly associated with lower training strain and directly predicted how fast swimmers swam.

More sleep, faster swimming.

(Not exactly breaking news for most, but worth emphasizing.)

The Myth That Taper Fixes Bad Sleeping Habits

This is where swimmers with poor sleeping habits get into trouble.

Maybe they know that their sleep has been rough during the heavy training weeks, but they imagine that the Taper MiracleTM will automagically sort it all out.

You know: Training volume drops, fatigue floats away, our sleep gets ~30% more sleepy, and suddenly we are back in business.

But this isn’t always what happens. A study with Brazilian national-level swimmers tracked sleep behavior across hard training and then the taper and saw that reduced training load didn’t automatically translate into better sleep quality.

Recovery scores shifted, training load declined, but sleep quality didn’t fall in line with those changes. Bad sleepers tended to continue sleeping like hot garbage.

And this matters because swimmers who struggle with poor sleep habits—irregular bedtimes, screens before bed, stress-driven wakefulness—during heavy training are stacking even more fatigue onto an already demanding workload.

When that fatigue hole gets too deep, even a well-structured taper isn’t enough to pull them out.

Pre-Taper Fatigue Crashes the Party

A swimmer can grind out weeks and months of hard practices while accumulating fatigue in the background, assuming that taper will eventually wash it all away.

But if sleep and recovery are consistently poor, swimmers arrive at the taper carrying so much accumulated fatigue that even a perfectly designed taper can’t fully rescue performance.

For example, Bretonneau et al. (2024) followed elite French swimmers training and preparing for nationals. The swimmers were assessed and divided into two groups based on their level of accumulated fatigue:

An acute-fatigue group Functional over-reaching group

Swimmers in both groups did the same training in the months leading up to taper and competition. But the difference was in how well they recovered during this part of training, and at the center was sleep.

Pre-taper, the functional over-reaching group slept less, showed more broken nights of sleep, and core body temperature didn’t drop normally at the onset of sleep.

This difference led to much different outcomes when tapering:

The acute fatigue group hit their taper and dropped nearly 2% from their pre-taper times. Textbook taper response. The functional over-reaching group group—again, who did the same training and even did the same taper—actually swam slower on race day, regressing by an average of 0.49%.

Even the taper couldn’t save them from the crater-sized hole of fatigue they’d created via poor sleep habits.

Sleep Better=Better Tapers and Faster Swimming

Swimmers often wait until it’s taper time to take recovery seriously. But good sleeping habits all season long is where it’s at.

Not only will you recover better between hard training sessions, boosting average performance (sounds good), but you’ll also set yourself up for quality sleep when taper hits, recovering better and unlocking your hard work for race day.

Here are some ideas to spruce up your sleep habits:

Track your sleep, not just your yardage. Can’t fix what you don’t measure! Wearables make it easier than ever to track sleep and see how well (or not) you are sleeping. Those who don’t like wearing them can also do a quick wellness check in the morning where they rate their sleep in a notebook or their logbook. Protect your sleep the way you protect your training. That means building an environment for success. A cool, dark bedroom. Cutting off the screens before bed. Consistent bedtime. Swimmers are busy and there are a million reasons to shortchange your sleep, so be proactive and defend your sleep. Daytime sleepiness is a warning sign, not a training badge. The Bretonneau study specifically noted higher daytime sleepiness in the extra tired swimmers in the weeks before tapering began. If you’re nodding off between classes or struggling to stay awake on the drive home from practice, something needs to change before the taper starts. Taper isn’t a miracle sleep cure. The increased time for added sleep—reduced morning workouts, shorter sessions—can really help, but taper can’t buy you better sleeping habits. The swimmers who respond best to tapering start it with manageable fatigue and aren’t backpacking months of sleep debt and feeling wrecked.

The Bottom Line

Taper is one of the more confusing parts of competitive swimming.

Swimmers and coaches focus intensely on hitting the right volume/frequency/intensity targets, which are obviously important, with sleep sometimes being treated as an afterthought.

Something that will sort itself once training gets lighter.

Don’t be that swimmer. Sleep is an all-around performance booster that directly impacts how well you train, taper, and race.

So remember that taper isn’t a magical CTRL+ALT+DEL button for lousy sleep hygiene, be proactive about developing good sleeping habits, and let the combination of a good taper and great sleep carry you to awesome performances on race day.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Olivier Poirier-Leroy is a former national-level swimmer, 2x Olympic Trials qualifier, and author of several books for swimmers, including YourSwimBook, Conquer the Pool, and Tapering for Sprint Freestylers.

The book is a 98-page eBook packed with actionable insights and research into what makes an explosive taper unfold on schedule. Everything from duration to taper type to managing your dryland to navigating the mental ups and downs of tapering for sprinters.

Tapering for Sprint Freestylers combines evidence-based insights with a collection of 15 ready-to-go sets (plus the “regular” versions to better understand how they scale down), a Taper Blueprint to plan your taper like a pro, and a 12-week sample resisted sprint program to show you how all the principles come together.

No more guesswork or hoping for taper miracles.

Show up on race day explosive, fast, and dangerous.

Learn more about Tapering for Sprint Freestylers

 

 

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