What do Sir Alex Ferguson, Arsene Wenger, Mauricio Pochettino and Pep Guardiola, as well as the England national team, Liverpool, Real Madrid, RB Leipzig, British Cycling and a host of Olympians, Formula 1 drivers and NBA stars have in common?
At some point or other, they have all called upon the services and expertise of Nick Littlehales.
Littlehales is a former professional golfer turned marketing director, who is now recognised as the worldâs leading Elite Sport Sleep Coach, and an innovator in the field of âhuman recovery'.
He published a best-selling book, âSleepâ, in 2016, and has pioneered a technique, the R90, which he believes can not only improve the quality of an individualâs sleep, but also enhance physical and mental wellbeing, and therefore performance.
âItâs a seven-step process,â Littlehales tells GOAL. âAnd at the core of it is the idea that we break down every 24 hours into 90-minute cycles.
âTraditionally, the idea around sleep is that it just happens at the end of the day when thereâs nothing else to do, and ideally youâll get eight hours a day, right?
âWell, nobody gets that. You canât just say âget a good nightâs sleep and Iâll see you tomorrowâ. Everyone is different.
âWe need to change the language around sleep. It should be talked about at school, as the first pillar of human health, because it impacts upon everything; diet, hydration, exercise, mental health, wellbeing and performance.
âIf you get your âhuman recoveryâ right, then everything else will be better, not diminished.â
Littlehales was working as the international sales and marketing director for Slumberland, a Manchester-based bedding company, in the mid-1990s, when he was approached by Oldham Athletic about a potential sponsorship deal.
âTheyâd just come off the back of a really successful period with Joe Royle as manager,â he says. âMost of the workforce were fans, so I thought it was a good idea.
âAnd of course because Iâd written the cheque, Iâd be invited along to games. And it was there that I was introduced to Mr FergusonâŠâ
âMr Fergusonâ, of course, is Sir Alex Ferguson, who at the time was in charge of the all-conquering Manchester United. He and Littlehales hit it off, and before long he was invited to Carrington, the United training ground.
âDave Fevre was the physio at the time, and he asked me to go in and speak to the players,â Littlehales says.
âAt the time there was no focus at all on how players slept or how they recovered. But United under Ferguson were so open-minded, and always seeking an advantage, that they allowed me in. It was a big deal, and I donât think it would have happened at any other club.â
Littlehales worked initially with individuals. âGary Pallister was one of the first,â he says. âHe had a lot of lower back problems, so we looked at what we could do to help alleviate those issues.
âThen for the first time during pre-season, Ferguson introduced double-sessions, which led to us creating a recovery room at the training ground, where the players could sleep between sessions.â
Word spread quickly. Unitedâs England players â the likes of David Beckham, Paul Scholes and Gary Neville â sang Littlehalesâ praises on international duty, prompting an introduction to Gary Lewin, the physio who also worked under Arsene Wenger at Arsenal.
âThose two, Ferguson and Wenger, they ran their clubs completely,â he says. âSo if they told a player to do something, whether it was changing their diet, yoga, stretching, cutting out alcohol, they did it. And that helped me when it came to what I was looking to do.â
Getty/GOALFast-forward 20 years or so, and Littlehalesâ work is everywhere. He works with a host of clubs, at academy and first-team level, and advises teams and individuals across a number of other sports.
With Team Sky (now Ineos), he created âsleep kitsâ for their Tour de France riders and staff, which were tailored for each individual. He has done similar with football clubs, including Southampton when Pochettino was manager.
The aim, he says, is always to try and replicate a âhomeâ environment, even when on the road, in hotels or in a motorhome.
âThink about it,â he says. âYour brain always has to get used to any new environment, and for each individual there are different factors.
âA lot of those are quite private and personal, but can we replicate some of them when they are away from their homes?
âLuxury hotels, theyâre set up for hen and stag parties, for executive travel. But for an athlete, we can improve it. The bedding is the biggest thing, mattress toppers, sheets, pillows, but it could be a smell, a colour, it could be the way the window is facing, the temperature. Anything we can do to elevate a âforeignâ place into something more familiar, we do.â
Littlehales designed the playersâ bedrooms at Manchester Cityâs Etihad Campus, and now âdips in and outâ with Guardiola and his squad.
Similarly to Pallister at United in the 1990s, he helped the likes of Sergio Aguero and James Milner ovecome issues, and helped educate younger players on the importance of recovery cycles and R90 techniques.
Getty/GOALâChronotypes are massive,â Littlehales says. âThere are two types, AMers and PMers, morning and evening people. And they really matter.
âKnowing which person is which chronotype can help inform decisions over when to train, how much to train, what kind of recovery period that person needs after an early kick-off or a night match.â
He adds: âItâs difficult to find another club that does things as well and as thoroughly as Manchester City.
âYes they have a lot of money, yes they have fantastic facilities, but that doesnât always equal success. You canât buy everything.
âWhen you wander round their facilities, you feel that common goal. Whether itâs the first team, academy, womenâs team. Itâs like âweâre doing it, so why arenât you?ââ
Littlehales agrees when GOAL suggests that sleep and relaxation for modern elite players may be more challenging, given the worldâs reliance on smartphones, iPads and other devices.
âItâs a great point,â he says. âWhat I have experienced over the last decade is that we are in a social media experiment, and a technology experiment. Some of it is so amazing that we just canât get enough of it. Other sides to it, though, are quite scary.
âNow everybody is a journalist, everybody can say exactly what they like without legislation. We can find out anything we want â where Steven Gerrard lives or where Cristiano Ronaldo goes for a walk. So security becomes huge.
âI can tell you, Iâve wandered around Manchester city centre with people like Beckham, Scholes, Giggs. They could go wherever they want. People would come up and ask for an autograph and that would be it.
âNow, a player doesnât know who is taking films or pictures of them from the other side of town. So they are under a lot more pressure, and the big question is how do they get away from it?
âWhat I find is that they start to create other behavioural traits. Theyâre trying to deal with the time they have to spend on their own, escaping from the day-to-day pressures and scrutiny. That leads to things like gaming and gambling and social media addiction.
âAnd itâs amazing what you can get delivered to your fingertips through a smartphone or iPad. Whether itâs fake news, bad advice, criticism, praise, propaganda, itâs there in a millisecond.
âI was actually giving a coaching session to a top club last summer, and there are guys there on Google while Iâm speaking, checking what Iâm saying!
âAnd football is trendy. Iâve been into clubs where theyâre all using Snus, these tobacco pouches which you place inside your top lip, or where they are all on sleeping tablets, because itâs become the thing to do.
âEven inside elite Premier League clubs, these things can happen, things can go wrong and things can be lost.â
What of sleeping tablets, then? An article by The Athletic back in September suggested that such pills were used across the English game, and that players were ignoring the advice of club doctors, using prescription drugs and sedatives, in many cases to help cope with the gameâs relentless schedule.
âEveryone wants a shortcut,â Littlehales says. âSo someone reads that they should be getting X hours of sleep a night and they think âI need a sleeping tablet to help that.'
âBut what they donât see is that they should not take such a tablet unless they have a serious clinical problem, and it is prescribed by a doctor for an extremely short period of time. Because it becomes addictive.
âAnd it doesnât help you âsleepâ so to speak. It sedates you. Itâs dangerous.â
Littlehales is aware that there will be resistance to new ideas, to âspecialistsâ and people who are looking to change mindsets.
âLook, any expert will tell you that what they do is the most important thing in the world. I get that,â he says.
âBut I think in modern top-level sport, we accept that certain things are vital to performance; nutrition, hydration, recovery, stretching, mental well-being. And to me, human recovery â sleep â is something that feeds into all of those things, and much more besides.â
He finishes with a question.
âLetâs use someone like Mo Salah as an example, because heâs very current,â he says. âSo, how does he consistently have this alertness, awareness, ability to make decisions quicker than goalkeepers, full-backs or anybody else?
âYou can say itâs because he sleeps well, but the truth is that he is doing a lot of things right which is maximising his ability to recover. And if he recovers better he can train better, and he can take on and retain information better, he can focus on the things that really matter in any particular game or situation.
âIt might only be a split-second difference, but itâs the difference, you know?
âSport has made so many advances in so many areas, but clubs now are realising that this area, the ability to recover as an athlete more consistently and sustainably, is so important.
âIt is that which will enable you to take more advantage of all the other things that are available to you, be it food, training, coaching.
âIt can be the difference between a 9/10 performance or a 10/10 performance.â




