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Nutrition and Growth

Child athlete nutrition: protein, calories, micronutrient guide

Kids in academies can't eat an adult diet. Daily protein, carbs, iron, calcium needs for the growth + sport phase — with concrete menus.

Çocuk Gelişim Scientific Board (Prof. Dr. Bülent Bayraktar)May 27, 2026 5 min read

Children in football, basketball, or swimming academies carry dual energy demands: growth + sport performance. Insufficient nutrition lowers height, performance, and immunity. This is the 2026 pediatric sports-medicine standard.

Daily caloric needs

Pediatric sports-medicine recommendations:

Activity level9-13 boys14-18 boys9-13 girls14-18 girls
Sedentary1800 kcal2400 kcal1600 kcal1800 kcal
Moderate (3-5 h/wk)2200 kcal2800 kcal2000 kcal2200 kcal
Elite (10+ h/wk)2800-3200 kcal3500-4000 kcal2400-2800 kcal2600-3000 kcal

These are minimums. The pubertal burst may need 20% more.

Protein needs

In a child athlete, protein has a dual role: muscle repair + growth.

  • Sedentary child: 0.95 g/kg/day
  • Moderate athlete: 1.2-1.5 g/kg/day
  • Elite athlete: 1.5-1.8 g/kg/day

A 40-kg 12-year-old footballer needs 60-72 g/day of protein.

Protein sources (per serving)

FoodProtein (g)
1 egg6
100 g chicken23
100 g ground beef25
100 g fish22
200 ml milk7
200 g yogurt10
100 g cottage cheese20
30 g almonds6
100 g lentils9

Practical: 3 eggs + 1 cup milk + 1 serving meat + 200 g yogurt = ~50 g protein.

Carbohydrate (fuel of energy)

For brain, muscle, and glycogen stores. In a child athlete, carbs should be 55-60% of total calories.

Pre-training (1-2 hr before)

  • Whole-grain bread + honey/jam
  • Banana + oats
  • Rice + fruit
  • Sandwich + ayran (yogurt drink)

Post-training (within 30-60 min)

  • Carb + protein combo (3:1 ratio)
  • Milk + banana + oats
  • Yogurt + honey + walnuts
  • Sandwich + milk

Iron — the silent enemy

Iron deficiency is common in child athletes (20-30%) — especially post-menarche girls and vegan/vegetarian children.

Signs: fatigue, performance drop, pallor, palpitations, poor concentration.

Daily need

AgeIron (mg)
9-138
14-18 boys11
14-18 girls15

Iron sources

FoodIron (mg/serving)
100 g ground beef2.7
100 g dry legumes6
100 g molasses5.6
100 g spinach2.7
30 g pumpkin seeds2.5
100 g liver9

Tip: Vitamin C (orange, lemon) increases iron absorption . Tea/coffee reduces absorption by 60%.

Calcium + vitamin D

Growth plates are calcium-dependent. Vitamin D deficiency slows height gain.

Daily calcium

AgeCalcium (mg)
4-81,000
9-181,300

3 cups of milk/yogurt/cheese typically cover it.

Vitamin D

In Turkey, sun-based synthesis is low (especially winter); 800-1,000 IU/day is pediatric standard. In sport, it reduces bone stress reactions and fractures by 30%.

Fluid needs

  • Sedentary: 1.5-2.0 L/day
  • Athlete: 2.5-3.5 L/day (0.5-1 L sweat loss)

Urine should be pale yellow. During training, 150-250 ml every 15-20 min.

Sports drinks — necessary?

  • <1 hr training: water is enough
  • 1-2 hr training: water + salty snack
  • >2 hr: isotonic (Gatorade-style; or homemade: 500 ml water + 30 g sugar + a pinch of salt + lemon)

Vegan / vegetarian child athletes

Doable but requires careful planning.

Risk areas:

  • Vitamin B12 — supplementation is mandatory for vegan children
  • Iron — plant absorption is low, increase intake 2×
  • Zinc — legumes, walnuts, pumpkin seeds
  • Omega-3 — flaxseed, walnuts, algae-based supplement
  • Protein quality — diversify plant proteins (lentils + rice = complete amino acid profile)

Pediatric nutritionist consult strongly recommended.

RED-S — Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport

If a child's caloric intake < energy expenditure, the body halts growth:

  • Height gain slows (<4 cm/year)
  • Menses become irregular (girls)
  • Bone mineral density drops
  • Recurrent stress fractures
  • Poor recovery + frequent illness
  • Low mood, motivation loss

RED-S is an IOC-recognized syndrome. Academy coaches + families must be aware.

FAQ

Should my child eat before sport?

Yes — 1-2 hr before, complex carbs. Training on empty stomach reduces performance and risks hypoglycemia.

Is protein powder safe for children?

For 8-14 yrs, not needed — food provides enough. For 14-18 yrs intense athletes, short-term support (1 scoop/day) may help, with pediatric nutritionist approval. Manufacturer integrity is critical (risk of contamination with banned substances).

How many meals per day should a growing child eat?

3 main meals + 2-3 snacks. For child athletes, 5-6 small meals keep blood sugar and energy steady.

How should race/match-day nutrition look?

  • 3-4 hr before: complex carbs + moderate protein
  • 1-2 hr before: light carbs (banana, bread)
  • 30 min before: fluids
  • Mid-race: 100-200 kcal quick carbs (gel, dried fruit)

Bottom line

Child athlete nutrition isn't a scaled-down adult model — growth, performance, and bone mineralization form a triple goal. Regular BMI + percentile tracking shows nutrition's effect concretely. Sign up free, log measurements, share with your pediatric nutritionist.

In this series

Nutrition & Growth guide

Frequently asked questions

Who is "Child athlete nutrition: protein, calories, micronutrient guide" for?

It is written for families, coaches and clinicians who need a clear educational summary before deciding whether a pediatric evaluation is needed.

Does this article replace a pediatrician?

No. It is educational content. Diagnosis, treatment and urgent medical concerns should be handled by qualified clinicians.

What is the main takeaway?

Kids in academies can't eat an adult diet. Daily protein, carbs, iron, calcium needs for the growth + sport phase — with concrete menus.

When should families seek clinical advice?

Families should seek advice when growth velocity slows, percentiles change rapidly, puberty timing is unusual, symptoms persist, or nutrition concerns are present.

How should this content be used with calculators?

Use article context together with serial measurements and calculator warnings; do not make decisions from a single number.

#athlete-nutrition#protein#calories#iron#calcium

⚕️ Medical disclaimer

The information in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. For decisions about your child's growth, please consult a pediatrician or pediatric endocrinologist.