When You Snooze, You Win (Sleep Part 3) Hosts: Dr. Teddy Bross & Dr. Roger Matthews Episode Summary: In this episode, we explore the critical role of sleep in physical performance, recovery, and overall health. From hormone regulation and tissue repair to mental resilience and cognitive function, sleep is a cornerstone of wellness that’s often underestimated. We discuss practical strategies for improving sleep quality, building healthy routines, and preparing for big events. About Highpoint Direct Care: This podcast is supported by Highpoint Direct Care in Golden, Colorado. We’re Dr. Roger Matthews and Dr. Teddy Bross - physicians with decades of experience in movement, mountains, search and rescue, ultrarunning, and performance-focused medicine. As a membership-based clinic, we give you unlimited visits, same-day care, and direct access to your physician - without insurance middlemen - so you get care that truly reflects your goals: strong bodies, resilient systems, and performance that lasts. If you want healthcare built for athletes, mountaineers, first responders, and lifelong movers, check out highpointdirectcare.com. Key Points: Sleep drives recovery: deep sleep supports protein and collagen synthesis, tendon and muscle repair, and hormone regulation.Cognitive benefits: REM sleep aids emotional regulation, decision-making, and mental resilience—key for athletes and everyday performance.Sleep extension strategies: gradual 10–15 minute bedtime shifts, consistent routines, and controlled sensory environments optimize sleep quality.Pre-event sleep: “sleep banking” or adding extra sleep in the days leading up to an event can improve performance.Travel and time zones: plan for 1 full night per time zone eastward, ½ night westward; consider tools like the Time Shifter app.Long-term benefits: sufficient sleep supports immune function, injury prevention, and cognitive longevity.Claims Requiring Clarification (because we can get carried away, and admit it): NCAA sleep recommendations: There is no official NCAA guideline of 10–12 hours. Expert consensus: 7–9 hours for adults, with elite athletes possibly needing more; sleep needs should be individualized.Elite athletes: The “9-hour target” is not universal. Athletes often need more sleep than general recommendations, but exact amounts vary per individual.Time zone adjustment: Eastward travel does disrupt sleep more than westward. The “full night per time zone east, half night west” is a rough guideline, not a precise rule.One night of sleep loss: Even a single night of complete deprivation can impair performance (aerobic capacity, strength, power). Effects are smaller than multiple nights but not absent.Night-before competition sleep: The claim that poor sleep the night before an event is less problematic than two nights before is generally supported, though the evidence is mixed.