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Published 22:27 31 Mar 2016 BST
"You should be looking at it over a week, as opposed to one or two nights before a game," he said. "You want at least five 90-minute cycles - that last cycle is when you dream. The cycles go from light sleep to deep sleep, to deep, deep sleep and it comes back to light sleep again before you wake up. "Ideally, five cycles would do but many pro athletes go through six cycles which amounts to nine hours. Eight to nine hours is ideal. "If you sleep too much, it will impact on the following night's sleep. "Some people get nervous before a big match and might find that they can't sleep as well and that's perfectly acceptable. The workshops have tips for dealing with that too, for getting to sleep if you're struggling so you can go through the required cycles that will help optimise your recovery and performance."Eight or nine hours? It's a lovely idea but not terribly realistic. Finally we have an explanation for why we never made it as elite athletes.

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