If you're asking, 'if I was a former athlete what should my macros be now for strength training,' the answer is to start with a 40% protein, 30% carb, and 30% fat macro split, because the high-carb diet that fueled your sport is likely causing fat gain and stalling your progress now. You're in a unique spot. You're not a beginner who has never touched a weight, but the rules you lived by for years-eating massive amounts of food, carbo-loading before games-no longer apply. That muscle memory is real, but so is the metabolic shift that happens when you stop practicing 20 hours a week. The frustration you're feeling is valid. You're working hard in the gym, but your body feels soft, your strength isn't climbing like it should, and you feel stuck between two identities. The problem isn't your work ethic; it's your fuel source. Your goal has shifted from peak in-game performance to building lean muscle and strength, and your nutrition must shift with it. We're moving away from a performance-at-all-costs model to a body composition-focused model. This means prioritizing protein for building blocks, using carbs strategically for fuel, and ensuring fats are adequate for hormonal health, all within a new, lower total calorie budget.
The single biggest reason you're struggling is a massive drop in your Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE). Your body has gone from a gas-guzzling race car to a fuel-efficient sedan, but you're still trying to fill it up at the same pump. This is the trap. Let's look at the math. A 22-year-old, 180-pound college soccer player training 15-20 hours a week might have a TDEE of 3,800 calories just to maintain weight. Now, take that same person at 32 years old. They still weigh 180 pounds, but they have a desk job and lift weights 4 times a week for an hour. Their new TDEE is closer to 2,500 calories. That’s a 1,300-calorie difference per day. If you continue eating even close to how you used to, you're in a massive surplus of nearly 10,000 calories per week. That's almost 3 pounds of fat gain a week. The mistake isn't that your metabolism is 'broken'; it's that your activity level has fundamentally changed. You no longer need to carb-load for a 3-hour game or eat 6,000 calories to survive two-a-days. Your primary need now is protein to repair and build muscle from strength training, with just enough carbs and fats to fuel your workouts and support your body's systems. Continuing to eat like a competitive athlete is the fastest way to get fatter and weaker as a recreational lifter. You have the formula now: calculate your new TDEE and set your macros. But a formula is useless without data. Do you know, with 100% certainty, how many calories you ate yesterday? Or the day before? If the answer is 'I think about 2,500,' you're guessing, and guessing is why you're stuck.
Forget the complex carb-cycling and nutrient-timing protocols from your playing days. Your new plan is about consistency and precision. This three-step process will give you the exact framework to build strength and improve your body composition without the guesswork.
Before we set macros, we need a calorie target. We're going to start at your new estimated maintenance level. This allows your body to build muscle without accumulating excess fat. A simple, effective formula is to multiply your current bodyweight in pounds by 14.
This is not a perfect number; it's a starting line. We will eat at this level for two weeks and adjust based on what happens. Don't be tempted to slash calories aggressively. As a former athlete, your body is primed to rebuild muscle (muscle memory), and starving it will kill that potential.
Protein is your new non-negotiable. It's the raw material for muscle repair and growth. While you were competing, carbs were king. Now, protein is. Your target is simple and high.
Protein has 4 calories per gram. So, 185g of protein equals 740 calories (185 x 4). This is your 'protein anchor'. Out of your 2,800 total daily calories, 740 are now dedicated to protein. This number does not change, even if we adjust total calories later.
With protein set, you have remaining calories to allocate to carbs and fats. These are your energy levers.
Now, we split these remaining calories between carbs (4 calories/gram) and fats (9 calories/gram). A great starting point for strength training is to split them evenly.
So, your starting daily macros are:
Follow this plan strictly for two weeks. Weigh yourself 3-4 times per week under the same conditions (e.g., right after waking up) and take the weekly average. If your average weight is stable and your lifts are going up, you've found the sweet spot. If you're gaining more than 1 pound per week, reduce your daily calories by 200, taking them all from carbs. If your strength is stalling, add 200 calories, all to carbs.
Switching your nutrition this drastically requires patience. Your body has to unlearn years of habits. Here’s what you can realistically expect as you follow the protocol.
If your weekly average weight is increasing by more than 1 pound per week, you're likely in too large of a calorie surplus. Reduce your daily intake by 200-300 calories. Remove these calories exclusively from your carbohydrate total to preserve gym performance and muscle-building protein.
Start at maintenance. As a former athlete returning to structured lifting, you have high potential for 'body recomposition'-building muscle and losing fat at the same time. Starting at maintenance provides enough fuel to build muscle with minimal risk of fat gain.
For your goals, total daily intake is 90% of the battle. Hitting your macro targets for the day is far more important than when you eat them. However, consuming a meal with 30-50g of carbs and 20-40g of protein 60-90 minutes before your workout can improve performance.
No. Carb loading is a specific protocol for endurance events lasting over 90 minutes. For a 60-minute strength training session, it's unnecessary and will lead to fat spillover. Your daily carb intake is more than enough to replenish glycogen for lifting weights.
Your metabolism isn't 'slower' in a broken sense; your total daily energy expenditure (TDEE) is lower. This is a direct result of no longer having 15-20 hours of sport-specific practice per week. Your body has simply adapted to a less demanding schedule. This plan accounts for that new reality.
All content and media on Mofilo is created and published for informational purposes only. It is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition, including but not limited to eating disorders, nutritional deficiencies, injuries, or any other health concerns. If you think you may have a medical emergency or are experiencing symptoms of any health condition, call your doctor or emergency services immediately.