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  • Mini has boys on a cleaner diet

    Organic vegetables and pasture-raised chickens are in, while processed foods, vegetable oil and soft drinks are out.

    This is the new diet that Sydney Roosters players hope will fuel their charge towards premiership glory. And, if successful, coach Trent Robinson and his clean-eating squad will have none other than former club great Anthony Minichiello to thank.

    Manly superstar Tom Trbojevic departed for the United States to see a world-renowned injury specialist about his troublesome hamstring.

    Robinson has turned to the former star fullback to help overhaul his players’ diets. The pair teamed up in 2013 when Minichiello was still playing, and they were behind a move to have an organic food truck turn up each week at their Moore Park HQ to prepare meals. The Roosters would go on to win the grand final that season, Robinson’s first as head coach of the club.

    Sensing the eating habits had begun to slip in recent years, especially while living in COVID-19 bubbles, Robinson reached out to Minichiello late last year about teaming up again to re-model a food plan.

    Robinson has always placed a big emphasis on diets, including the 2018 pre-season, the same year they won the first of two premierships, which involved players fasting for 24 hours and consuming activated charcoal and sea water in a bid to improve gut health.

    Minichiello’s plan is not as funky, has elements of the Keto diet and has been embraced by the entire squad who have the roster to go all the way in 2023. Even new recruit Brandon Smith, who would be the first to admit he does not have the best physique in the NRL, has fully embraced Minichiello’s program, as has Matt Lodge who has landed a fresh deal for 2023.

    The 42-year-old Minichiello became a qualified nutritionist during lockdown.

    “Robbo and I had a chat at the end of last year about diets,” Minichiello told the Herald on Monday.

    “Robbo told me how the boys had gone down a certain path the last few years [with food], and he wanted to re-visit what we did in 2013 and 2014 when we cut out bread and soft drink, and brought in an organic food truck to cook us fresh vegetables and lots of protein.

    “I told Robbo I had since become a qualified nutritionist and I can take things on if you want, and he said, ‘Let’s do it’.

    “The boys have been really good about it. I’ve shared my story and my injuries, and I didn’t want the boys to go down the same path I did where I was injured and broken for four years before I changed my ways.

    What’s On And Off the Roosters Menu

    Good: Grass-fed meat; pasture-raised chicken; organic fruit and vegetables

    Bad: Vegetable oil; processed foods; soft drink; alcohol and bread in moderation

    “It’s all about eating whole, fresh, nutrient-dense foods as much as possible, which gives you clean energy and promotes healing.

    “The foods you don’t want are processed foods, vegetable oil and refined sugars.”

    Minichiello said there were elements of the Keto diet, which embraces fat over carbohydrates, but the diet was more a combination of different trends he had followed over the years.

    Players can still eat bread in moderation, and drink alcohol in moderation, while Minichiello encouraged grass-fed red meats, pasture-fed chickens and spray-free and ‘toxin-free’ fruit and vegetables.

    Meanwhile, Minichiello will host a function on Tuesday night to launch the club’s new $12.5 million centre of excellence at Allianz Stadium – the flashy facility is expected to be named after billionaire chairman Nick Politis. The training set-up spans the entire length of Allianz Stadium on the mezzanine level along the eastern grandstand.

    It includes a recovery pool, gym and museum, including the silverware the club has won over the years, while Politis is expected to be recognised because of his contribution to the club for over 50 years.

    The Roosters will call Allianz Stadium home until at least the end of 2047 after taking out a 25-year lease. The club will continue to train across the road at Kippax Fields.

  • #2
    All hail the Min Cat.

    Seriously though, I'd take a dinner invitation, sounds delicious.

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    • #3
      I'm sure it works.

      I'm no rugby league player but I've been doing the Keto diet 5 days per week for the last 2 years and I'm in the best shape I've been in since my early 20s

      Only indulgences are a couple of drinks on Friday/Saturday nights and possibly takeaway once on the weekend

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      • #4
        Be great if the club published some of Mini's recipes and nutritional advice on the website

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        • #5
          Sounds like a good idea and it's common knowledge that Mini's got a solid knowledge of foods. However, a nutritionist is not a dietician.

          If it was anybody other than Mini advising (i.e. some random with a 6-12 month TAFE cert) then I'd be highly skeptical.

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          • #6
            [QUOTE=ism22;n973792]Sounds like a good idea and it's common knowledge that Mini's got a solid knowledge of foods. However, a nutritionist is not a dietician.

            If it was anybody other than Mini advising (i.e. some random with a 6-12 month TAFE cert) then I'd be highly skeptical.[

            I see. So it isn’t the message that is important but the messenger.
            I respect all our moderators here. Past present and even future. Always have done and always will do a wonderful job.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Andrew Walker View Post
              Originally posted by ism22 View Post
              Sounds like a good idea and it's common knowledge that Mini's got a solid knowledge of foods. However, a nutritionist is not a dietician.

              If it was anybody other than Mini advising (i.e. some random with a 6-12 month TAFE cert) then I'd be highly skeptical.
              I see. So it isn’t the message that is important but the messenger.
              Yes, I think that a trust relationship plays out when it comes to unaccredited people providing advice in relation to diets.

              - If players need bespoke dietary advice then I trust that the club has doctors and dieticians who can provide this and it would trump anything Mini's got to say about 'what you should eat'.

              - If Mini's basically giving a pep talk about how lowering one's consumption of alcohol, fast food and processed sugar's gonna reap benefits on the field then I'm all for it. He's the master of discipline and is highly trusted (i.e. we know he isn't selling steroids on the side or some shyte so I'm very happy to have him within our four walls).

              - Since anybody can call themself a nutritionist, I'd be careful about letting a nobody inside our four walls to talk about diets. Discipline's one thing but there's heaps of fad diets out there and lotsa people spruking all kinds of shyte. If we were hiring some random dude from the gym who 'got full jacked on diet alone, bro' then they can get farked. They haven't built the same trust relationship with us that Mini has. Also... Mini has a proven track record.

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              • #8
                A dude on reddit posted that he was injury prone in the gym, after he listened to Mini’s poddy with Denan he wasn’t getting any more injuries because he listened to Mini and completely changed his diet.

                So there is that

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by ChookMaster View Post
                  A dude on reddit posted that he was injury prone in the gym, after he listened to Mini’s poddy with Denan he wasn’t getting any more injuries because he listened to Mini and completely changed his diet.

                  So there is that
                  I don't know if he's doing it now but he did have his "Minifit" program where he was going into schools to educate kids on eating right and exercise.

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                  • #10
                    Can Victor still have a snag on a bbq and a beer?


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                    • #11
                      Mini can write up a brain food diet for Radley.

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                      • #12
                        According to the Webster article I posted in the CBA thread the boys have just come off a 40 hr fast.

                        I remember doing the 40 hr famine at school. Let me just say I'll never have another barley sugar again. Ever.

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                        • #13
                          Don't worry, we'll all be eating insects soon.
                          1985: 1 try vs Parramatta, 1 try vs Manly, 1 try vs Wests, 2 tries vs Souffs
                          1986: 2 tries vs Illawarra, 1 try vs Balmain, 2 tries vs Norths.

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                          • #14
                            Plenty of garlic and pasta sauce I hope.
                            no spaghetti
                            Last edited by Bondicigar; 01-30-2023, 12:32 AM.

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by stringaz View Post
                              According to the Webster article I posted in the CBA thread the boys have just come off a 40 hr fast.

                              I remember doing the 40 hr famine at school. Let me just say I'll never have another barley sugar again. Ever.
                              It took Hutch 50 hours to complete his 40 hour fast

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