There's a version of Erling Haaland that the world sees, the one charging through defenders, towering over goalkeepers, scoring goals that look almost unfairly easy. And then there's the version that exists before any of that happens. The one doing ice baths at dawn, obsessing over the cut of a steak, going to bed with blue-light-filtering glasses on. That version is less glamorous, obviously. But it's probably more responsible for the goals than the goals themselves.
Haaland is one of those athletes who seems to treat his body like a second job. Not in the joyless, clinical way, he's said openly that he loves food, that he lives to eat. But there's an intentionality to everything he does around nutrition and training that goes well beyond what most professional footballers bother with.
As per Goal.com, Haaland consumes around 6,000 calories a day, nearly three times the recommended intake for an average adult male.
He spoke in his documentary 'Haaland - The Big Decision' about why he eats the way he does: "You (other people) don't eat this, but I am concerned with taking care of my body. I think eating quality food that is as local as possible is the most important. People say meat is bad, but... which meat? Which one? The meat you buy at McDonald's? Or the local cow that eats grass right there? I eat the heart and liver," Most people would scroll past that and assume it's eccentric.
But beef heart and liver are genuinely among the most nutrient-dense foods that exist — packed with iron, B12, vitamin A, and copper in amounts you'd struggle to get from most other sources.
His breakfast starts with coffee and sourdough, which isn't what you'd expect from a man built like a freight train. Pre-match, his father Alfie — who manages much of his nutrition — cooks him a lasagna. And the Man City chefs are regularly asked for cheese and ham omelettes. His favourite food, if you're wondering, is apparently kebab — but he admits he eats it only a couple of times a year when he's back home in Norway.
The morning routine before training even starts
The first thing Haaland does each morning is get sunlight in his eyes. "It is good for circadian rhythm," he explained. He also filters his water and wears glasses that block blue light at night to protect his sleep quality. These aren't things most 24-year-olds think about. But Haaland seems to have absorbed a lot of the kind of biohacking language that performance coaches push, and he takes it seriously.
Four to five times a week, he does ice baths followed by sauna sessions — a recovery and muscle regeneration routine he sticks to consistently. It's uncomfortable, it takes time, and it doesn't show up in any stat sheet. That's exactly the kind of thing most athletes skip.
Training: The numbers behind the physique
Haaland's former coach at RB Salzburg, Stanislav Macek, revealed that even as a young player, Haaland was doing 300 press-ups and 1,000 sit-ups a day.
His sessions lean heavily on cardio, resistance running, sprinting uphill, treadmill work, rowing machines, and HIIT sprints. He also does weight training, bodyweight exercises, and functional movements, but not in the way a bodybuilder would train. E
Meditation
Meditation is a part of Haaland's routine. "I like to meditate. It's been helping me a lot to meditate and find inner peace, so it's been good for me," he told Esporte Interativo.
Meditation isn’t just for calm mornings, it’s a real edge for athletes. When you’re training hard or competing, your mind can get noisy. Meditation helps quiet that. It helps with stress and pressure, which every sportsperson deals with. And recovery matters too, meditation can help your body relax and bounce back faster. Over time, it builds mental toughness.