There will be no knocking back a hot toddy and counting sheep to get to sleep for the New Zealand women's hockey team at the Olympic Games.
More traditional methods for nodding off are out. Instead, solutions will include wearing amber-coloured blocker glasses indoors - think a Bono lookalike contest - and not using backlit devices like computers and smartphones from around 9pm.
The Black Sticks' schedule has two games at 8.30am (against Australia and Germany). Those matches require the team to be up at 5am. Coach Mark Hager and his team decided to get advice from the Sleep Well Clinic's Dr Alex Bartle on how to ensure suitable rest.
"Ideally, for a 5am wake up, you should be getting to sleep somewhere between 9 and 10pm when your normal bedtime might be 11pm," Bartle says. "You need darkness. That helps produce melatonin [the chemical which helps people sleep].
"Any electrical gadget which is backlit delays the process. I also encourage people to wear amber-coloured glasses before bed. They help block out blue light which suppresses melatonin. Blue is the wavelength of light which occurs most outdoors during daylight. The glasses make the brain think it is dark and the melatonin can surge.