Soccer Conditioning Drills
The term athletic training in soccer (or physical training) indicates a training method used to improve an athlete’s or team’s performance from a coordinative and conditioning point of view.
In soccer, athletic conditioning training is used to train general coordination skills (motor learning, motor control, motor transformation) and special coordination skills (motor combination, differentiation of muscular strength, balance, orientation, rhythm, response, adaptation). Athletic conditioning training is used to strengthen endurance, strength, quickness and speed. There is a further objective: soccer athletic training can prevent injuries linked to training load mismanagement (muscle-tendon injuries in particular).
In order to schedule the drills it is possible to follow a general and/or a specific sport programme. For example, soccer athletic training is important both for a player’s general endurance and a specific role endurance training. The same goes for other coordinative and conditioning abilities. Indeed, performance characteristics vary from sport to sport: soccer players’ endurance is different from runners’, as well as their strength differs from basketball players’ and their speed is different from tennis players’.
For this reason, before planning soccer athletic training, it is necessary to know the player’s performance model, including the peculiarities of the role. In this way athletic training will be targeted, specific and suitable for the team and the player.
Here you can find some soccer conditioning drills.
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Athletic Training
Coordination using low hurdles
Coordination - Drill for improving running technique by using gaits -
Athletic Training
Cognitive challenge - AFC Ajax
Awareness - Competitive cognitive exercise with subsequent finalization on goal -
Athletic Training
Individual exercises for Youth Soccer Players
Coordination - Individual/small groups exercises to perform after training -
Athletic Training
Monitor players' fitness level with Hooper Index
Education - Both perceived fatigue and perceived recovery are important. To monitor these parameters coaches can use the Hooper Index -
Athletic Training
Resistance workout: The spiral
Aerobic power - Aerobic workout to improve physical condition and players' aerobic resistance -
Athletic Training
Ball possession 4 vs 2
Anaerobic lactic - Exercise to improve lactic acid clearing rate and various technical skills -
Athletic Training
Specific integrated strength
Strength - Technical circuit for strength, stability and equilibrium -
Athletic Training
Physical Technical Circuit - Double L
Coordination - Exercise to improve speed, cognitive skills and shooting at goal -
Athletic Training
Sprint training: Four Corners
Speed - Useful exercise to train speed, quickness, speed resistance and explosive strength on short distances -
Athletic Training
Regaining the ball - Development of aerobic power using the ball
Possession - How to train aerobic capabilities of players during the game by using the ball