Players running in small groups during a training session. Photo courtesy of extremesoccerloverx.blogspot.com |
“Playing
the ball exclusively is the best way for soccer players to build fitness.” That
was said by Sports photographer and editorialist, Axel Heiken. As true as the
afore mentioned expression is, some of our local tacticians consider spending too
much time running without the ball, all in the name of “fitness.”
Players,
particularly amateurs should practice purely with the ball. Studies and surveys
points out that footballers run 4-7miles (contingent on position) during the 90
minutes of a football match. They are subjected to abbreviated but critical and
intense periods of hard work at atypical intervals complete rest periods.
Players
go through toilsome training sessions week in and week out. In most cases, physical
trainers are amply won over by the cliché that if they are physically prime
than their next opponents, then they will get the better of them with ease and
minimal repose. Physical fitness has more than its due credit that some coaches
have the assumption that other prospects like mental fitness and tactics of the
game of football are utterly standard and thus physical fitness is crème de la
crème.
This
has gone to a degree where by all on-field troubles are blamed on lack of
“fitness”. In addition a lot of this collateral running would probably be of
paramount use if they were orthogonal to the game of football itself.
It
is boring that our local players in the premier league spend most of their time
at their teams, doing something similar to fartlek training and can’t even
string 4-5 passes in between themselves, to say the least!
However,
endurance is still a vitally important virtue in a football player. In training
sessions, it will actually make a wholly sense and logic for Michael Kopt’s
notorious “Intermittent endurance training” to reproduce the types of exertion
found in literal and actual match play. It can also be seen as a varieties of
definitive interval training methods where players do acute and intensive
sprints until the game ends, giving the players longer breaks.
In
the long run, players must be vulnerable to short periods of exertion that may
be maximal or submaximal. However, these should always be soccer-specific,
interrupted by brief, irregular rest periods because the higher the ability level,
the shorter the breaks.
Intermittent
endurance training is somehow similar to fartlek training in the demands it
places on the heart and circulatory system. It also allows training of
technical/tactical concepts simultaneously. KP
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