Engine Room

Conditioning & Endurance

The best technical player in the world is useless at minute 85 if their lungs are empty. Build the aerobic engine, repeated sprint capacity, and mental toughness to dominate the full 90 — and extra time.

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Built on GPS Data & Heart-Rate Science
These programs are designed using verified match data from the Premier League, Bundesliga, and elite European competitions. Every target is based on what professionals actually do — not what looks hard on Instagram.
1

What the Elite Actually Do

Before you train like a pro, you need to know what a pro actually endures. GPS tracking from the world's top leagues gives us the unfiltered truth — and the gap between elite and amateur is not talent alone. It is the capacity to repeat high-intensity actions while maintaining technical quality under fatigue.

10–13
km covered per match
Elite outfield players
2–3
km high-speed running
>19.8 km/h per match
20–40
max-velocity sprints
per 90 minutes

Heart rate tells the real story. During match play, elite footballers spend the majority of their time in high aerobic zones. Average match heart rates typically sit between 160–180 BPM (approximately 80–90% of max HR), with sustained periods above 85% HRmax during pressing phases, transitions, and set-piece battles. Recovery between high-intensity bouts is rarely complete — your heart rate might drop to 140 BPM for 10 seconds before the next sprint demand. This is why aerobic base is non-negotiable: you are not resting; you are recovering while still working.

Distance is not the metric — density is. Anyone can jog 10 km. What separates the elite is that 20–30% of that distance is covered at high intensity, with accelerations, decelerations, and changes of direction that spike oxygen demand far beyond steady-state running. A central midfielder does not just run 12 km — they do it while repeatedly transitioning between anaerobic bursts and incomplete aerobic recovery. That is the engine you are building.

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Position-Specific Engine Demands

GPS data proves that no two positions share the same physical profile. Your conditioning program should reflect what you actually do for 90 minutes — not generic fitness tests that never appear in a match.

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Centre-Backs
Lowest total distance (~9–10 km) but highest relative intensity per action. Short, explosive sprints to close down, then long periods of low-intensity positioning. Need: Repeated sprint ability with full recovery between duels, and aerobic base to maintain concentration.
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Central Midfielders
Highest total distance (~11–13 km) and highest high-intensity running. Constant transitions between attack and defence. Need: Superior aerobic capacity, lactate threshold, and the ability to sustain technical quality while fatigued.
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Wingers / Wide Players
30–40 max-velocity sprints per match, often with the highest acceleration/deceleration counts. Need: Repeated sprint ability above all else — the capacity to hit top speed in minute 85 like you did in minute 5.
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Strikers / Forwards
Lower total distance (~9–11 km) but highest high-intensity actions per minute played. Sprints are longer and more decisive. Need: Anaerobic power endurance — the ability to produce match-winning sprints when defenders are exhausted.
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Full-Backs
The hybrid engine. Cover the entire flank, often the most physically demanding role in modern football. Need: The endurance base of a midfielder plus the repeated sprint capacity of a winger. Box-to-box, endlessly.
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Goalkeepers
Lowest total distance but explosive actions decide matches. Dives, jumps, and rapid repositioning. Need: Anaerobic power, reactive agility, and the aerobic base to maintain sharp decision-making for 90+ minutes.
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The Golden Rules of Conditioning

  • Pre-season is where engines are built. In-season, you just maintain. These programs are designed for pre-season and breaks. During the season, 100% commitment in every team training is your primary conditioning. Only add extra work if you are genuinely struggling to last 90 minutes.
  • Struggling for 90 minutes? Fix your team training first. Before adding extra conditioning sessions, raise your intensity in every drill, pressing exercise, and small-sided game. If team training is not enough, then — and only then — add one targeted extra session per week.
  • Train for the game, not for a fitness test. Football is repeated sprints with incomplete recovery, not a steady 5 km jog. Your conditioning must mimic the stop-start, high-low rhythm of match play. Continuous running has its place, but interval and repeated sprint training is the priority.
  • Heart rate zones matter more than distance. Know your max HR and train in the correct zones. Aerobic base work at 60–70% HRmax builds your foundation. Threshold work at 80–85% HRmax raises your lactate tolerance. High-intensity intervals at 90–95% HRmax prepare you for match transitions.
  • Recovery is part of the program. You do not get fitter during the session — you get fitter during sleep, nutrition, and active recovery. Ignore recovery and you are just accumulating fatigue, not fitness.
  • If your goal is Division 2, train like a Division 1 player. Never settle for the bare minimum required at your current level. The player who trains one level above their competition is the player who gets promoted, selected, and signed.
If a coach calls you tomorrow and asks you to train with their team — are you fit enough to keep up with the pace? If your answer is no, then it is time to put in the work.
The Standard You Walk Past Is The Standard You Accept
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Download Your Programs

Each PDF includes complete sessions with distances, intensities, heart-rate targets, and progression frameworks. These are not generic running plans — every interval is designed to replicate the energy demands of match play, from pressing phases to transition sprints.

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Aerobic Base Builder
Zone 2 work, tempo runs, and cardiac output sessions. Build the engine that lets you recover between sprints and maintain technical quality under fatigue.
4-week program • 2-3 sessions/week
Download PDF
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Repeated Sprint Ability
The bread and butter of football fitness. Short maximal bursts with incomplete recovery — exactly what your legs face in minute 80 of a tight match.
4-week program • 1-2 sessions/week
Download PDF
High-Intensity Intervals
Threshold work and anaerobic power endurance. Train your body to tolerate lactate, maintain speed under fatigue, and dominate the decisive final minutes.
4-week program • 1-2 sessions/week
Download PDF
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How to Progress

These programs are built for pre-season blocks and off-season maintenance. Run each 4-week cycle, test your benchmarks, and restart with increased targets. The tracking fields in every PDF make your progress impossible to ignore.

  • Week 1: Establish baselines — Yo-Yo test, 10 km time trial, 3km. Train at conservative intensities to build rhythm
  • Week 2: Push interval intensities to match-play demands. Extend work periods, shorten recovery ratios. Monitor morning heart rate for overreaching
  • Week 3: Introduce position-specific scenarios — pressing drills for midfielders, channel runs for full-backs, repeated sprints for wingers
  • Week 4: Deload — reduce volume by 25%, maintain intensity. Test Yo-Yo or beep test. Compare to Week 1
  • Week 5: Retest and restart. Beat your numbers, or repeat the block until you do. Consistency beats intensity; progression beats perfection

Not improving? Check recovery first — sleep, nutrition, and stress matter more than extra sessions. Improving too fast? Be patient. Aerobic adaptations take weeks; the goal is sustainable progress, not a single hero session.

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The Benchmarks — Hit These, Then Move On

Conditioning is measurable. If you hit the numbers below, your aerobic base is good enough for semi-pro football — and your time is better spent on speed, strength, and the ball. If you are below: build the engine first.

< 40–42
min 10K run
Sub 4:00–4:12 /km pace
3000+
meters Cooper Test
12 min max effort
2000+
meters Yo-Yo IR1
Modern football standard

10K — reveals aerobic capacity and recovery ability. Sub 42 min is the semi-pro threshold. Sub 40 min means your base is solid; extra distance running gives diminishing returns.

Cooper Test — the classic 12-minute standard. 3000 m (4:00/km average) is the minimum for this level. Elite players often hit 3200–3600 m. Under 2800 m = build aerobic base before chasing explosiveness.

Yo-Yo Intermittent Recovery Test Level 1 — the modern test used by football clubs worldwide. It mirrors match demands: 40 m shuttles with 10 s active recovery. Semi-pros should hit 2000+ meters. This measures your ability to repeat sprints with incomplete rest — the exact demand of the 85th minute.

Hit these numbers? Stop running laps and start sprinting. Conditioning is rent — once it is paid, invest in assets that win matches.

Ready to Outlast Everyone?
Download your first program, commit to the work, and build the engine that dominates in the final minutes. Fitness is not a talent — it is a decision.
Download Aerobic Base Program →

These programs are developed by certified strength & conditioning coaches with experience at professional football clubs. They combine verified GPS match data, heart-rate periodisation, and modern concurrent training science — adapted for your journey from semi-pro to elite.

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