Total fitness from the land of Total Football


Total fitness from the land of Total Football

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zimbos_05
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Nearly 40 years after Netherlands legends Rinus Michels and Johan Cruyff unleashed Total Football on an unexpecting world, along comes a Dutchman espousing a new philosophy - periodisation.

If it is a concept that is unlikely to ever acquire Total Football's sexy cache, Raymond Verheijen believes periodisation - in essence a less is more approach to training - is important in allowing clubs to protect their key asset - players.
The 39-year-old Verheijen has an impressive pedigree.

He worked with Guus Hiddink, Frank Rijkaard, Louis van Gaal and Dick Advocaat at three World Cups and three European Championships with Netherlands, Russia and Korea, as well as with the Korean national team at the 2010 World Cup finals in South Africa.

Rijkaard also used Verheijen when he coached Barcelona, as did Hiddink when he managed Chelsea, while Advocaat used the 39-year-old fitness expert when he was in charge of Zenit St Petersburg.
   

Former Manchester City boss Mark Hughes also turned to Verheijen at the start of the 2009-2010 season and Craig Bellamy has been so impressed by the Dutchman that he now pays to work with him at his own expense.

"The objective of periodisation is to play every game with your best 11 players," Verheijen told BBC Sport during an hour-long interview, following a presentation at the UKSEM sports medicine conference at the end of last month.

"First of all because you want to win and secondly because the fans deserve to see the best players."

The idea that you start every game with your best team sounds like common sense.

But a look at the statistics shows that it does not always happen, even though it is estimated that up to 70% of Premier League clubs are using computer and medical analysis to measure player performance and fatigue levels.

The website physioroom.com's Premier League injury table on the weekend of 4-5 December recorded there were 108 top-flight players out of action.

On average, that is 5.4 players for each Premier League team or a fifth of each club's designated 25-man squad, with Aston Villa and Tottenham each having as many as 11 players on the treatment table over the weekend.

It is not just in England that clubs are having to juggle their resources due to injury. On the weekend of 20-21 November, 124 players were unavailable to play in Italy's Serie A due to injury.

Since former Liverpool boss Rafael Benitez took charge at Inter Milan, the Italian champions have come under particular scrutiny.

Up to 28 November, Inter had 37 injuries this season, it meant that those injured players missed a total of 68 games.

Before Inter played Spurs in the Champions League on 2 November, Italian newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport identified 15 muscle-related injuries that had affected Inter players since the start of the 2009-10 campaign.

"All teams have injuries," Benitez said. "We have a certain amount of muscle-related injuries but 40% of them were picked up on national team duty. Also, 85% of them are recurring from last year."

But for Verheijen, injury clusters demand closer analysis.

He believes as many as 80% of injuries are preventable, arguing that fatigue due to overtraining is the cause, pointing out that 14 of the 23-man 2010 Dutch World Cup have already been injured this season.

"World Cup players start the pre-season fit but fatigued," stated Verheijen, whose football career was cut short by a hip injury. "So there is no need for fitness training in pre-season as this results in even more fatigue and, eventually, injuries due to a loss of coordination and control.

"People make training so important that it is like survival of the fittest and at the end of the week when you have a game you see who is left and say OK we will play with these 11 players."

Verheijen, who has a Uefa A coaching licence, argues that too many fitness coaches are not from a football background and do not fully understand the sport and its relationship to training and preparation.

"Coaches should take the games as a starting point and build training sessions around them so players can fully recover and start the next match fresh," he added.

"They are afraid their team will not be fit enough for the start of the season. However, with this 'high injury-risk' training regime - subconsciously - they make fitness development more important than team development."

Bellamy, who after leaving City continued to work with Verheijen at Cardiff, is a convert.

"Last season at Manchester City I really felt great and Verheijen played a big part in this," Bellamy told a Feyenoord fan magazine in October.

"In the past, I used to train at 100mph until I was exhausted. No wonder I always broke down halfway through the season. I always thought this was a logical consequence of my playing style and I even started training harder when I was not fit."

Periodisation has been around as nearly as long as Total Football.

Developed by Russian researcher Leo Matveev, it is an approach designed to prevent overtraining and result in peak performance.

Most clubs would claim that their fitness regimes are designed to achieve that aim, but Verheijen suspects it is not happening enough.

"If football is an intensity sport, then less is more and you have to focus on the quality of training instead of the quantity," stated Verheijen, whose bête noire is double-training sessions.

"Doing two sessions a day in pre-season...I really I don't understand, because all you are doing is exhausting your players," added Verheijen, who believes different types of players - young players who have just joined the first-team or experienced defenders - should each be following specialised training plans.

"By doing one session a day with maximum intensity, when you come to November and December you're players will be much fitter and fresher than they are normally are with the traditional approach."

Both Bellamy and Carlos Tevez were vocal critics of City manager Roberto Mancini's insistence on weekly double training sessions last season.

Within 10 days of Mancini taking over from Hughes in December 2009, Joleon Lescott, Sylvinho, Roque Santa Cruz, Stephen Ireland, Shaun Wright-Phillips, Micah Richards and Nigel De Jong all picked up injuries.

"That was amateur stuff," said Verheijen.

"You take over a team that has the best statistics in the Premier League in terms of work rate - the most sprints - and you have the best injury record, based on a quality approach: one session a day, with maximum intensity that is no longer than 90 minutes.
   
VERHEIJEN'S TRACK RECORD
World Cup 1998: Netherlands defender Winston Bogarde broke leg in training
Euro 2000: Netherlands defender Jaap Stam pulled hamstring during shooting after training
World Cup 2002: No injuries with Korea side that reached semi-finals
Euro 2004: No injuries with Netherlands squad
World Cup 2006: No injuries with Korea squad
Euro 2008: Russia striker Pavel Pogrebnyak injured by tackle in preparation game against Serbia

World Cup 2010: Central defender Kwak Tae Hwi injured by tackle in preparation game against Belarus

"Then you take over and you start doing two sessions, each session two hours long, which is totally the opposite."

City insist those injuries were due to a glut of games over the Christmas period last season.
"Injuries are inevitable in this period for any club," said a City spokesman in a statement.
"Sylvinho, De Jong, Santa Cruz, Wright-Phillips were all fit for the 4-1 win at home to Blackburn on 11 January - Mancini's first league game after the 10-day period mentioned.

"Lescott and Richards had injury problems both before and after Mancini's arrival last December, so attributing those problems to his arrival is also unfair," added the spokesman, pointing out that City have only one player - Emmanuel Adebayor - who is injured at the moment.

When Verheijen worked with Rijkaard at Barcelona and Hughes at Manchester City, his ideas were initially greeted with scepticism by the players.

None more so than Bellamy, who was so distrustful that he kept a training diary over six weeks during pre-season ahead of the 2009-2010 season so he could argue that Verheijen had been wrong.

"He wrote the diary to kill us with it afterwards," said Verheijen. "But after six weeks it was the first pre-season that he did not get injured in his career."

Verheijen, who has also studied exercise physiology and sport psychology as well as taking a one-year Science in Football course, is not without his critics. Craig Duncan, head of human performance at Sydney FC, argues a reduction in training is not always positive.

"A problem is that there needs to be more corrective work to decrease the risk of injury through faulty movement patterns," Duncan commented.

"Specific strength training also needs to be incorporated as does flexibility and I have also had positive results from yoga.

"This is all supplementary work to work completed on the pitch. Recovery strategies also need to be enhanced so we don't necessarily have to train less just train smarter."

Other critics of Verheijen argue that his almost injury-free record is distorted by primarily working with international teams and also as a consultant.

Verheijen admits it is more difficult being a consultant but still firmly believes his methods are better than those employed by most coaches.

"A lot of coaches treat all the players the same way, whatever their age, whatever their body composition, whatever their injury history, whatever their playing position - everybody is doing the same training," Verheijen said.

"The culture in football is you either train or you don't train and there is nothing in between."

It is a culture he has spent his career trying to change and he will continue to preach his gospel to the unconverted.


we saw the effects of this against japan in 06. that extra fitness paid off big time later in the game.



Edited by zimbos_05: 8/12/2010 11:41:39 PM
Arthur
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Zimbos could you add a link please.

Many of us are waiting for his book to come out.
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might be of interest slide 29 onwards http://matanuskasoccer.countmein.com/FileServer/Organization/Media/522280cd-c2da-413e-bc83-605c97aca300/e57a08f7-9449-4345-81c2-f90f83115aec/KNVB%20Conditioning.pdf

Europe is funding the war not Chelsea football club

zimbos_05
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Arthur wrote:
Zimbos could you add a link please.

Many of us are waiting for his book to come out.


ill try and find the link. i got it off bbc.
Arthur
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Some more about Dr Raymond, also thanks Zimbo.

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Raymond Verheijen: "Coaches are responsible for overcrowded sickbay"

Wednesday 10 December 2008

An important reason for the months long crisis at Feyenoord is the months long wave of injuries in Rotterdam.

Feyenoord coach Gertjan Verbeek even called his colleague at Ajax Marco van Basten about it and has asked the Erasmus Medical Center carry out a study about the increase in hamstring injuries.

But on short notice there's even more injuries.

Ironically on of the best known specialists in the area of of training buildup and periodization, Raymond Verheijen is already on the pay list of Feyenoord.

But he only works with the youth teams of the club.

Verheijen worked with Dutch coaches Frank Rijkaard, Louis van Gaal, Guus Hiddink and Dick Advocaat, went to five major international tournaments with the Netherlands, South Korea and Russia and recently presented his book 'Het periodiseren van voetballen' (Periodization in football).

Verheijen is amazed by the amount of injuries that several clubs are dealing with at the moment.

"I can not and do not want to say anything substantially about what is happening at other clubs or at Feyenoord. To be specific about that you need to be involved directly. Generally speaking I can say that a wave of injuries can be prevented easily by balanced training," he says.

In the 10 years that I have been in this line of work I have never experienced a wave of injuries in the teams I am involved with. Of course there is always the odd injury in football. That is inherent to the sport. It's normal to have one or two injured players in a group of twenty. When there is ten or twelve there is something wrong in the training build up."

"It often goes wrong during pre-season. Coaches focus on fitness to much in that period. What is? Building in automatisms and you can only do that when you are working with a steady group of players every day. But because they start working hard on fitness straight after the players' vacations they get injured and you can not train with the intended basic team. With good football training you gain enough fitness."

"I do not believe in many training sessions. In football it is important that every session has a high level of intensity. When you train very often you develop chronic tiredness and the quality of the training sessions falls. When you are tired but you have to strain yourself, your coordination is less good and you get injured quicker."

To monitor a player's tiredness the Omega Wave is on the rise, a machine that asserts to measure the load of physical strain a player can handle.

"In most scientific literature that machine is burned to the ground. The margin of error is too big. You can use it well to calculate the average load for a group of athletes, but it does not provide accurate information for individuals. Besides it is a well-known secret that players know exactly how to manipulate the machine by now. The Omega Wave is often used by clubs to show how professional they are, but I believe that using unreliable machinery is shows your amateurism."

"By calling out for research and other complicated measures clubs give the impression that it is very difficult to solve the problem. But in reality it is actually very simple. By adjusting the different training impulses to each other you get immediate results. Often when there is a wave of injuries they point the finger at at the medical staff, totally unjustified. There is only one person to prevent a wave of injuries and that is the coach. He has to provide a decent training build up, so that players don't start an intensive exertion when they are already tired. Coaches shouldn't consider a wave of injuries as something that happens to them as a result of bad luck or external factors, but as something they are responsible for themselves. Without that change of culture nothing changes, no matter what study you carry out ."


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Some very interesting points are made by Raymond Verheijen.
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I know a player going to a full-time programme in the states. The player hasn't payed as much before.

For the player's sake I hope the US college coaching staff are aware of 'periodisation'.
GO


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