This episode with Raymond Verheijen is about football periodization, why many coaches overcomplicate training, and why the primary job of a coach is to structure football-specific work in a way that improves performance while reducing injuries.
Verheijen explains that periodization is not a rigid master plan that controls a team. It is a tool for organizing training, practice games, and the weekly and monthly rhythm of work based on the characteristics of football and the functioning of the body. The model should help coaches avoid both overtraining and undertraining, but it must always remain subordinate to tactical goals and playing style.
A central theme of the episode is his criticism of the growing dependence on data-driven monitoring. He argues that the coach’s first responsibility is to develop the ability to observe players and communicate with them, rather than outsourcing judgment to questionnaires, GPS, or heart-rate systems. In his view, data may be used to confirm an observation, but never to replace the coach’s eye. He is particularly skeptical of GPS, calling attention to its measurement error and the false confidence it can create.
The discussion then moves into small-sided games. Verheijen argues that 4v4 or other reduced formats should not be random competitions where players simply run hard. Instead, these games should be a simplification of 11v11, preserving the team’s playing style, positional roles, and tactical responsibilities. If a coach structures small-sided games correctly, effort and accountability become obvious through football itself, without the need for artificial commands to “work harder.”
Another major point concerns rehabilitation and return to play. Verheijen rejects the traditional separation between rehab and football training, where injured players train in isolation and later jump back into the team environment. He argues instead for a football rehab periodization, where rehab is an individual simplification of the team’s football reference. This reduces the transition shock and lowers the risk of setbacks and reinjury.
He also criticizes the rise of generalized movement specialists who treat football like gymnastics by trying to impose ideal movement patterns. His counterargument is that football does not rely on one perfect technique or one ideal movement solution. Because every game situation is different, football requires functional variability in technique and movement. Players must be able to solve problems in many ways, not conform to one stereotyped model.
On strength training, Verheijen makes the point that the term itself is often used too loosely. Different coaches use the same word to describe very different methods. He argues that strength work in football should begin with an analysis of the actual demands of the sport. Since most explosive football actions occur after deceleration and change of direction, weight-room exercises should reflect that reality rather than rely on generic strength methods disconnected from football actions.
The conversation closes with discussion of the college soccer environment, which Verheijen sharply criticizes. He views the condensed preseason and congested Friday-Sunday competition model as fundamentally harmful to player welfare. His advice for coaches in that setting is to distinguish between fitness and freshness. Fitness is developed before the season; once the competitive schedule begins, the focus must shift to recovery and restoring freshness between matches rather than trying to continue conditioning players during the season.
Finally, he discusses injuries at elite clubs and argues that the head coach and training methods are the biggest drivers of injury rates. He references research suggesting that coaches tend to carry their injury profiles from club to club. His conclusion is simple: demanding training is not the issue by itself; poor balance between intensity, volume, fatigue, and recovery is.