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Today we have the honor of interviewing Gavin Benjafield, performance director at LAFC, an MLS team.
Gavin Benjafield is the Performance Director at Los Angeles Football Club (LAFC), where he leads an integrated performance department spanning strength and conditioning, sports science, nutrition, data, and mental performance. Originally from South Africa, he has over 20 years of experience in elite football, beginning his career at Ajax Cape Town before progressing to Ajax Amsterdam in the Netherlands and later working in the Premier League. He holds a background and degree in exercise physiology, with expertise in final-phase rehabilitation and sports science, having developed his career during a time when practitioners were more generalist before the field became highly specialized. In 2018, he joined LAFC at its inception, drawn by the rare opportunity to build a high-performance model from the ground up, and has since played a key role in shaping the clubās performance philosophy and interdisciplinary approach.
You can watch the video interview below by clicking on the Youtube link. You can also listen to the audio interview by clicking on the link at the top of the page:
šShow Notes: Through this interview, we touched on:
* His background and what led him to LAFC.
* His role at LAFC, and what a typical day looks like.
* His approach towards performance training, S&C, rehab and innovation.
* How he sees the world of performance training in elite sports evolving in the coming years.
* Which technologies he would build if he had unlimited resources.
You can read the full transcript of the podcast interview with Gavin located at the top of this blog post.
Here are the quotes from the interview with Gavin:
Q1. Background & path to LAFC
āIāve been involved in football for close on 20 years. Iām South African, I started with Ajax Cape Town, then moved to the Netherlands with Ajax Amsterdam, and later worked in the Premier League before landing in Los Angeles in 2018. My background is exercise physiology, final phase rehabilitation, sports scienceāat that time we were still pretty generalists, and the industry has since become much more specialized. The big attraction for me coming to LAFC was that Iād never been in a club where I had the opportunity to build something from the ground up. In 2017 the club didnāt really exist at first-team level, so it was like having a piece of land and saying, āthis is how weāre going to build the house.ā That opportunity was unique, and I felt this may be the only time in my career where I could do something like that.ā
Q2. Role at LAFC & typical day
āMy role as Performance Director is primarily overseeing areas like strength and conditioning, sports science, data science, nutrition, and mental performance coaching. Itās very much a managerial roleāIām the connector between all those disciplines, the players, the coaching staff, and the leadership. Iāve stepped away from being a specialist; instead, I hire experts in each field and make sure everything is aligned. There isnāt really a ānormalā day, but we do fall into a rhythm. We start earlyāaround 7:45 the medical and performance teams meet to align on the day, then smaller staff meetings follow, and by 9:00 we meet with coaches. From nine to ten is really important for player interaction, maintaining those relationships. Training starts mid-morning, and the rest of the day flows from there. The challenge is that it becomes very cyclical, so you have to deliberately create moments to reflect, sit down with staff, and think about how to improveābecause thatās really where the gold is found.ā
Q3. Approach to performance, S&C, rehab & innovation
āFor me, performance is a singular unitāeveryoneās role is ultimately pointed toward improving team performance. Whether youāre in nutrition, strength and conditioning, or data, the question is always: how are you enhancing the player and the team? We are one team with different specializations. I often use analogies like Formula One, where even one personās role is criticalāif they donāt execute, the whole system is impacted. Or like an orchestra, where everyone plays a different instrument but must be aligned. I really emphasize teamwork, collaboration, and communication. My philosophy is not rigidāitās fluid, because every season presents a different challenge. Whether itās schedule congestion, injuries, or travel, you need a unique approach each time. Ultimately, our goal is to maximize player potential, maximize availability, and navigate the season as effectively as possible.ā
Q4. Future of performance training
āI think we now have so much information at our fingertips that weāre actually becoming distracted. Itās very easy to keep adding new tools, new technologies, new ideas, thinking they will enhance performanceābut often weāre just diluting what was already working. If we look back five years, we have to ask whether all these additions have really produced better outcomes. Distraction is becoming one of our biggest enemies. We canāt create more time with athletes, so if we keep adding more tasks, weāre just overloading both staff and players. I use the analogy of a backpackāif we keep adding more, we just end up tiring ourselves out. I believe the future is about simplification and consistency. If we reduce the number of ānewā inputs, we can apply things more consistently, and thatās what actually allows athletes to adapt and improve over time.ā
Q5. Dream technology
āIf I had unlimited resources, I would build a single, discreet device that captures everythingāsomething like a continuous monitoring system that combines all the functions we currently separate across multiple tools. I want to see how an athlete moves from fatigue back to readiness, how travel impacts them, how they respond to both physical and mental stress over time. Right now, a lot of what we do is still a best guess, especially early in the training week. Ideally, weād have continuous physiological data that helps us make better decisions day by day. The key is that it has to be simpleāplayers donāt want to wear more technology, they want to wear less. At the moment, we risk turning athletes into robots by asking them to wear multiple devices. The goal should be one solution that gives us richer insights while staying completely in the background and allowing athletes to perform naturally.ā
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By Julien BlinToday we have the honor of interviewing Gavin Benjafield, performance director at LAFC, an MLS team.
Gavin Benjafield is the Performance Director at Los Angeles Football Club (LAFC), where he leads an integrated performance department spanning strength and conditioning, sports science, nutrition, data, and mental performance. Originally from South Africa, he has over 20 years of experience in elite football, beginning his career at Ajax Cape Town before progressing to Ajax Amsterdam in the Netherlands and later working in the Premier League. He holds a background and degree in exercise physiology, with expertise in final-phase rehabilitation and sports science, having developed his career during a time when practitioners were more generalist before the field became highly specialized. In 2018, he joined LAFC at its inception, drawn by the rare opportunity to build a high-performance model from the ground up, and has since played a key role in shaping the clubās performance philosophy and interdisciplinary approach.
You can watch the video interview below by clicking on the Youtube link. You can also listen to the audio interview by clicking on the link at the top of the page:
šShow Notes: Through this interview, we touched on:
* His background and what led him to LAFC.
* His role at LAFC, and what a typical day looks like.
* His approach towards performance training, S&C, rehab and innovation.
* How he sees the world of performance training in elite sports evolving in the coming years.
* Which technologies he would build if he had unlimited resources.
You can read the full transcript of the podcast interview with Gavin located at the top of this blog post.
Here are the quotes from the interview with Gavin:
Q1. Background & path to LAFC
āIāve been involved in football for close on 20 years. Iām South African, I started with Ajax Cape Town, then moved to the Netherlands with Ajax Amsterdam, and later worked in the Premier League before landing in Los Angeles in 2018. My background is exercise physiology, final phase rehabilitation, sports scienceāat that time we were still pretty generalists, and the industry has since become much more specialized. The big attraction for me coming to LAFC was that Iād never been in a club where I had the opportunity to build something from the ground up. In 2017 the club didnāt really exist at first-team level, so it was like having a piece of land and saying, āthis is how weāre going to build the house.ā That opportunity was unique, and I felt this may be the only time in my career where I could do something like that.ā
Q2. Role at LAFC & typical day
āMy role as Performance Director is primarily overseeing areas like strength and conditioning, sports science, data science, nutrition, and mental performance coaching. Itās very much a managerial roleāIām the connector between all those disciplines, the players, the coaching staff, and the leadership. Iāve stepped away from being a specialist; instead, I hire experts in each field and make sure everything is aligned. There isnāt really a ānormalā day, but we do fall into a rhythm. We start earlyāaround 7:45 the medical and performance teams meet to align on the day, then smaller staff meetings follow, and by 9:00 we meet with coaches. From nine to ten is really important for player interaction, maintaining those relationships. Training starts mid-morning, and the rest of the day flows from there. The challenge is that it becomes very cyclical, so you have to deliberately create moments to reflect, sit down with staff, and think about how to improveābecause thatās really where the gold is found.ā
Q3. Approach to performance, S&C, rehab & innovation
āFor me, performance is a singular unitāeveryoneās role is ultimately pointed toward improving team performance. Whether youāre in nutrition, strength and conditioning, or data, the question is always: how are you enhancing the player and the team? We are one team with different specializations. I often use analogies like Formula One, where even one personās role is criticalāif they donāt execute, the whole system is impacted. Or like an orchestra, where everyone plays a different instrument but must be aligned. I really emphasize teamwork, collaboration, and communication. My philosophy is not rigidāitās fluid, because every season presents a different challenge. Whether itās schedule congestion, injuries, or travel, you need a unique approach each time. Ultimately, our goal is to maximize player potential, maximize availability, and navigate the season as effectively as possible.ā
Q4. Future of performance training
āI think we now have so much information at our fingertips that weāre actually becoming distracted. Itās very easy to keep adding new tools, new technologies, new ideas, thinking they will enhance performanceābut often weāre just diluting what was already working. If we look back five years, we have to ask whether all these additions have really produced better outcomes. Distraction is becoming one of our biggest enemies. We canāt create more time with athletes, so if we keep adding more tasks, weāre just overloading both staff and players. I use the analogy of a backpackāif we keep adding more, we just end up tiring ourselves out. I believe the future is about simplification and consistency. If we reduce the number of ānewā inputs, we can apply things more consistently, and thatās what actually allows athletes to adapt and improve over time.ā
Q5. Dream technology
āIf I had unlimited resources, I would build a single, discreet device that captures everythingāsomething like a continuous monitoring system that combines all the functions we currently separate across multiple tools. I want to see how an athlete moves from fatigue back to readiness, how travel impacts them, how they respond to both physical and mental stress over time. Right now, a lot of what we do is still a best guess, especially early in the training week. Ideally, weād have continuous physiological data that helps us make better decisions day by day. The key is that it has to be simpleāplayers donāt want to wear more technology, they want to wear less. At the moment, we risk turning athletes into robots by asking them to wear multiple devices. The goal should be one solution that gives us richer insights while staying completely in the background and allowing athletes to perform naturally.ā
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