What is a Training Plan? Do I Need One as a Coach?

Many people associate terms like training planning, blocks, phases, or periodization mainly with strength and conditioning training. However, technical and tactical training also requires a structured training plan to ensure long-term player development.

In team sports, improving technical skills and tactical understanding is the primary responsibility of a coach or coaching staff. However, in practice, many coaches focus only on individual training sessions, rather than having a bigger picture in mind.

Why is a Training Plan Important?

Planning a single training session is, of course, essential—this is where players develop their skills on the field. A well-structured session should include:

✔️ Appropriate drills for the session's focus
✔️ Proper use of equipment and space
✔️ Consideration of player numbers and time constraints

However, a single session is just a small piece of a much larger puzzle. To maximize player development, a coach needs to think long-term and structure training accordingly.

How to Create a Long-Term Training Plan

1️⃣ Weekly Planning

The next level of planning is the weekly schedule. The number of available training sessions determines how detailed and specific each session can be:

📌 2 sessions per week? Prioritize key areas carefully.
📌 4 sessions per week? More focused, specialized training is possible.

Additionally, load management should be considered:

⚡ If there is a match on the weekend, the most intense (running-heavy) session should not be on Friday—instead, it should be scheduled midweek to ensure proper recovery.

2️⃣ Monthly & Seasonal Planning

To get a bigger perspective, training should be structured into phases or cycles over weeks and months. These phases vary by sport but generally follow this structure:

📅 Preseason: Building fitness, tactical foundations, and team cohesion
🏆 Competition Phase 1: Refining tactical principles and maintaining fitness
❄️ Winter Break (if applicable): Recovery & specific improvements
🏆 Competition Phase 2: Tactical fine-tuning and peak performance
🔥 Playoffs / Championship Phase: Maximizing performance

Together, these phases form the season plan. Coaches can even plan beyond a single season, setting long-term objectives that guide development across multiple age groups (U10, U12, U14, etc.).

💡 Key Focus: Long-term plans should emphasize player development over results. Tactical principles, key skills, and training methodologies should be structured progressively.

Conclusion: The Role of a Digital Training Plan

A well-structured long-term training plan helps coaches:

Ensure systematic player development
Manage workload and recovery
Align training with age-specific needs

📲 VOOR’s digital training planner assists coaches in creating structured long-term training plans, optimizing load management, and developing players effectively. Start planning smarter today!

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