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Sun, sweat and GPS out the window – inside story of pre-season

Sun, sweat and GPS out the window – inside story of pre-season

SNS

“I’ve had boys being caught driving round the stadium with their GPS hanging out the window, claiming they’ve done 5K in 16 minutes.”

Pre-season training isn’t the place for the faint-hearted.

The days of running up and down sand dunes in the mid-1970s may be over. Trips to Largs have since been switched for private jets, Austrian training camps and sports science.

‘We went to Hungary and it was 40 degrees’ – the manager

While players are off sunning themselves in some picture-perfect beach club, or perhaps playing Ludo with the kids on a staycation at a midge-infested glamping site, back at base camp there will be some poor sod plotting their return.

Enter stage left, Livingston manager David Martindale.

With the break between the season finishing and preparation for the next shortening by the year, you’d think it would be difficult for players to allow their fitness to slide too much. Right?

Well, Martindale is one of many managers who will make sure their players aren’t coming back battling the holiday bulge.

“It’s changed now,” he told BBC Scotland. “The boys will have a two-week programme so when they come back in, they’re not a million miles away from when they left the club.

“They’ll be given 5Ks, they’ll be given 10Ks, they’ll be given some mobility exercises and light gym work.

David MartindalSNS

Footballers are professionals, so let’s go on the notion every single one of them watches what they eat and drink and follows the holiday programme to the letter.

But what happens if that maybe hasn’t happened?

“I’ve had everything,” said Martindale. “But they’re only cheating themselves. You find out very quickly on the first day back if they’ve been telling porkies.

“I remember one player telling me he had an all-inclusive two weeks in Mexico, I said, ‘well, you’re going to have to get out and you’re going to have to go run, you’re going to have to watch what you’re eating slightly, you’re going to have to watch what you’re doing’.

“He came back in, I think his body fat had nearly doubled, and he’d put on about 8kg, and from that moment onwards he was playing catch up. He went out on loan two weeks later…”

Martindale says he’s not all old school when it comes to pre-season training. After the first day tests, the footballs are out and friendlies will soon be played.

Livingston are off to the Netherlands this summer with their boss saying finding the right location for a trip is crucial.

‘From laundry to private dining… It’s never-ending’ – the club secretary

Livingston won’t be the only team heading abroad to get ready for the rigours of the season. Dozens of sides across the UK will be doing the same.

So, what goes into planning such a trip?

“Once the board and the manager determine there’s going to be one, the manager would normally tell me where he would like to go,” Karen Castello, Kilmarnock’s club secretary, explains.

“Once a venue’s available and we have a hotel, then obviously flights or ferries have to be organised. Then we have to also gather everyone’s passport details and ensure they’re all valid within the six months of travel.

“From laundry, dealing with the food that the sports scientists advise, it’s never-ending. Also, within the hotel we also have to arrange meeting rooms, physio rooms, private rooms, private dining…”

While Castello is in charge of the logistics after listening to the manager’s wishlist, clubs can also pull in agents to pull together the perfect trip.

During the jaunt, which is typically around one week, players will also get some down time. And if anyone fancies a round of golf, then you guessed it, Castello has to organise this too.

“It’s also good when you’ve got fresh players coming in as well,” said Castello of the social benefit of going away for pre-season.

“It’s the only time you actually get a chance to actually meet the boys on a daily basis.

‘There was a 22-man brawl’ – the player

Andy Halliday with water bottleSNS

So we’ve heard from a manager and a club secretary, but what about those who are being put through their paces?

It may seem a bundle of laughs jetting away to warmer climes. But this is where the hard graft begins and, as Martindale alluded to, there’s nowhere to hide.

“My first full-time pre-season I did the runs on Gullane sands with Livingston. Thankfully that’s long gone, because I don’t think I could have done 17, 18 of them,” said Motherwell midfielder Andy Halliday.

“We’re very lucky to do what we do, but everyone sort of dreads that first day back in pre-season because they know they’re going to be putting in the tough yards.

“But after it’s done you obviously always feel the benefits for it and you know you’re better off for it as a player and obviously as a team as well.”

“We were in Holland last year, I’ve been to Marbella, I’ve been to Portugal so we’re really lucky to be going to nice places with warm weather as we’re not blessed with brilliant weather here in Scotland, so I think it’s always nice to get a bit of sun on your back as well.”

In saying that, Halliday’s pre-season experiences haven’t always gone to plan. He remembers one trip for all the wrong reasons.

“It was either my first or my second season at Hearts, and we played a friendly against a Spanish team and there was a 22-man brawl,” he recalls.

Related topics

  • Scottish Premiership
  • Scottish Football
  • Football

Source: BBC

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