When is a player really ‘match fit’?

Leading names from football, cricket and ice hockey explain the differences between being fit and being ready to play in a professional game.

“The difference is huge,” says West Ham defender Ryan Fredericks. “You can spend as long as you want – years, even – running up and down the pitch or running around cones, but 10 minutes in a Premier League match is 100 times harder than any of that.

“You can’t fake anything on a Premier League pitch. You have to react to so many things – mentally, as well. If you get caught out, you’re stuck.”

‘Match fitness’ has long been a buzz term in sport, and never more so than during its attempt to return in the summer of 2020, when players could be expected to regain it at much shorter notice than they would like.

In the Bundesliga, Bayern Munich had some form of training taking place six weeks before matches returned. Most others won’t have that luxury.

Yet the term has such a variety of definitions across different sports and circumstances that it can be difficult to comprehend what it truly means.

Many professional sportspeople have gyms built into their homes, while they all have access to high-class equipment and experts to keep them in good shape. Their base fitness levels, one would assume, should always be impeccable.

What Fredericks is referring to is the difference between being fit – injury-free, in good nick – and being ready to play in a professional, competitive sports match. It is what every athlete is aiming for after an injury or break from the game.

“There are different aspects to it,” says Richard Collinge, Head of Medical Services at West Ham United.

“The science behind it all is now a major guide as to objectively clearing a player to return to training and then to return to a match, but the player has to also be psychologically ready.

“Those two things have to match, otherwise that player is not going to be ready to play.”

“I consider it a tripod of performance – physical, mental and emotional,” says Dan Garner, who has coached UFC champions Ronda Rousey and Michael Bisping, as well as three Super Bowl winners and an Olympic gold medallist, and is now head coach of the Hockey Training programme, based in Ontario.

“What happens if one leg of a tripod is knocked out? It collapses. In order to determine whether someone is actually ready, they would need to be mentally, emotionally and physically ready.”

The physical aspect is perhaps the easiest for fans to relate to. Fitness targets, whether they be distances, weights, calorie loss or anything else, are something that lots of us are constantly grappling with Betway.

“We have benchmarks and training data over several seasons so that we know what each player has got to achieve,” says Collinge.

“How fast he needs to sprint, the number of accelerations and decelerations he makes, the distance he covers.

“You also have to break that down into positional analysis. Match fitness is very different if you’re a goalkeeper from a modern-day wing-back. Using GPS data and distances covered, if a player has had a six-week hamstring injury we can tell what we need to prepare them for based on their position.

“We do some change of direction testing, too, because they have to be able to pivot acutely. They have to be able to withstand the force of an opponent and strike a ball.

“The rehabilitation period is not cleared until we can match as best as possible the loading of the tissue that will be required for full training and then a 90-minute match.”

Fredericks, who is precisely the type of explosive wing-back that Collinge is referring to, agrees that being ready to play in a game is far more complex than merely having the capacity to run long distances.

“The hard miles in games don’t really tire you out,” he says. “Sprinting up and down isn’t really what we find hard.

“The hard stuff is the short bursts of pace, when you’ve got to quickly get tight to someone. Nobody can tell you that you’re match fit unless you’ve been in the scenario where you’re having to struggle in the last 10 minutes and you’ve got to grind out a game.

“That’s when you find out about yourself, not doing runs in training.”

A player’s return for the reserves is often heralded as a major landmark on the road to match fitness.

In reality, though, while this represents one of the final hurdles to a first-team return, they still have plenty to prove at this stage, not just in terms of their physical wellbeing but also their state of mind.

“When placed in front of spectators and a worldwide audience then the anxieties of the player come into play as well,” explains Collinge. “That can affect the tissue tone. It’s all interwoven. The player needs to feel comfortable that he can play a game.”

Fredericks agrees. “Match fitness comes from confidence,” he says.

“Going into the game knowing that you’re at a higher risk of injury or that you might blow up after 60 minutes isn’t ideal. You need to play two or three Under-23 games or training-ground games to get that. It’s unheard of to have a long time out and then go straight into the Premier League.”

But the same routines don’t work for all sportspeople.

Kevin Pietersen, who played 275 internationals and is England’s third-highest run-scorer of all time across all formats, felt that intense practise sessions were far more valuable for his match fitness than sanitised warm-up matches.

“I didn’t need to feel that match scenario,” says Pietersen. “I hated practise games, I hated trial games, I hated all that.

“I think if you calculated my average from all of the warm-up games that we played it would be terrible. I didn’t want to play in them, I had no interest in them, because they never made me feel like I felt when I practised.”

Instead, Pietersen would embark on a personal process that would enable him to be ready for every match in every series on every tour.

The nature of the cricket schedule means that players regularly have to adapt to new conditions in different parts of the world – not just in terms of pitches, but also climate.

That makes returning to match fitness an even more difficult process.

According to Garner, the emotional state of a player is the most important prong in recovering match fitness – not just after a return from an injury or a long break, but in preparing for matches on a regular basis.

“Athletes perform best when they enter what is known as a flow state,” he says.

“You don’t want to be too emotionally aroused, or you’ll start making bad decisions. You’re too jazzed up. But you also don’t want to be not aroused at all, because being too calm and too relaxed doesn’t have you hyped up enough.

“A flow state is right in the middle. That is 100 per cent emotionally-based.

“To be game-ready, an athlete needs to not have any injury limitations holding them back, but also has to focus on the mental and emotional components.”

Recognising that a player might be lacking the mental capacity to perform, Garner says, is “what separates the good coaches from the great ones”, and explains why coaches are so much more attuned to medical processes now than they might once have been.

At West Ham, for example, Collinge speaks daily with first-team manager David Moyes and his coaching staff to assess the fitness of players and set realistic targets for their returns.

“It’s all about clear dialogue,” says Collinge. “The process is one of joint decision-making.

“We might look at the frequency of games coming up and pencil in particular players for particular games. Then we discuss what that player needs to do to prove himself fit and available for that game.

“We as medical staff and coaching staff want the player to be confident, ultimately. We want to make sure that the psychology and feedback from the player is positive, so that they can feel primed for competitive action.”

The process is similar in the South Africa cricket team. Masekela decides which kind of baselines tests are required based on the profile of players that the coaches have told him they want.

“They might tell us that they need a robust guy, or something else, and based on that information we come up with the testing protocol,” he says.

“If the coach doesn’t agree with the kind of tests we do, or he doesn’t understand them, then they’re relying on my word only. I don’t want that to blow up in my face.”

His efforts are all focused on one end goal.

“If you have your guys firing on all cylinders you will produce a good game. That’s what we want: guys performing at 100 per cent and producing good entertainment.”

As professional sport starts to emerge from its unscheduled hiatus, that challenge for fitness coaches around the world is greater now than ever.

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