The Star Malaysia - Star2

Fighting fit

It takes an awful lot to prepare footballer­s for the World Cup – a caffeine fix is but one strategy.

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ELITE footballer­s face ever-increasing physical and mental demands, with a faster-paced game and long, gruelling seasons. In a World Cup year, how does a player make it to June fit and fired up?

It is actually quite difficult, the experts say, and requires an army of dedicated specialist­s tracking and carefully engineerin­g each athlete’s mental and physical condition.

Research shows that the beautiful game has become faster and more intense, requiring players to be fleeter of foot and of mind, raising stress levels and the risk of serious injury.

But there is little time for rest and recuperati­on.

Every four years, many teams enter the world’s most popular sporting extravagan­za having just completed a major competitio­n: the UEFA Champions League finished less than three weeks before the 2018 World Cup opens in Russia on Thursday.

“There is no real regard for the demands of internatio­nal football within clubs,” said John Brewer, a professor of applied sport science at St Mary’s University in London, who helped prepare the English national team for the 1990 World Cup.

“They (clubs) want their players at 100% until the last game, and it doesn’t matter if there’s a World Cup afterwards.”

Trainers rely on high-tech to keep tabs on their athletes.

GPS is used to track their every move in training sessions and matches, measuring changes in running or accelerati­on speed while monitors track their heart rate.

Players returning to the home team after training or playing away, complete questionna­ires on diet, sleeping patterns and any aches or pains, “which help us detect problems that are not necessaril­y visible”, said Stephane Caterina, a French physical trainer specialise­d in football.

And then, a few weeks before a World Cup, the athletes are assessed for battle readiness and put through their final preparator­y paces – “catered to each individual player”, according to Caterina.

“Some will have a tougher fitness routine because they have played less and are better able to handle it, even need it. On the other hand, someone who has played a lot will be spared.”

Over-extended players can be prescribed a regime of hot-and-coldwater baths to boost muscle recovery, along with massages and other regenerati­ve treatments.

High-risk endeavour

But they are not to be left completely static, and may do low-intensity, “fun” exercises such as forest bike rides or mountain hikes before resuming their classical training a week or two before the first match. The aim, of course, is to have players in tip-top shape and resistant to injury. But it is a tough balance, and sometimes things go wrong in the lead-up to a World Cup.

France has not forgotten the trauma of Zinedine Zidane tearing a thigh muscle in a warm-up game five days before the opening of the 2002 World Cup, a setback blamed in part for the national team’s poor showing.

A similar fate has now befallen Egypt, with star striker Mohamed Salah injuring a shoulder while playing for Liverpool in the Champion’s League final on May 26.

A 2013 study in the Journal of Science and Medicine and Sport said the physical demands of football have skyrockete­d since 1966, when the eighth World Cup was held. The game speed increased by 15% to 2010, and the ball passing rate by 35%, according to the analysis of World Cup final games.

While the added intensity produces much excitement for fans, it comes at the risk of “an increased probabilit­y of injuries through highspeed collisions involving greater kinetic energy and when moving at sprint speeds more frequently”, the study authors said.

Another study counted 104 injuries at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, an average of 1.68 per match.

Almost two-thirds of injuries were to the legs, 18% to the head or neck, and 10% to a hand, arm, or shoulder.

“The most frequent diagnosis was a thigh strain,” said a paper in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

Almost two-thirds of injuries came from player contact.

But the research did find that the number of injuries had actually dropped since 1998, due in large part to a decline in foul play which it attributed to stricter rules and enforcemen­t.

Mental grit

Mental toughness, say the experts, is something every good player must have.

“Athletes who feel that they can cope with the demands of the competitio­n view it as a challenge and are more likely to produce their best performanc­es,” Lee Moore, a lecturer in sport psychology at the University of Bath said.

On the other hand, “athletes who think that they might struggle to cope with the demands view it as a threat and are more likely to underperfo­rm.”

A scientific review in the journal Sports Medicine in April concluded that mental fatigue impairs running, passing, shooting, tackling, decision-making, and tactical performanc­e on the field.

“Teams should ensure that they recover both mentally and physically between matches,” said Michael Smith of the University of Newcastle in Australia, who co-authored the paper.

“This would involve getting enough sleep and having enough rest/leisure time,” he said.

Mental fatigue can result from too many tactical meetings, media interviews and video game training.

“Players should avoid mentally demanding tasks before a match, and may benefit from caffeine consumptio­n before a match or at half time,” Smith advised. – AFP

 ?? — Filepic ?? Zidane’s injury just before the 2002 World Cup was devastatin­g.
— Filepic Zidane’s injury just before the 2002 World Cup was devastatin­g.

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