What is Tactical Periodization?
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Originally developed by Vitór Frade, at the University of Porto, Tactical Periodization is a methodology - popularized by coaches such as José Mourinho and Andre Villas Boas - that trains soccer players through a logical process that focuses on four moments of the game.
These four moments are: Offensive Organisation, the Transition from Defence to Attack, Defensive Organisation, and the Transition from Attack to Defence. Through Tactical Periodization, the aim is to develop players to rapidly alter their on-field behaviours according to the tactical context of the match, and what actually unfolds in front of them. In turn, every training exercise focuses on at least one of the four moments, and always the coach's tactical game model of how he wants his team to play. In doing so, football players prepare and learn how best to conquer the often unpredictable matches that they encounter competitively.
This book is the English language translation of the acclaimed book Periodización Táctica by world-renowned coach and sports science specialist Xavier Tamarit.
*Important Note: What is Tactical Periodization is the translation of an academic book that examines Tactical Periodization's underlying philosophies, methodologies, and application. It covers areas such as systemic thinking, football as a complex phenomenon, and how the 'sum is greater than its parts'; it does not contain practical how-tos or drills. Candidly, it is not an 'easy' book to read, and requires a certain level of effort and concentration by the reader. However, for those who stick with it, the book provides a rewarding and high value resource for the modern football coach who wishes to understand exactly how Tactical Periodization developed, what it means for the sport, and how it can influence his or her coaching. Summary sections have been added to each original chapter to offer additional insight.
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Book preview
What is Tactical Periodization? - Xavier Tamarit
What is Tactical Periodization?
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Xavier Tamarit
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[Smashwords Edition]
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Published in 2015 by Bennion Kearny Limited.
Copyright © 2015 Bennion Kearny Limited.
ISBN: 978-1-910515-24-2
All Rights Reserved.
Bennion Kearny has endeavoured to provide trademark information about all the companies and products mentioned in this book by the appropriate use of capitals. However, Bennion Kearny cannot guarantee the accuracy of this information.
Published by Bennion Kearny Limited, 6 Woodside, Churnet View Road, Oakamoor, Staffordshire, ST10 3AE
www.BennionKearny.com
About this Book
This title is a translation of Xavier Tamarit’s book Periodización Táctica. Efforts have been made to remain as faithful to the original text as possible and this can, on occasion, lead to testing sections for the reader. Some content simply does not translate directly nor easily.
In turn, a new Summary section has been added to each chapter that attempts to draw out the primary concepts of the chapter in question.
About The Author
Xavier Tamarit is a professional football coach who made his name at Valencia, in Spain, as the assistant to the head coach Mauricio Pellegrino. During his time there, Tamarit established himself as one of the world's leading experts on Tactical Periodization, and he is currently the assistant coach at Estudiantes de la Plata in Argentina.
About The Translators
Iñaki Samaniego is one of the most upcoming goalkeeper coaches in Europe. Born in Sevilla, and after living and working for several years in England and Holland, he is now back in Spain. Iñaki has coached at important clubs like RCD Espanyol in Barcelona and ADO Den Haag in The Hague. Currently he coaches the goalkeepers of CE Constancia in Mallorca. Besides coaching, Iñaki also gives presentations and practices about goalkeeping, having shared his knowledge about the position in countries like Sweden, Scotland, Holland, England and Spain. Last but not least, Iñaki is also an avid translator, having translated several football related books like the Bestseller Soccer Tough. If you want to know more about him, you can follow him on twitter on @InakiSamaniego
Cecilia Fernandez is an experienced translator and proof-reader, specialising in Spanish and English languages. She studied Media & Communication and she has lived in Latin America and Spain, acquiring a deep understanding of cultural differences and idioms. She is currently based in London, United Kingdom, where she started her own company: Good Words Online (www.goodwordsonline.co.uk).
Foreword
Football through time, and like many other phenomena created by man, has followed the different paradigms of thinking that respective periods have offered. Football’s path has been, and is, motivated by different aspects that interact. It is part of a belief system: a search for the evolution of the game.
In the ‘beginning’, football was played purely and simply for the pleasure brought about by the activity itself. The quest for victory was part of the essence of the game, but the real pleasure was playing it.
With the need and desire to develop the game, participants started to try and understand how they could improve. Realizing that football was a game that was fundamentally technical, they tried to develop the player technically, with improvements that implied better performances individually and collectively. The way they achieved improvements reflected the scientific paradigm at that time, namely, mechanistic thinking. Different skills were taught and trained separately and, once you mastered them, you would play.
Later on, as things evolved, it was understood that football was not just a technical game, it was also tactical and physical. From that new understanding of the game, the evolutionary process of football (and its training) went on to highlight these three dimensions. However, playing football carried on to be expressed in a mechanistic way, and the separation between the physical, the technical, and the tactical was unquestionable. This reality persisted and solidified the association of football with certain sciences like physiology, biology, and biomechanics, amongst others, whose mechanistic paradigm was evident.
Built on a new stream of scientific thinking, the systematic paradigm - some people agree - sees the game of football as the interaction between tactical, technical, physical and psychological dimensions. It tries to create a training methodology that concedes the interaction of the different dimensions into so-called integrated training
. However, as is wont to happen in many revolutions, there is always a certain nostalgia that cannot be overcome; a nostalgia that conditions the step to another level, or to another paradigm.
In the case of integrated training
there were always two problems that the methodology could never surpass.
The first one comes with the name itself, integrated training
, which suggests a certain identity crisis
. If we consider it integrated
is it because it is something that can be disintegrated? The questions that subsequently follow are: maybe football can be broken down into tactical, technical, physical and psychological? Maybe football is a whole? Is not Football just a tactical game? In any action, technical ability, run, or manifestation of any kind, is it not a decisional response to a certain situation created by the game? If we understand that it is, the game is tactical, but it will permanently have technical, physical, and psycho-cognitive manifestations. This means, the tactical game is the whole and from the moment it gets divided up, it stops being so.
The second problem derives from the persistence of the first one. This means that integrated training
never managed to liberate itself from the integration and disintegration problem. Even though it tried to promote the interaction between the different dimensions, it permanently suffers from two sub-problems. The first one refers to the control and direction of training; the second, to the lack of contextualization (in other words, the lack of specificity that training shows).
Related to the dimension that assumes the control and direction of training, seen in the first problem, should be the tactical dimension. However, it is the physical dimension that takes that role.
Regarding the lack of context, it is clear that training often fails the tactical dimension - the one that controls the process which provokes a non-specificity related to the team. With this we want to say that, even though training may seem specific, because the training situations created belong to the football game, they are not always ideal to bring out the desired behavioural patterns for that team. There is no specificity of team, there is specificity of modality, a generalized specificity and, as a consequence, abstraction.
Aware of these problems, and with a deep understanding of the systemic paradigm, Professor Vítor Frade (first team assistant coach for many seasons at Futebol Clube de Oporto, and simultaneously lecturer at the sport department of Porto University) has, for almost thirty years, developed a football training methodology that finally leaves aside the mechanist paradigm and emphasizes playing as a singular creation and which is, therefore, specific.
He named the operational process that creates play as Tactical Periodization
. Periodization
because there is a period of time to create the expected game. Tactical
because the game is decisional, but those decisions, individual or collective, can be different depending on desired behavioural patterns. That is why decisions must not be abstract, but built within the intended behavioural matrix. Decisions must be contextualized and specific to the team.
Thus, the term Tactical Periodization contextualizes the game of a team and creates an identity that directs and orientates all the members of that team, allowing specificity to emerge.
This book, in a simple way, tries to highlight the main foundations of Tactical Periodization. It tries to show the bridges created and used by this methodology, finding support from different knowledge areas. It tries to enhance a different way of looking at the game and training. It can become a turning, or even starting, point towards a different understanding of the training process.
Will this methodology be better or worse than the others? I personally think better. But besides that, one thing I know for sure: this concept of training is nothing more than the search for the essence of Football. It is research into the game as it is, an indivisible game, or, as Vítor Frade says, An unbreakable game!
Will somebody who takes this conceptual path be successful? First of all, they must follow the suggested methodological principles, and having done so, success will very much depend on the quality of the playing ideas of the manager. However, the methodology has already brought about a few national championships; from the first team of F.C. Porto, to the greatest exponent of this methodology, José Mourinho, who has already won several national championships in four different countries, Portugal, England, Italy and Spain, several national cups, and the Champions League.
So, Tactical Periodization is a different way of constructing the game, it is, fundamentally, a true operational and philosophical revolution
of football training.
Guilherme Oliveira, J. (2007)
Introduction
Tactical Periodization is a training methodology that first arose over 30 years ago when Professor Victor Frade, through his experiences, began to question the training methodologies used up to that point.
Understanding that football and team play cannot be understood through classic scientific thought (analytically and decontextualized) - given its wholeness, unpredictability, and nonlinear condition, he decided to search for more suitable theories for the problems of football. Frade arrived at some systemic theories that, together with certain methodological principles, eventually became Tactical Periodization.
Tactical Periodization is a training methodology where the primary concern is the play that a team intends to produce in competition. This is why the playing model is assumed as a guide for the whole process, using principles, sub-principles and sub-sub-principles to shape it; reaching a certain quality, and specific adaptation, by respecting the methodological principles that sustain it.
This book stems from the need to make this training methodology known outside