The short answer: To improve aerobic fitness for football, prioritise high-intensity interval running and small-sided games over long slow jogging. Football is a repeated-sprint sport, so your training should mimic its stop-start demands while building a strong aerobic base.
What kind of fitness does football actually require?
A match involves walking and jogging punctuated by repeated bursts of sprinting, jumping and changing direction. You need both a strong aerobic base to recover between efforts and the capacity to repeat high-intensity bursts.
This is why long, steady-state running alone is not enough. Your training should rehearse the explosive, intermittent nature of the game.
Which interval sessions build football fitness fastest?
Intervals develop the ability to work hard, recover, and go again.
- 4x4 minutes: hard running at around 90% effort, 3-minute jog recovery, builds your aerobic ceiling.
- Repeated sprints: 6-10 x 30m with short rest, trains match-specific repeat efforts.
- Shuttle runs: with turns to mimic deceleration and re-acceleration.
Two quality interval sessions a week is plenty for most players.
Can small-sided games replace running drills?
Largely, yes. Small-sided games (such as 4v4 or 5v5 on a compact pitch) elevate heart rate to training levels while developing technique, decision-making and game awareness at the same time.
They are also more enjoyable, which improves consistency. Use pure running when you need precise control of intensity, but games are an efficient, football-specific way to build your engine.
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