Planning

How to plan football trainings across a season?

Planning at the season scale isn't just arranging drills. It's a rhythm of trainings, a match schedule and predictability that lets parents and players know what to expect.

Updated: July 5, 20266 min read

Set a steady training rhythm

Predictability is more valuable than a perfect plan. When trainings happen on fixed days and times, parents find it easier to arrange transport and turnout rises.

Start with the frame: how many trainings per week, on which days and at what time. Only on that skeleton should you arrange the specific sessions.

Tie trainings to the match schedule

  • Mark matches and tournaments in the calendar for the whole known period.
  • Match the intensity of trainings to what's ahead of the team.
  • Plan in advance events that require travel or organisation.

Keep everything in one calendar

A scattered schedule is a source of misunderstandings. When trainings, matches and tournaments are in one team calendar, everyone sees the same picture and a date change reaches everyone.

  1. 1Enter fixed trainings for the coming period.
  2. 2Add known matches and tournaments.
  3. 3Set events that need earlier organisation.
  4. 4Update the schedule when changes come up.

How TrainTeam helps

In TrainTeam you keep the whole team schedule — trainings, matches, tournaments and meetings — in one calendar. Every event collects availability and is the basis for call-ups, and the club sees all teams' calendars.

Tip

It's worth setting the season and groups at the start. Then planning the next periods is just repeating a proven rhythm, not building from scratch.

Summary

  • A steady training rhythm raises turnout and helps parents organise.
  • Tie training intensity to the match schedule.
  • Keep trainings and matches in one team calendar.