Secret to Leicester's success - Sports science

Leicester City pulled off the greatest story in English Football

Training Sessions

According to Reeves, Leicester’s training sessions are broken into three essential parts: recovery, high-intensity work and, finally, the player's workloads are decreased in the run up to the next fixture.

He went to say: “It might be earlier on in the week when we have certain players that have played at the weekend, our focus is in and around recovery. That might be for the 48 hours after a game where we’ll be looking to take subjective scores, we’ll be using iPads and apps in order to record the players’ data and how they’re feeling, how well they slept, the number of disturbances in the night, their nutritional strategies.”

“As we progress through the week we have the adaptation days. These will be our hardest training sessions of the week where we’ll be looking to impart acceleration, deceleration exposures on the players in small, tight areas, so a lot smaller than the pitch you’ll see them running around on a Saturday. We then have larger areas which open players up and register some of the high-speed distances and the peak speed which is really important for the demands of the game that we see now.” Reeves added.

The 48-hour recovery period and a day off in midweek is not often followed by other clubs, resulting in more injuries. This lets the Foxes’ have a routine, say 50m sprint at the end of a tiring training session to accustom their body to wear and tear on matchdays.

Along with it, they use beetroot juice, which improves sprint abilities and decision making by just 3.5%, but we all know the small margins involved in football these days.

Player feedback

Along with this, Leicester’s players have to complete a daily questionnaire on their iPad which has questions about how their bodies feel after the previous day's training, and if several have similar injury concerns, the team can adjust the session next time to avoid the problem.

The questionnaire also asks how they slept at night and whether they were disturbed, so that they can accordingly change what they eat and drink to ensure they get the best rest between training sessions and matches.

The science department was aided by Leicester’s early exit from FA Cup and no European competition, which let them plan their training sessions with more efficiency. Everything is monitored, including the conditions of the pitch - whether soft or hard and training is planned accordingly.

What Ranieri hears from sports scientists

All the outputs of training sessions are used to determine a team for the next match, keeping in consideration various aspects of a player. However, they do not present all the data to the manager, they just pass on what they feel is important information on players and the team, as a whole.

Reeves claimed: “The key information suggests that there may be issues in and around certain players or members of the team, if we can identify patterns that have happened across previous seasons or when certain training sessions have taken place then I think it’s our job to give that information to the manager, empowering him to make decisions, and ultimately then he’s aware of the risk versus reward of whatever decision he comes to.”

Leicester was always keen to figure out new training techniques, and collecting new data through this method. They’ve not kept the technologies to themselves, though, and have helped contribute to the practice of sports science.

The club has already collaborated with local rugby union team Leicester Tigers to shape its approach towards improving players’ strength and conditioning, and the club intends to do the same with teams across various sports.

“I think it’s great to not only try and get an understanding of the way that football teams are working, but to look across different disciplines, to go into cycling like the kind of culture and environment that Team Sky have set up, with marginal gains, or looking at rugby and the way that they try and implement different recovery processes or their strength and conditioning aspects,” says Reeves.

Jamie Vardy suffered a hip injury in November

Vardy’s hip injury in the month of November could have dented Leicester’s fairytale run, but what helped him recover was a cryotherapy ice chamber, where players are treated to temperatures of -135C for up to four minutes. The chamber is much like an ice bath, where blood is withdrawn back to the heart before newly oxygenated blood is flushed into the player's muscles.

"The players like it because it's a dry ice so not as harsh on the skin as ice baths," Reeves said. "The players will often walk down the corridor afterwards looking light on their feet and feeling good in themselves. It also has a knock-on effect with sleep for that evening and the following evening."

Leicester City organizes VR sessions for the players, which is basically a virtual reality device to prepare players better for an in-match situation. However, it’s not completely effective as it’s hard to predict events in an unpredictable game like football, and although it’s hard to develop Reeves believes that this technology can be used for reactions, awareness or visual acceptance. Leicester are already looking at ways they can use data to train players’ mindset for high-pressure situations.

“Ninety minutes of football is extremely demanding: the stress associated with a game, the levels of arousal, the crowd, everything that goes in and around a Premier League game is stressful, so if we can try and identify the way that the minds working, the decision making process, how players are reacting to certain stimulus and ultimately can we coach that or improve it.”

The mastermind of the sporting miracle

All this was also helped by Claudio Ranieri. The occasion was huge, and the players could easily get distracted and lose their way, but Ranieri spoke to his players like he did in the press - he focused on the process, rather than the outcome. Leicester's performance psychologist Ken Way credits Ranieri for keeping his players focused and calm, when the rest of the nation were awed by the fairytale unfolding in front of their eyes.

These are all pretty clear-cut technologies, not rocket science, but after a season where the Foxes beat the 5000/1 odds of winning the EPL, we’ve clearly understood that nothing needs to be. In a game often complicated, Leicester have shown that it all boils down to one important thing - teamwork.

The trophy they won was due to the exploits of the entire team as a whole, and this trophy is for everyone who dared to believe. With so much money and huge corporations involved in modern football, it was heartwarming to see football win.

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Edited by Staff Editor
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