Coach training

This training is for coaches who want to deepen their understanding of the game and make the connection between a game model, its principles, and what really feeds them on the field.

The starting point is always the individual. What behaviors, perceptions, and motor responses, at the level of an individual player or a small group, shape collective principles? How do these details then influence team dynamics?

Particular attention is paid to space-time crisis situations, when time is running out, space is closing in, and uncertainty is increasing. It is in these moments that the quality of perception, movement, and timing becomes crucial for decision-making.

The training also incorporates a mental and emotional dimension that is directly embedded in the exercises. The mental aspect is not addressed in an abstract way, but is worked on through specific situations of cooperation with teammates and opposition with opponents, in order to make the content more accurate and transferable to real play.

Through InMova, coaches have stable motor and perceptual benchmarks for designing consistent, relevant, and progressive training situations.

The goal is to better understand how collaboration and opposition influence behavior, and how to guide players toward more effective and autonomous responses.

Who is the coach training for?

This training is for coaches who want to deepen their understanding of the game beyond pre-established playing models. It is aimed at:

  • Professional coaches, or those who aspire to become professional coaches, who want to refine their reading of the game and their ability to develop individuals for the benefit of the team.
  • Youth coaches who are keen to build solid, transferable, and sustainable foundations without locking players into fixed patterns too early.
  • Individual coaches, as well as physical trainers, who want to integrate movement, perception, and feeling into their work, and connect physical development to the meaning of the game.
  • Coaches at the beginning of their careers, looking for a structured, coherent framework for reflection that is connected to the realities of the field.

More broadly, this training is primarily aimed at coaches who want to adopt a different perspective, one that is sensitive to the details that make a difference, to the meaning of the game, and to the way football is experienced and understood on the field.

Each work situation incorporates a mental and emotional dimension, in order to help coaches develop their players’ intuition, decision-making skills, and ability to remain focused under pressure.