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Performance Goalkeeping
Newsletter
March 2008,
Issue 2: GK Fitness 1, written by John Cone
Welcome to Performance Goalkeeping Newsletter
Issue 2. This issue is the first in a series of
three written by John Cone covering goalkeeper
strength and fitness training.
John Cone is a former goalkeeping coach in the
MLS, currently a PhD student in exercise
science, and coach educator for US Soccer. John
holds an M.S. in exercise physiology and
runs a
fitness consulting company: Cone Fitness
Training and Consulting LLC.
For more information on fitness consulting,
please visit:
www.conefitnesstraining.com
As we discuss
different thoughts,
philosophies, GK
techniques and
tactics with the
coaching community,
please direct
questions, comments
or topic suggestions
to
newsletter@PerformanceGoalkeeping.com. Other coaches
can join our mailing
list by visiting
www.PerformanceGoalkeeping.com
and entering an
email address in the
sign up box.
***
Perhaps more
than any other position in soccer the success of
the goalkeeper is linked to their physical
ability. The physical contribution to the
goalkeeper’s success is comprised of a number of
components of varying importance and
contribution specific to each goalkeeper’s short
and long-term success. In addition, the
technical development of the keeper is
inextricably tied to the keeper’s physical
development. For instance, the general
coordination of a goalkeeper heavily impacts
their technical ability. The integration of
these components into the goalkeeper’s training
presents a unique challenge to the goalkeeping
coach.

Figure 1: Physical development in soccer
(adapted from Hodson 2001)
In order to maximize the goalkeeper’s training
experience, athletic development, injury
resistance and resiliency, and ultimately
performance, it is essential that the training
opportunities available to the coach are
maximized. Typically, the primary training
opportunities available to the goalkeeping coach
of a university or professional goalkeeper
consist of:
1.
Warming Up
2.
Technical Training
3.
Anaerobic Fitness Training
4.
Resistance Training
Each of the aforementioned training
opportunities serves specific functions in
training, and all are well suited for the
integration of training specific athletic
components. The following diagrams illustrate
the pairing of athletic components with their
respective training opportunities.

The warm-up must
prepare the goalkeeper for the session to
follow. It is an ideal time for the integration
of a number of physical components, as well as
for training the technical development of the
goalkeeper, specifically handling and collapse
diving.

The majority of time
a goalkeeping coach spends with the goalkeeper
is focused on technical training. Further, a
large amount of this time is spent on movement
of the keeper in the goal as it relates to the
outlined technical components of goalkeeping.
The integration of training specific athletic
components in technical training works towards
optimizing the goalkeeper’s development and
training experience.

The development of
anaerobic endurance in the goalkeeper focuses on
two components: 1) ensuring that, when under
prolonged pressure, the goalkeeper is resistant
to fatigue, and 2) to ensure that the
goalkeeper’s maximal effort at the end of the
match is equivalent to that at the match’s
beginning. The ability to effectively stress and
train the goalkeeper’s anaerobic endurance
without opening the goalkeeper to injury is a
key component in the training and development of
the goalkeeper.

Resistance training
for the goalkeeper is an integral component in
first developing injury resistance and
resilience, and finally developing a
goalkeeper’s athletic ability. The
implementation of an appropriate strength
program must be individualized to the
goalkeeper’s needs, targeting a decrease in
muscular imbalance, and a progressive approach
to resistance training implementing a number of
components of athleticism.
The ability to maximize the outlined training
opportunities requires an understanding of the
physical and physiological response to the
specific training components, the ability to
teach movement mechanics, and the ability to
diagnose and understand the specific needs of
the individual goalkeeper. Typically, an
understanding of all of these components
requires an integration of the knowledge and
abilities of a goalkeeper coach and a fitness
trainer.
The goal of this series of newsletters is to
provide the goalkeeping coach with a better
understanding of the training opportunities
which are available to the goalkeeping coach,
and how best to implement and integrate training
of athleticism for the goalkeeper.
Hodson, A. (2001). "The F.A. Fitness Trainers
Award Fitness and Conditioning Update."
Insight: The F.A. Coaches Association Journal
4(4): 46-47.
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