Soccer Conditioning: SmallSided Runs: Zone 2 + NEAT (2025)
Soccer Conditioning: Small-Sided Runs, Zone 2 + NEAT (2025)
Table of Contents
🧭 What This Plan Is & Why It Works
Goal: Build durable, match-long endurance for soccer by combining three pillars:
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Small-Sided Runs (SSR): Conditioner drills in tight grids or channels that mimic game patterns (accelerate, decelerate, change of direction) but are paced to stay mostly aerobic.
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Zone 2 Aerobic Work: Steady, conversational training (≈ RPE 2–3/10; ~65–75% HRmax; ~60–70% VO₂max) to enlarge mitochondrial capacity and recovery between sprints.
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NEAT: Non-exercise activity (walking, stairs, active commute) to raise weekly movement without extra stress.
Why it works for soccer
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Matches are repeat-sprint with long aerobic contribution. A robust aerobic base delays fatigue and restores sprint ability between efforts.
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Small-sided formats elevate touches and soccer-specific movement while letting you control intensity with pitch size, work:rest, players, and rules.
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NEAT adds low-strain minutes that support energy balance and tissue remodeling between hard days.
Intensity anchors
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Talk test: full sentences = Zone 2.
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HR: 65–75% HRmax (or top of LT1 if you know it).
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RPE: 2–3/10.
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If you drift above (breathing breaks sentences), slow the pace or increase grid size/rest.
✅ Quick Start (Do This Today)
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Baseline: Note your average daily steps for the last 7 days and a comfortable easy run/walk pace you can hold for 30–40 min.
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Pick 2 Zone-2 slots this week (e.g., Tue & Fri, 35–45 min each).
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Add 1 aerobic small-sided session (e.g., Sat). Keep HR under your Zone-2 cap.
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NEAT bump: Add +1,500–2,500 steps/day via walks (2 × 10–15 min), stairs, and short errands on foot.
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Track 3 metrics: minutes in Zone 2, session-RPE (0–10), and steps/day.
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Cap progression at 5–10%/week in total aerobic minutes.
🗓️ 7-Day Starter Week
| Day | Focus | What to Do | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | NEAT + Mobility | 2 × 12-min brisk walks + 10-min hips/ankles | Keep steps > baseline |
| Tue | Zone 2 | 40 min easy (run, jog-walk, or bike) | RPE 2–3; can talk |
| Wed | Technical + NEAT | 30–45 min ball work (light) + 2 × 10-min walks | Keep HR mostly low |
| Thu | Strength (light) | 30–40 min full-body (hinge, squat, push, pull) | Leave 2–3 reps in reserve |
| Fri | Zone 2 | 35–45 min easy | Finish feeling fresh |
| Sat | Small-Sided Runs (Aerobic) | 30–40 min in grids (see session library) | Strict aerobic cap |
| Sun | Recovery | 30–60 min easy walk or bike + stretch | Steps steady |
Target weekly steps: start at your baseline and add +10–20% (e.g., from 7,000 to 8,000–8,500).
📅 30-60-90 Conditioning Roadmap
Phase 1 (Days 1–30): Build the base
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2 × Zone-2 (35–45 min), 1 × aerobic SSR (30–40 min), NEAT +10–20%.
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Strength 1–2×/wk (submax).
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Progress total aerobic minutes ~5–10%/wk.
Phase 2 (Days 31–60): Extend & sprinkle thresholds
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One Zone-2 grows to 55–65 min.
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Add 10–12 min LT1–LT2 steady work inside one session (e.g., 3 × 4 min “upper Zone-2 but talk-test borderline”).
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SSR volume +10–15% via set count or slightly larger grids.
Phase 3 (Days 61–90): Soccer-specific durability
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1 long Z2 (60–75 min), 1 moderate Z2 (40–50), 1 SSR (40–50).
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Add 1 micro-dose of high speed/accel (6–10 × 20 m relaxed strides) after Z2 once per week to maintain top-end without fatigue.
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NEAT steady; deload every 4th week (-25–30% volume).
Checkpoint targets by Day 90
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Can hold Zone-2 pace 70+ min without breathing strain.
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SSR aerobic sets stay under HR cap while quality (first touch, movement timing) improves.
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Match day: late-game sprints drop <10% vs first half in GPS/RPE notes.
🧠 Key Techniques & Coaching Frameworks
Training-load control
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Session-RPE: minutes × RPE (0–10) to track internal load.
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Monotony: weekly mean load / SD; avoid >2.0 across weeks by varying session length.
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Progression rule: increase only one lever at a time—duration or density or grid size.
Intensity distribution (80/20 lens)
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Aim ~80% easy (Zone 2 + NEAT + light tech), ~20% harder (matches, speed, anaerobic drills). This keeps the engine growing while quality sprints remain sharp.
Grid design levers
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Bigger grid, more players, longer rest → easier (more aerobic).
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Smaller grid, fewer players, ball constraints → harder (more anaerobic). For this plan, bias easier settings.
Stop-light cueing
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Green: talk-test easy; keep going.
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Yellow: sentences break; lengthen grid or slow pace.
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Red: gasping; extend rest or switch to walk/jog.
🛠️ Session Library: Small-Sided Runs (Aerobic)
A. Channel shuttles with ball (2–3 players)
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Setup: 20 × 8 m lane per player, cones every 4 m.
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Set: 6 min continuous jog-touch-turn at conversation pace; 90 s walk. × 4–6 sets.
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Cues: soft touches, hips low on turns, HR under cap.
B. Big-box rondo runs (4–6 players)
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Setup: 30 × 20 m rectangle; 1 ball; 1 pressure defender jogging only.
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Work: 4 min keep-away at controlled tempo (max 2 touches), then 2 min walk. × 5–6.
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Constraint: defender must stay Zone-2; rotate roles each set.
C. Patterned overlap circuit
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Setup: 35 × 25 m; mannequins/cones as pass gates.
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Work: 3 min pattern (back-to-goal set, layoff, overlap, cross) at aerobic tempo; 2 min walk. × 6–8.
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Emphasis: timing, scanning, first-time passes.
D. 3-zone progression run
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Setup: Three adjacent 20 × 12 m zones.
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Work: 8 min continuous loop (carry in zone 1, wall pass in zone 2, diagonal run in zone 3). HR steady. Rest 2 min. × 3–4.
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Tip: if HR creeps up, widen zones by 3–5 m.
E. Aerobic “rondo + recovery walk” (6–8 players)
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Setup: 25 × 25 m; 1–2 balls.
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Work: 2 min gentle rondo → 1 min perimeter walk. × 12–15 min blocks (2–3 blocks).
Keep ball speed > player speed. If players sprint to keep possession, the session is too hard for the day’s intent.
👥 Audience Tweaks
Academy (U13–U18):
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Keep total Zone-2 minutes modest (25–40) and emphasize technique quality.
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Use body-weight strength; avoid chasing HR numbers obsessively.
Amateurs (2–4×/wk training):
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Choose run/walk Zone-2 if deconditioned; bike or pool if joints ache.
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One SSR + one Zone-2 is enough on busy weeks; prioritize sleep and NEAT.
Pros & High-Level Amateurs:
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Integrate Zone-2 on tactical or gym days to spread load.
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Use long Z2 (60–75) in base phase; shorten in congested fixtures.
Masters (35+):
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Add extra rest day after long Z2.
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Favor bike/elliptical Z2 if tendon history; do short sprint strides only after a full warm-up.
⚠️ Mistakes & Myths to Avoid
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Myth: “Small-sided equals HIIT only.”
Reality: With larger grids, more players, and longer rests, SSG/SSR can be predominantly aerobic. -
Mistake: Chasing calories with extra hard sessions instead of NEAT and nutrition.
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Mistake: Letting “easy” become moderate. If you can’t talk, it’s not Zone 2.
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Myth: “Zone 2 makes you slow.” A big aerobic base protects high-speed repeatability.
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Mistake: Adding duration and density and speed in one week—pick one lever.
🗣️ Real-Life Scripts & Examples
Player to coach (after HR drift):
“My HR’s crossing the cap in set 4. Can we widen the grid or add 30 s rest so I stay aerobic?”
Coach to team (pre-session):
“Green day: if you can’t talk, you’re going too hard. Ball speed up, feet relaxed. We’re building engines, not chasing gasps.”
Busy amateur plan (3 days):
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Tue: 40 min Zone-2 jog-walk.
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Thu: 30 min SSR block (A + D).
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Sat: Match or scrimmage.
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NEAT: 8–10k steps daily.
🧰 Tools, Apps & Resources
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HR & GPS watches: Any basic HR monitor suffices; wrist optical is OK, chest strap is better for accuracy.
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Apps: Polar Flow, Garmin, Coros, Strava, TrainingPeaks (track time in zone and session-RPE notes).
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Field kit: Cones, 1–2 balls per group, simple grids.
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Strength add-ons: Mini-bands, kettlebell, or dumbbells for short maintenance circuits (2×/wk, 20–30 min).
Pros/Cons (quick):
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HR monitors: +objective; –can lag on sprints.
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GPS: +distance/speed; –urban canyons can skew data; not essential for Zone 2.
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Step counters: +NEAT awareness; –don’t replace training.
📌 Key Takeaways
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Build the engine first: 2 Zone-2 sessions + 1 aerobic small-sided session weekly.
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Use levers (grid size, players, rest) to keep SSG/SSR aerobic.
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NEAT is free endurance—walk more, move more.
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Progress slowly (5–10%/wk), deload every 4th week.
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Track minutes in Zone-2, session-RPE, and steps; adjust before you’re cooked.
❓ FAQs
1) What HR is Zone 2 for most players?
Typically 65–75% of HRmax (or just under your first lactate threshold). Use the talk test: full sentences = right zone.
2) Can I replace Zone-2 runs with cycling or swimming?
Yes. Any modality that keeps you in Zone-2 works—great for joint-friendly volume.
3) How do I keep small-sided drills from turning into HIIT?
Use bigger grids, more players, touch limits, and longer rests. Watch the talk test and HR.
4) What’s a good weekly step goal for NEAT?
If you average 6–7k, aim for +1–2k steps/day, building to 8–10k. It’s about consistent movement.
5) Will Zone-2 make me slower?
No—paired with a little speed/accel work and matches, Zone-2 improves repeat-sprint recovery and late-game performance.
6) How soon should I expect results?
Most feel steadier by 4–6 weeks; clearer match-fitness gains often show by 8–12 weeks.
7) How do I deload without losing fitness?
Every 4th week, cut aerobic volume by 25–30% and keep NEAT high; resume progression the next week.
8) I don’t have HR tech—can I still do this?
Yes—RPE 2–3/10 and talk test are enough. Keep breathing easy and nose-dominant most of the time.
9) Where do strength sessions fit?
1–2 ×/wk, 20–40 min. Keep a rep in reserve; avoid maxing out during high-volume weeks.
10) What if my schedule is packed?
Protect two 35–45 min Zone-2 slots and slot SSR on the weekend. Use walk calls, stairs, and short errands for NEAT.
📚 References
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Seiler, S. “What is best practice for training intensity and duration distribution in endurance athletes?” Int J Sports Physiol Perform. 2010; & 2018 updates. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30010241/
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Hill-Haas, S. et al. “Physiological responses and time-motion characteristics of small-sided games in soccer.” Sports Med. 2011. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21425886/
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Impellizzeri, F. et al. “Physiological and performance effects of generic vs. specific (small-sided) training in soccer.” Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2006. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16672835/
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Owen, A. et al. “Small-sided games: the physiological and technical effect of altering pitch size and player numbers.” J Strength Cond Res. 2011. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21494238/
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Barnes, C. et al. “The evolution of physical and technical performance in the English Premier League.” Int J Sports Med. 2014. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24332183/
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Foster, C. et al. “A new approach to monitoring exercise training.” J Strength Cond Res. 2001. (Session-RPE method.) https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11726298/
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Osgnach, C. et al. “Energy cost and metabolic power in elite soccer.” Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2010. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20195188/
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WHO. “Guidelines on Physical Activity and Sedentary Behaviour.” 2020. https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240015128
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Levine, J. “Non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT).” Proc Nutr Soc. 2003; and related work 2005. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14692602/
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FIFA 11+ Injury Prevention Program (aerobic warm-up framework). https://www.fifa.com/what-we-do/medical/fifa11-plus
⚖️ Disclaimer
This article provides general fitness education for soccer and is not a substitute for personalized medical advice; consult a qualified professional if you have injuries or health conditions.
