I want to preface this by saying that none of this information has been tested, other than me using it in my save and seeing it work. My players are developing well and average training rating is above 8.00 most of the times. These schedules have been built and adapted over 12 in game seasons. Couple seasons ago my team went through the biggest injury crisis ever so I decreased the intensity a bit. Anyways, here is how I set up the training in my West Ham United save, where I just won a treble.

I have built 9 different custom training schedules that I use throughout the season. Some schedules are used more than others, for example, most of the time I use Attacking versions because I expect my team to dominate.


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This schedule is used for the first 2 weeks of the preseason, where I put emphasis on heavy conditioning. First two friendly opponents are usually mid-table European teams, challenging enough, but not too strong. Pre-season training is also done with this intensity set up:

Next schedules are attacking minded, usually used in weeks when we are playing opponents I expect us to win against, which lately is pretty much everyone, but it was not like that only 5 years ago when I took over and saved the Hammers from relegation while winning the FA Cup.

Not many training sessions being done when playing 2 matches a week, and again some adjustment are needed depending what days of the week the games are on. Extra recovery session was added to Thursday to help with injuries, and it worked, otherwise I would put any of the Tactical section slots.

In the games where I expect to be on the back foot (playing away against top opponent) or simply am playing against opposition who is objectively more talented, this is the training schedule I will use. It's heavily concentrating on defending while also leaving some options with direct attacking .

I've found that this setup helps me increase team tactic familiarity pretty quickly, since players have a lot of match day preparation training. Also, a recovery day with a Match Review Session after games is a must in my opinion. Anecdotal evidence suggests that Match Review helps tremendously in building team cohesion and tactical familiarity. I usually praise all the players that have above 8.0 training rating, every two weeks. I found that if you do it too often, players tend to not appreciate it as much. Sometimes I skip a couple of weeks if morale is perfect and there is no need for that. But it is a great way to build relationships with your players, and in result they will respect and listen to you more.

I would love to hear your opinion. What do you think? What do you do different? What is the reasoning? Of course, these schedules are not set in stone, they are more of a template. I change some sessions on per need basis.

A total of nine training schedules created by Marsara at FM Korea. I translated it for FM-Base and also thought I'd share it here to help people to. Also been using this on my Twitch save with Colchester.


If you have a longer pre-season, then repeat one/two/three and finish up with four and five.


Matches:

Generally if you only play league games and are knocked out of the cups you'll only play one match during the week however if you are in cup competitions still then you'll likely be facing two matches a week on the occasion.


If there are no matches during the week then it's quite hard training:

Almost every player performing well in training and I've seen some excellent improvements in player skills too.

Less than half a season since implementing this so will need to assess further down the line but it's far better than other training schedules I have tried.

Is there something similar for lower league teams? I'm not really sure how to go about balancing happiness, enough training and also match preparation, with so few training sessions. I also don't just want to leave it to the assistant and would like to get as much out of it as possible.

Don't do it on the calendar section, do it on the schedules one.

Schedules > Select Schedule > Custom Schedules

They should all be in there. If not, make sure you named the folder you saved it in as 'schedules' and not 'schedule' or 'scheduled'.

I've tried this schedule for a season and a half, I'm getting a lot of complaint from the players telling they want more quickness training, so I had a look and neither the no matches nor the 1 match program have nothing focused on the physical stats

Thats a pretty big oversight. I tried this training too but needed to really heavily change it. It provides a good base though for those looking to develop their own from scratch and has some great ideas. Just needed to know what you are doing to change a few things otherwise it will probably do more harm than good

You can say that again. Almost seems like the players just want to complain for the sake of complaining at times. The Assistant Manager can be just as bad at times too, complaining about individual training focuses that he reckons aren't going to do anything yet lo and behold guess who has achieved statistically significant improvement in their focused attributes a month later.

And you don't need to heavily change this training setup at all. For the one-match weeks, change (not every one but alternating ones) from Tactical to Physical on a Wednesday afternoon. A lot of the Tactical stuff is also in Attacking Shadow Play the following morning anyway.

As an aside, regarding the structuring of the pre-season training program sessions shown in the screenshots in the opening post. What with this being a video game I'm going to presume that structuring an Endurance session before a Resistance session doesn't actually have any negative impacts on athlete development. Because in a real-world context the current literature and research would very much suggest that those two session types be sequenced the other way around for optimal benefit in regards to strength gains.

A robust technical skill-set is almost mandatory to play in such a style. I want forwards and midfielders who are not hesitant to take on an opponent in a one-on-one, I want defenders who are comfortable on the ball and dare to play out from the back. What I wanted to try was to create a Coerver-inspired training regime for my U18 (and possible reserve) squad.

One of the critical features of this program is control over the ball. Coerver believed that incredible skill was not simply innate, but training could teach you these skills. Coerver thought that players who dominated in one-on-one situations could give their team a vital edge over their opponents. With the pace of the modern game increasing and space on the pitch becoming an ever-scarcer commodity, an improved technique on the ball could give players an extra edge.

The transition schedule has been modelled to help the players improve the skills they would need when transitioning from offence to defence and vice versa. A lot of these skills are also prevalent during the attacking and defensive schedules, but I want to train them separately as well, in combination with a bit of tactical training for context.

The defensive schedule has been modelled to help the players improve the skills they would need when they are trying to hold off an opponent. The secondary focus during this week is also training the attacking skills. Players cannot train on defence without having at least some team-members perform attacking duties at the same time.

The possession schedule has been modelled to help the players improve the skills they would need when they want to dominate possession. The secondary focus during this week is also training the attacking skills. The objective is to keep hold of the ball, which means taking on opponents every now and then, especially when cornered, is essential.

As you all know, during training sessions, the team is split up into training units. These are Goalkeeping, Defensive and Attacking. By default players are placed into the most suitable unit for them; strikers into Attacking, centre backs into Defensive, etc. The unit a player is in defines what part he takes in each training session.

What I like about these training units is that there are also secondary and even tertiary focusses during most exercises. For instance, during a primarily offensive training exercise, there is often a secondary focus on the defensive unit, who act as the opposition. At times, the goalkeepers get involved as a tertiary focus as well.

I really enjoyed your posting here as it was a great explanation to what i was doing already without actually knowing why ?

I have one question though: I notice that in your schedules there is a complete lack of goalkeeping units which has been a problem with my own schedules as well. How do you solve that or do you ignore your young keepers development?

Revisiting older training articles to get a better understanding of how training works. How often do you set these schedules in the training calendar? Would a month be focused on a specific topic (July is just allocated to attacking, August is defending) or do you rotate through on a weekly basis? Just wondering if players only see attacking every month if this impacts their progress.

Hey Guido, could you expand on this? Are you alternating type of schedules on a weekly basis, but reviewing every three months or are you having three months of attack, then defence, then technical? (for example) 006ab0faaa

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