Field Hockey training plans, built for your goal

Field hockey's stop-start, high-intensity intermittent running is a specific fitness demand that generic running plans don't replicate. SportBlox builds your field hockey training plan around your position, goal and where you are in the season — this covers field hockey specifically, not ice hockey.

Who it's for

Pre-season conditioning

Base aerobic and repeated-sprint fitness to arrive ready for a new season.

Sharper stick skills under pressure

First-touch and ball-control drills designed to hold up at match intensity.

In-season match fitness

Load-managed sessions that maintain conditioning between matches and training nights.

A week of field hockey training

Example: an attacking midfielder in-season with a Saturday fixture. Your own plan is built around your event, level and schedule.

Mon Stick skills — 3D elimination & first touchskill50 min
Tue Gym — lower-body strength & trunk stabilitystrength40 min
Wed Repeat sprints & change of directionspeed35 min
Thu Small-sided games — 3v3 press triggersconditioning45 min
Fri Prehab & penalty-corner rehearsalrecovery25 min
Sat Match dayendurance80 min
Sun Rest

How SportBlox personalises it

Your goal & event date

Sessions build toward the specific goal and date you set, with a taper if you're racing or competing.

Your skill level

Volume and intensity scale to where you actually are, from Inexperienced to Professional.

Your stated weaknesses

Tell SportBlox about things like “reverse-stick control”, “repeated high-speed running”, “aerial trapping” and the plan weights sessions toward fixing them.

Your schedule

The plan fits the days and time you say you have — not an idealised training week.

Coaching a field hockey team?

SportBlox builds your team's training plan around the squad as a whole — its goals, weaknesses and upcoming events — and you review and refine every session before your athletes see it.

For coaches

Field Hockey training plan FAQ

Is this for field hockey or ice hockey?

Field hockey. The running, agility and stick-skill demands are specific to the field game.

Will it work around my club's training sessions?

Yes — tell it your existing training nights and matches and it builds around them.

How long is a typical pre-season block?

Usually 4–6 weeks of progressive aerobic and repeated-sprint conditioning before match-speed work ramps up.

Is it suitable for goalkeepers?

The base plan targets outfield demands; note goalkeeper as a role detail and sessions shift toward reactive agility and explosive strength.

Is it beginner-friendly?

Yes, skill level scales both technical complexity and conditioning intensity.

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