When José Mourinho arrived at Chelsea in 2004, he startled a generation of English players by rolling footballs onto the training pitch from the first day of pre-season. As former captain John Terry later recalled, getting the balls out so early was unheard of for his generation; Mourinho’s logic was that a pianist does not run around the piano but works on it. Behind that unconventional approach was a coaching philosophy known as Tactical Periodisation.
The methodology was developed roughly 35 years ago by Vítor Frade, a sports science professor at the University of Porto, where he worked on the pitch under Sir Bobby Robson while pursuing his academic research. Frade is not a household name, but his influence within the game is enormous, and Mourinho was among the first world-renowned coaches to adopt his ideas publicly and prove their effectiveness — guiding FC Porto to two league titles, the UEFA Cup and the Champions League between 2002 and 2004.
At its core, Tactical Periodisation rejects the conventional view that the physical, technical, tactical and psychological dimensions of football should be trained in isolation and given equal priority. Instead, it treats the tactical dimension as the overarching one, with the other three operating within it.
Football is understood as a chaotic, complex game drawing on disciplines as varied as neuroscience, complexity theory and physiology, and the methodology insists that training must reflect that complexity rather than fragment it.
As explained on Spielverlagerung, the principle of specificity — what Frade calls the supra-principle — demands that every exercise relate directly to the team’s game model, the set of pre-determined behaviours that give the side its identity across the four moments of the game: attacking organisation, defensive transition, defensive organisation and attacking transition.
The word periodisation here does not refer to managing physical load, as in traditional fitness theory, but to the weekly organisation of tactical principles. This weekly plan is called the Morphocycle, structured around recovery and acquisition days where strength, endurance and speed are each emphasised in turn, always paired with the relevant tactical principles. Crucially, fitness is never separated from the ball.
This was precisely Mourinho’s conviction. Speaking at a 2005 coaching conference, he argued that he did not believe in sending players away for isolated fitness sessions or practising skills separately, insisting that all aspects had to be combined in match-realistic situations. Under his regime, the role of the fitness coach changed entirely; his long-time assistant Rui Faria was not a fitness coach in the traditional sense at all.
As Sky Sports reported, Frade’s fingerprints are all over the modern Premier League, with coaches such as Marco Silva, Nuno Espírito Santo, Brendan Rodgers and Carlos Carvalhal among his disciples. Carvalhal, who studied under Frade for years at Porto, cautions that the theory is widely misunderstood — many believe that simply training with the ball amounts to Tactical Periodisation, when in truth grasping it requires study of complexity theory itself.
For all its academic density, the practical promise is straightforward. Teams that train the game by playing the game spend less time on fragmented work and more on tactical sophistication, while players cover comparable distances — often more — but run with an idea. Mourinho was the figure who carried that conviction from the classrooms of Porto onto the pitches of England, and in doing so reshaped how the modern game prepares.