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Access all areas for a Premier League club’s pre-season tour in the U.S.

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In the scorching heat of Inter Miami’s training base in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the final moments of Wolverhampton Wanderers’ morning training session are playing out.

“We are 1-0 up at the Emirates, two minutes to go, keep going,” urges the Wolves head coach Gary O’Neil. Wolves begin their Premier League season away at Arsenal’s Emirates Stadium on August 17 and, even here, some three weeks before the match, O’Neil is focusing minds.

The final drill is an energy-sapping exercise in which O’Neil divides his group into four teams of four outfield players, with two goalkeepers remaining in their goals for the entire session. Each team of four have three-minute cycles, in which they compete in a 30-by-20-metre area. One team, therefore, stays on for the entire three minutes and the other three teams come on fresh for a minute each. O’Neil calls it his “mentality” test.

“It is when you’re up against it, trying to behave as a team,” he explains. “You learn about individuals and how they respond under different stresses. We also want to include our principles, trying to protect the middle, trying to find a spare man and trying to build up. That is the aim, no matter what we do.

“This drill, it shows up your personal traits, it always gets you. You see exactly what people are.”

Toti Gomes, the Wolves defender, is a standout. “If you’re doing that drill, you want Toti in your team. He doesn’t suffer badly from disappointment. If a goal goes against his team, he picks himself up. When he gets tired, he’s not bothered. He knows he’s there to work. In this drill, you can be 5-0 down because another team keeps coming on fresh. He’s stable emotionally.

“We have got some emotional ones in the group that struggle with conceding a goal and getting ready to go again. So it’s a good drill for us.”


The winning team of that 4×4 drill, Chiquinho, Jorgen Strand Larsen, Hugo Bueno and Pablo Sarabia (Jack Thomas – WWFC/Wolves via Getty Images)

As for the Emirates reference? “It’s to show them that we’re not doing this for now. It’s for when we get somewhere and it matters, so we hang in and we survive. I am trying to give them little pictures on why we do stuff and why it’s important not to drop your level for the last minute. It’s for when we really need it.”

This is just one insight during a three-day period in which the Premier League side opened their doors to The Athletic and provided unrestricted access to their first visit to the United States in 43 years.

Before fixtures against Premier League rivals West Ham United and Crystal Palace, as well as German side RB Leipzig, Wolves based themselves at the Florida Blue training centre, preparing for the season just a couple of pitches down from the MLS team part-owned by David Beckham and starring Lionel Messi. O’Neil impressed during his first season in charge, leading Wolves to doubles over Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea, while also beating Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City. Saturday evening’s 3-0 win over Leipzig was capped by a glorious team goal, which swiftly had social media salivating on Sunday morning.

During our time together, no area was out of bounds. The Athletic watched training sessions, spoke to O’Neil, the team’s players, the team’s performance and sport science specialists, the club kitman, the head chef, the nutritionist, as well as the head of operations responsible for bringing the entire visit together.

Along the way, we joined the Wolves players on a river taxi across Fort Lauderdale and then flew with the team on a chartered flight to Jacksonville — a flight delayed to make way for Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s exit from Florida. The result, hopefully, is a report that tells you everything you may have ever quietly wondered about what really goes on during pre-season.


Two weeks to ‘deload’ and heart-rate monitors at home: What happens between the end of the season and pre-season? 

Matt Doherty, the Wolves full-back, is on the top deck of a boat traversing Fort Lauderdale when he reflects on some of his more brutal pre-season experiences. He is now in his second spell at the club, having spent a decade at Wolves and then periods with Tottenham and Atletico Madrid, before returning to Wolves in 2023. He recalls his earlier summers at Wolves under Kenny Jackett, when the team were in League One in 2013. He laughs: “We were doing 7am runs before we even had breakfast. And I was overweight at the time. So I didn’t enjoy that.

“Times are changing — it’s not just old-school running now where you just absolutely blast it all the time. People’s bodies can’t take it now. Some people train for five days in a row, and then all of a sudden they need a day or two off. That’s not how it used to be.”


Wolves full-back Matt Doherty (Jack Thomas – WWFC/Wolves via Getty Images)

More traditional approaches do remain, as Doherty discovered while on pre-season under Antonio Conte at Tottenham. “We were throwing up out of both ends by the time we had finished. That was the hardest pre-season I did. Ever. That was crazy. But we hung off every word that he said and rightly so. I can’t speak highly enough of him.”

The big change, Doherty says, is the way players now look after themselves between the end of a previous campaign and the start of pre-season. “I used to be a disaster every summer. I didn’t know what I was doing. I’d still exercise but I’m an eater. I was just eating houses down wherever I went. You have to maintain yourself or you will be left behind. People may say, ‘Isn’t this what pre-season is for? To get fit?’. To a point, yes, but you can’t come back in disgrace, as I have done in the past.”

At the end of last season, Wolves gave their players a two-week window to “deload”, according to Phil Hayward, the club’s head of high performance. “A fortnight where they don’t have to worry about doing anything at all.

“The mentality of the players is very different to when I started in 2008. It was a real battle to get guys to do anything in the off-season, they came back a stone overweight, they had been away on lads’ holidays. You’d spend the first bit of pre-season trying to get weight off them and back somewhere near to where they needed to be for the season.

“Now it’s gone the opposite way. It is partly driven by social media. Now the battle tends to be trying to make sure they get rest and don’t do too much. A lot of guys want to do extra stuff in their own time. Some have people they work with in their own countries, which brings challenges in terms of communication and lots of other issues around liability insurance. If we are letting them see somebody, how do we coordinate that? That’s become a big part of my job in the last few years, liaising with people in the players’ circle.”

When Wolves players go away for the summer, some have a clear period to relax, while others go to the European Championship and Copa America. The players are given GPS devices and heart rate monitoring belts to take home, and Hayward says it enables the club to keep an eye on a player’s “internal loads” as they ease themselves back into shape before pre-season.


Joao Gomes in action for Brazil at the Copa America (Maciek Gudrymowicz/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

“It means we get real-time information about what they’re actually doing and make sure they’re following a plan,” he says. “We want them to get back to individualised baselines. The off-season training program is to make sure they come back in a decent state, to be able to then drop into our main programme with the squad.”

How much damage can a player really do in that period before pre-season? “From an aerobic perspective, you’ll start to decondition after a couple of weeks. Even if a player is out for a week with a minor injury, there is a drop-off from a cardiovascular fitness perspective, physiologically. It’s almost impossible to say exactly how much fitness they have lost between seasons. But once they get back into the training programme, we look at heart rate data and their physical output. It is to see how they’re responding to a given session compared to how they responded to a very similar session before the end of last season. There is definitely a percentage drop-off.”


First-day nerves, blood tests and daily questionnaires: The start of pre-season

Day one back at the training ground is testing day. Doherty says it is a day he cannot wait to be over. “There are nerves. It is not like, ‘Oh my God’, but you just want to know the results and hopefully be in the middle, the same as everybody else and kind of hide away’.”

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Hayward explains that testing involves medical assessments with the club doctor, blood tests and ultrasound scans. For outfield players, there is an emphasis on testing the main tendons, especially in the lower limbs, while for goalkeepers, shoulder assessments are key.

He says: “If they have an issue in the season, we then refer back to those images and compare it back to when we know everything was fine. The blood tests are looking for micronutrients. We work closely with the nutritionist to decide which particular panel of blood tests we want to do. That is individualised to different players as well, according to what we know of their history, biochemistry, and their normal deficits. It helps us know if someone’s always low on vitamin D, for example, and if we can support that with supplements.

“We are also looking for general health markers. That’s how we first found out about Carl Ikeme’s problem a few years ago (the former Wolves goalkeeper was diagnosed with leukaemia after posting abnormal pre-season blood test results). We have a general medical consultation with them: how have they been over the summer, any new issues, any illnesses you’ve not told us about? Mental health comes into that as well. Has anything gone on at home?”

One striking aspect is the extent of joined-up thinking between the club’s sports science practitioners and the coaching staff. This is O’Neil’s first full pre-season as a head coach — he took over Wolves five days before the start of the Premier League last season and had been named Bournemouth manager after the season started in the previous campaign. Wolves’ head of physical performance, Mark Piros-Read, has led multiple pre-seasons at Swedish side Malmo.

Hayward says: “Gary is a very collaborative boss. There are conversations between the coaching staff and Mark about what Gary wants to get from the sessions and what Mark needs to get from a physical perspective, so we try to find ways to get that physical conditioning into the players with the football. They gel really well in terms of planning the sessions to make sure that they both get what they require. It is more heavily focused physically at the early part of pre-season, with Mark having more input and then towards the start of the season, it becomes much more focused on football and culture.”


Phil Hayward, head of high performance, and Mark Piros-Read, head of physical performance (Jack Thomas – WWFC/Wolves via Getty Images)

Within sessions, O’Neil takes guidance from the sport science team. The players fill in daily questionnaires on their mobile phones, answering subjective queries about how they are feeling, how they slept, whether they have any fresh soreness or fatigue and how they feel in their stomachs. Some players wear Oura Rings, or Apple Watches, and proactively report their length and quality of sleep. The club do not insist on this, however, taking the view that it may be deemed invasive. Hayward says: “It’s difficult because you get paid a lot of money to be an athlete so that’s part of what you sign up to. But it maybe undermines the amount of trust you have from the players as well, if you insist.”

Any issue a player raises will be tested objectively and analysed by the medical and physio team.

Hayward says: “Gary is very receptive to that information. We’ve got players today who won’t do the whole session. They’ll be managed through the last part of the session because we compare this current week with their last four weeks. If there’s a huge spike, there’s a big increase in injury risk. That’s based on a lot of research. We call that acute chronic workload ratio.”

Wolves spent the first part of their pre-season in the Spanish resort of Marbella. The main event, however, will be in the United States.


Three types of pillow, WhatsApp location pins on nights out and Uno Flip: How does a club organise pre-season in the U.S.?

When Wolves’ commercial department secured the club’s participation in the Stateside Cup during the Spring, Matt Wild, the club’s general manager of football operations, sprang into action. Wolves’ overall touring party, including players, football staff, operations, commercial and media, stretched to 85 people over a 12-day visit that encompassed a game against West Ham in Jacksonville, Crystal Palace in Annapolis and Leipzig in Fort Lauderdale. For the logistics, the club handle, well, everything.

“The players just need to bring themselves and a wash bag,” jokes Sam Perrin, the head of kit at Wolves. “And sometimes they don’t even want to bring the wash bag.”

In the club’s view, this is not mollycoddling, but simply doing everything possible to ensure a player can perform at their best at the highest level. For travel to the U.S., visas are a necessity and the club take care of the administration.

Most of the club’s South American players already had U.S. travel visas, but 18-year-old Pedro Lima, signed on July 1, did not, so he was dispatched to the American embassy in London to turn around a fast-track application. The club needed to keep within budget for the tour — Wild estimates the cost to be £1,050,000 ($1,344,000) in total. The club flew on scheduled commercial flights from London to Miami, rather than private transatlantic chartered planes, which represented a significant saving. “We’re getting participation fees for being here, but we need to make sure the profit and loss works out.”

They flew in two groups because each group required a certain number of business, premium and economy flights, with the players in business class. When the club flew chartered from Fort Lauderdale’s private terminal to Jacksonville, the bus drove the travelling party directly from the hotel to the plane, avoiding the masses within the airport. An unexpected delay, however, came when Prime Minister Netanyahu, fresh from a visit to see Donald Trump in Mar-a-Lago, was travelling out of the same terminal, meaning an hour’s delay on the tarmac as Israel’s equivalent of Air Force One, and all the security detail this encompasses, was given priority.

A big decision was where to base Wolves during the tour. They considered an IMG training base in Tampa and another location by Ponte Vedra Beach in Jacksonville. Yet when an exhibition game against Leipzig at Inter Miami’s Chase Stadium came up — making Wolves the first English team to play at the stadium — they decided to locate themselves at Inter Miami’s training complex. “We knew the players would like it,” Wild says. “You have the beach nearby and it is where Lionel Messi trains.”


Wolves based themselves at Inter Miami’s Florida Blue training centre (Jack Thomas – WWFC/Wolves via Getty Images)

Wolves stayed in the W hotel in Fort Lauderdale. The hotel needed to fit specific requirements. Wild says: “We wanted exclusivity on several floors for our players, so they’re not sharing. But then you need to make sure that you’ve got good-sized rooms on each floor. We always make sure that we’ve got a good pillow. We’ve got three different types of pillows; some are hard, some are soft.

“We needed a good function space, a physio room, a dining room, a meeting room, a kit room. I needed somewhere for the coaching staff to work. We agreed that Inter Miami would do our laundry for us and they helped us source all our sports drinks and water.”

 

As Wild explains the intricate detail that goes into the tour, it can feel a little bit as though footballers are on a school trip. A WhatsApp group is made, where they are sent the schedule every night for the day ahead. It is explained to them what to say to airport security when they are entering the U.S.

Recreational activities are planned, such as the river taxi on the day The Athletic joins the team, and a visit to the Everglades several days later. Players are not provided with a per diem allocation which can be expensed, given that their travel and food are already included. Zlatan Ibrahimovic famously once complained that Manchester United had deducted the price of a fruit juice from a hotel minibar from his payslip.


The river taxi in Fort Lauderdale (Jack Thomas – WWFC/Wolves via Getty Images)

The club brings four members of its security team to the U.S., including Steve Sutton, the club’s director of safety and security. On the day we are talking, the players are afforded a night out, heading down to Miami. O’Neil tries to balance hard preparation — Doherty says the players have “worked their socks off” — and some escape. They are given a curfew of 11pm.

Wild says: “If our players go out, they have to pin their location so that we know where they are. It’s more for their safety. Our security team are really good at making sure everyone is accounted for. It’s just subtly staying in control.”

go-deeper

Every player meets the curfew. During the trip, the dynamics of the group are revealing. At the end of O’Neil’s mentality test, he asks every player to shake hands with one another, recognising that tensions can heighten during training, but reminds his players they are all on the same team. There are times the group can break into natural cliques; the British and Irish contingent sit together on the boat trip, as do the Spanish-speaking group. But it is also encouraging to see Wolves captain Mario Lemina in deep conversation with Luke Cundle, a returning loanee, while later on after dinner, 16-year-old Luke Rawlings, who only got his first pay packet the previous month, is receiving advice from the club’s £44million record signing Matheus Cunha.


(Jack Thomas – WWFC/Wolves via Getty Images)

Wild had planned ahead by organising a games room, ordering in a giant Connect 4, a Pac-Man console, a Marvel arcade game and a Cornhole set. As it transpires, the player’s game of choice during the tour appears to be the even more modest Uno Flip.

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The planning is not only operational. Performance expert Hayward says his team prepared the players to be ready to work in a new time zone, five hours behind the UK.

“We flew over on Tuesday. But we had a double session on Monday in England. We have these light glasses,” he explains. “What we’re trying to do there is create a stimulus from a light perspective, to give the perception of it being similar to the midday sun. So we got them to wear the light glasses on Monday evening after training, to almost try and trick the brain and ready them for a new time zone.

“When we arrived in the U.S., we made sure the guys all stayed up until 10.30pm and then advised them to stay in bed until at least 7am the next morning. The doctor also provided melatonin tablets for them in the evening to help them with getting to sleep more quickly and have a deeper sleep, therefore avoiding what normally happens when you travel west and wake up in the middle of the night.”

As for the searing heat and sweat-inducing humidity? He says: “Some argue it doesn’t make sense to be here because it’s so different from the climate back in the UK. You are used to training in 30 per cent humidity and 20C (68F) heat and that’s where your matches are going to be played. So why would you come to 90 per cent humidity and 35C? But there are a lot of physical and physiological benefits from training in heat, similar to the effect you get from altitude training. Heat creates a greater physical challenge for the players.

“You can get more bang for the buck from an internal load perspective without having the same external load in actual physical load through the joints. We want that overload. That’s intentional. We don’t want to spend a lot of time working on ways to cool them down, because you want to challenge them more physiologically to try and get that response.”


(Jack Thomas – WWFC/Wolves via Getty Images)

Every precaution is taken, however, and Hayward’s previous life at the Los Angeles Galaxy gives him personal experience.

“There’s a quite extensive protocol about heat exhaustion and heat stress, and monitoring for that and how to respond if that happens. If we see symptoms of heat stress, we’ll follow protocol to cool them down in pretty large ice baths. We’ll measure the temperature to make sure they’re never at risk. We’ve got real-time heart rate. If someone’s heart rate is staying very high and they’re not recovering as well from a phase of the session as we’d expect them, that would probably be the first flag we’d see. We’ve got it on a tablet at the side of the pitch.

“We can also see from observing, if someone starts to behave slightly differently. When there’s a change in the drill, the doctor will get around the players and have a chat to make sure everyone’s OK.”


Two tonnes of kit, five types of boots – and being in charge of underwear: How do clubs clothe their players on tour? 

For Perrin, the head of kit, this is his first transatlantic pre-season tour in his fifth season at the club. He says he liaised with his Chelsea counterpart while planning the tour, to hear things that work and don’t work.

If you constantly panic about having your phone, wallet and keys in your pocket, then the level of detail and pressure for Perrin sounds pretty overwhelming. “My wife calls it glorified babysitting,” Perrin jokes, but making sure the players are equipped is essential. Preparations are made weeks in advance. Wolves cargoed out two tonnes of kit and equipment ahead of arriving, as well as taking ten bags on each flight.

“One thing my old boss told me is, ‘Don’t give them an excuse to blame you’,” Perrin says. “Don’t let them be able to say, ‘The kit team didn’t do this, so that’s why I didn’t score’. You also want trust from the management team and respect from the players. If the players respect you, they don’t chuck stuff on the floor and expect you to pick it up.

“There’s so many different things that happen that you don’t think about as fans. An example: the electric voltage is completely different here. We had our heat press (to print numbers on shirts) shipped out just for any last-minute changes. Then the day we were travelling, the squad changed. So we set the printer up but it didn’t work because of the voltage. So I’m now panicking, how the hell am I going to print these shirts? In the end, we managed to borrow one from Inter Miami. It was almost a nightmare for me.”


More on the world of football boots and kits…


The club are responsible for organising every piece of sporting equipment that a player may require, down to the underwear that a player chooses to wear in training or during a game. In case you are wondering, most footballers wear Sloggi Y-fronts, a Swiss brand. “Black for staff, navy for players,” Perrin adds. “We supply them, wash them, refold them and put them back into kit rolls.”

A few players — Tommy Doyle, Pedro Lima, Rodrigo Gomes and Pedro Neto — however, choose a different brand, so they provide six pairs to the club, meaning the club will always have two available for the player for a matchday and up to four at the training ground.


Neto is one of those who provides his own underwear (Jack Thomas – WWFC/Wolves via Getty Images)

In a Premier League game, it is a requirement for every player’s shorts to be numbered. Yet for pre-season friendlies, this is not the case, so the club transport over a set number of non-numbered shorts. For the three games in the U.S., Perrin has brought over six matchday shirts for each player, as most Wolves players change into a fresh jersey at half-time. Craig Dawson, he notes, is the only one who will keep the same shirt for the second half. “He’ll take his socks off or down and he’ll redo his pads every time and resets himself in that way.”

The club also bring the player’s boots. In most cases, it is three each, meaning the players are equipped whether they need metal studs or moulds, and have a spare pair. “We’ve ended up bringing four boot bags. Unless you’re Matt Doherty, he’s bought five. Matt is one of the greatest kids. He has to feel right. If he fancies that pair of boots today, he’ll want to wear that boot. I’d rather just bring all five and then he can choose.”

Boots are cleaned by staff, a job made easier by superior modern pitches, usually requiring only a quick brush or rinse. “And then we dry them with a towel and hang them back up in the boot room, which is heated. We have two boot steamers and a boot oven outside. The oven softens the boots but keeps them dry. A steamer softens the boot a little bit more but wet. So in the winter months, you tend to use the oven more than the steamer because by the time you get outside, your feet are freezing cold.”


One hundred eggs at breakfast, 5am starts in the kitchen and performance-orientated dessert: How do clubs feed their players on tour? 

As players exhaust their reserves during pre-season, refuelling becomes an essential component.

Wolves’ head chef, Melissa Forde, travels with the team for the trip, in addition to multiple members of her team. She works closely with Matt North, the club’s nutritionist, to devise menus catering for every scenario a player will face in pre-season. Forde speaks with The Athletic in Jacksonville, where she flew out before the team for the West Ham fixture, to make sure the evening meal service was in hand. It meant a 4.30am wake-up in Fort Lauderdale and by the time dinner is wrapped up, it is now 9.30pm. “I nearly fell asleep in my dinner last night,” she says.

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Forde’s work is a passion project. Her background is as an executive chef at Birmingham’s Hippodrome theatre, having previously worked as a sous-chef at Marriott hotels. As far as she knows, she is the only female head chef at a Premier League club. She points to transferable skills from her previous roles; kitchen management, multitasking, catering en-masse for high volume or in banquet style, and also being able to walk into a hotel several times a month and understand the kitchen layout and operations. She sent the hotels her menu plans before the team flew out to the U.S., ensuring they sourced local produce for the team.

She then manages a team of her own staff and hotel staff to produce a spread befitting a Premier League club. For breakfast, her team will be up at 5am to prepare for the day, using more than 100 eggs at breakfast alone. There is no shortage of choice. When The Athletic joins Wolves for lunch, there is a vast salad bar, steamed and roasted vegetables, a vegetarian chickpea curry, barbecued chicken and a live cooking station preparing fajitas. Dessert offerings are Greek yoghurt and honey, or a fruit selection.


Melissa Forde, Wolves’ head chef (Jack Thomas – WWFC/Wolves via Getty Images)

She says: “I have a lot of freedom. If a chef’s creativity is silenced, it’s almost like you kill the chef within them.” At the training ground back in England, her “jerk chicken Wednesdays” have become a firm favourite, as have her themed days to mark moments in the calendar such as Black History Month. She has won over the Wolves playing squad by creating dishes familiar to their Portuguese background. In the case of Yerson Mosquera, the Colombian defender, he experienced homesickness when he moved to the club and she went out of her way to find ingredients from his own country to lift his spirits.

The menu itself is prepared in close collaboration with North, as well as the team’s sport science department who know what every training session will include, and the type of refuelling that will be required. North is in the dining room, subtly advising players on the type of food they need to take in. It takes time to develop trust after a player signs. Players are weighed daily, while their body fat is also measured using callipers at eight skin-folds on a monthly or fortnightly basis, depending on the player.

He says: “Nutrition can be quite judgmental. So if you’re coming into that environment and the first thing I’m doing is sitting down analysing your diet — then if you’ve got a predisposition to a negative behaviour towards food or not understanding them — it might not come across well. When they first sign, it is just about building relationships, small interactions, trying to give them tips rather than saying you’re doing something wrong.

“From a nutritional standpoint, when they sign for the club, they’ll get their bloods taken. Off the back of that, we’ll analyse what they need to increase or change within the diet, whether that’s supplements or actual food. The key ones are, calcium, vitamins B, C, D and K, and iron.”


Summer signing Pedro Lima (Jack Thomas – WWFC/Wolves via Getty Images)

The extent to which the body absorbs micronutrients differs from person to person, so sometimes two people could eat the same thing but absorb it differently. That is part of the reason supplements provide a crucial function.

One challenge can be to get players to eat enough food. North explains: “On an average training day, they’ll be burning upwards of 3,000 calories. On a heavy training day, they might do more much more, so we need them to have a big carbohydrate intake.

“The day before the game is when we’re trying to load the stores. So we’ll change the menu design to have more carbohydrates on board and the protein portions will be lower and the menu will be really low fat. The chefs have really clever strategies where they integrate more carbohydrates into dishes. We’ll use juices. We look at the satiation of foods. Potatoes are really satiating. So you can’t eat a lot of it. When they need to eat a lot more, we’ll put mashed potatoes on, which doesn’t fill you up as much, but we’ll push them more towards rice and pastas, which our players digest easier.

“You may think a diet for a footballer might be relatively clean with no sauces and condiments — but on a day before a game when we need more carbohydrates, we’ll have sweet and sour chicken — obviously adapted but the sauce will have a lot of carbohydrate, with the players not really knowing it. There’ll be a snack bar. The players are really big on pancakes, easily digestible and they can put toppings on, it really ramps it up. We have performance-orientated dessert. On a day we need a lot of carbs, that might be a rice pudding or a modified apple crumble. On the day when we need more protein, the chefs use high-protein yoghurts or whey protein.”

Unlike some other clubs, no foods are banned. Ketchup, often prohibited on the orders of head coaches, is available, because the nutritionist takes the view that if a small amount of sugar helps a player consume the large amount of protein — from an omelette, for example — it is worth it.

The players rarely need to be told off these days. Hayward says: “If we suddenly put out loads of burgers and pizzas at lunchtime, they’d be moaning about that. ‘Why are we being given this? It’s not right for us’.”


Pre-season matches and how do they help the season ahead? 

O’Neil has been using his time in pre-season to attempt to adapt his team tactically. That is not easy when some players, such as Jose Sa, Joao Gomes, Nelson Semedo and Neto, only joined up with the team towards the back end of the tour following their exertions with Portugal at Euro 2024, while new players may yet arrive who will need to adapt to a new club.

O’Neil says he wants his team to be more aggressive without the ball this season and would also like to have the option of playing more regularly with four defenders rather than five. He says: “Having five defenders on the pitch does limit what you can do going forwards,” he says, before adding, “It’d be silly not to use this pre-season to try and nail the bits that we need to be a bit more aggressive.”

O’Neil’s first season at Wolves brought largely rave reviews but form did suffer between March and the end of the season, as Wolves exited the FA Cup against Coventry City and won only two of their final 12 Premier League games. They finished the season in 14th place, albeit only three points short of a top-half placing.


Wolves head coach Gary O’Neil (Jack Thomas – WWFC/Wolves via Getty Images)

Piros-Read, the team’s head of physical performance, is asked if there were things his team have learned as a result of that late-season drop-off. “If you look at a lot of our starting players, it was the biggest season they’ve ever had for the number of matches played,” he says. “Rayan Ait-Nouri, the year before didn’t play much at all. Lemina has only played one season similar to that before. Arsenal have players the bulk of whom have done 40 games each for the last few years. Even Max Kilman (who has since joined West Ham) had only done a year of that.

“But now we’ve got this base of a team who built that foundation last year, and will have that robustness. Jorgen Strand Larsen, our new signing up front, played a full season in La Liga, which will help us. This is probably something you don’t think about until you really look into it. If a player has only ever started 24 games, and he’s played 37. It doesn’t sound a lot to Joe Bloggs, but that is a lot bigger demand for a footballer over a season.”

The 3-1 victory against West Ham revealed that not even the most precise planning can account for every factor; first a prime minister held things up, then the match itself was delayed for two hours, amid torrential storms in Florida. The game was eventually played, the pitch holding out, and O’Neil joked he had learned more about weather in the previous hours than he ever thought possible.

The final game, a 3-0 demolition of German club Leipzig, was played amid wild rain storms. Every mobile phone in the area received a tornado warning shortly after the match. The game brought more optimism from a new signing, Rodrigo Gomes, a 21-year-old brought in from Portuguese team Braga this summer. He has scored three goals on the tour, with the pick of them rounding off a flowing team move against Leipzig.

go-deeper

As for the games themselves, do they really provide that pit-in-the-stomach feeling that a competitive game triggers? O’Neil says he feels more relaxed, more like a training day than a matchday.

“You can never really tell in training,” O’Neil says. “So getting into matchdays, seeing how they look, what sort of numbers they register, looking at team shape, issues within it, things we’ve worked on that they haven’t fully grasped or that they have grasped. It’s like an exam paper. You practise all week — and then there’s an exam paper at the end and it tells you exactly where you are.”

This, however, remains the mock exam. The main event will be at the Emirates on August 17 — and if Wolves are leading with two minutes to go, O’Neil will know his plan has come together.

(Photos: Wolves; design: Dan Goldfarb)





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