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Manipulating player numbers in small-sided soccer games: effects on numerical superiority and inferiority across physiological, physical, technical, and tactical performance

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Small-sided games (SSG) are widely used in soccer training to replicate the physiological, physical, technical, and tactical demands of competition within representative contexts. Coaches often manipulate task constraints by creating numerical superiority or inferiority, which imposes specific demands and elicits targeted adaptations. This review aimed to synthesize the effects of numerical imbalances on player performance across physiological, physical, technical, and tactical domains. Evidence indicates that playing in numerical superiority consistently reduces physiological intensity (e.g., mean heart rate, time >90% HRmax) and high-intensity physical load (e.g., total distance, sprinting, accelerations), while increasing low-intensity activity such as walking. Oppositely, technical performance improves, with a higher number of passes and overall actions. Tactical behavior also adapts, with teams expanding playing length and width, covering more space near the opposition goal, and increasing attacking opportunities, while exploratory behavior and proximity to their own goal decrease. Conversely, teams in numerical inferiority adopt compensatory strategies, focusing on defensive organization and goal protection, which can reduce physical output and exploratory movement, particularly under high-inferiority conditions. Numerical imbalances in SSG seem to modulate physiological load, physical activity, technical execution, and tactical behavior. These findings provide a framework for optimizing training design and session planning in soccer, enabling coaches to manipulate player numbers to target specific performance outcomes.
Original languageEnglish
JournalFrontiers in Sports and Active Living
Volume8
Early online date15 Apr 2026
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Apr 2026

Keywords

  • football
  • performance analysis
  • player number
  • small-sided games
  • task constraint

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