Episode 321
Preparing for the World Cup: Physical Performance Under Extreme Pressure
May 25th, 2026
46 mins 34 secs
Tags
About this Episode
The 2026 Men’s World Cup will place unprecedented demands on international teams: 48 nations, 104 matches and a tournament staged across Canada, Mexico and the United States, with teams required to manage heat, humidity, altitude, travel and limited recovery time.
In this episode of the Science for Sport Podcast, Richard Graves is joined by Dr Ben Rosenblatt, Founder of 292 Performance and former Lead Men’s Physical Performance Coach at The Football Association.
Ben draws on his experience preparing the England men’s football team for two World Cups and a European Championship, alongside his work with Olympic athletes, GB Hockey and elite performers across a range of sports.
The conversation explores what it really takes to prepare athletes for tournament football at the highest level. Ben discusses why physical preparation cannot begin when players arrive in camp, how small doses of training can create meaningful change during a tournament, and why “available” is very different from “ready to compete” when returning players from injury.
He also explains the physical and psychological challenges of competing in extreme environments, from heat and altitude to fatigue and pressure, and shares how the best performance teams use data, observation, communication and athlete understanding together to make better decisions.
For practitioners working in elite sport, this episode offers a detailed insight into preparing players not simply to take part in major tournaments, but to perform when the demands are at their highest.
In this episode you will learn
- Why effective tournament preparation starts months before the first game.
- How England used micro-dosed strength training during the 2018 World Cup to improve players’ power and hamstring strength.
- Why athletes must continually adapt and “reinvent” themselves to sustain performance at the highest level.
- How Ben used daily monitoring with GB Hockey to prepare players for the demands of eight matches in 13 days at the Rio Olympics.
- Why data should be considered alongside observation, athlete feedback, staff conversations and practitioner judgement.
- The difference between returning a player to availability and preparing them to compete in the decisive stages of a major tournament.
- How performance teams can prepare players for heat, humidity, altitude and travel during the 2026 World Cup.
- Why recovery, nutrition, strength training and sprint exposure must be individualised rather than delivered as a single team-wide solution.
- How clarity, trust and pressure training help athletes execute when the stakes are highest.
- What the best high-performance environments look and feel like behind the scenes.
About Dr Ben Rosenblatt
Dr Ben Rosenblatt is the Founder and Director of 292 Performance, a multidisciplinary performance consultancy supporting elite athletes and organisations.
He previously served as Lead Men’s Physical Performance Coach at The Football Association, where he supported the England men’s senior team through two World Cups and a European Championship. His career has also included work with the British Olympic Association, GB Hockey, elite football and Olympic athletes across multiple Games.
Ben holds a PhD in biomechanics and motor learning, and his work focuses on helping athletes and teams prepare for the most demanding moments in high-performance sport.
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