- Why a “6-week” plan works (when properly calibrated)
- The rules of the game before you start
- 3 simple tests to measure your progress
- Load management: two typical weeks (3 sessions or 5 sessions)
- Summary table: your 6-week cycle
- Week-by-week schedule (concrete sessions)
- How to move the plan forward without overloading it
- Adjustments to suit your profile (without distorting the cycle)
- Success criteria: what should your “before/after” look like?
- A useful tool for situating yourself (and avoiding lopsided matches)
- Conclusion
- Key takeaway
- Further information (useful resources)
Why a “6-week” plan works (when properly calibrated)
In padel, progress is rarely achieved by adding “one more match” at random. The key is to organize the week as a mini-cycle: a session to build, a session to rehearse, a session to play under pressure. In other words, you train to save time in the match (placement, reading, choices), not just to “hit harder”.
This plan has three very concrete aims: to increase the tempo without becoming disunited, to stabilize shots that keep coming back, and to make better decisions in hot spots (at the net, on lobs, at the end of sets).
The rules of the game before you start
- Benchmark tests: 20 to 30 minutes at the start, halfway through and at the end (you’ll know if you’re really making progress).
- Progressiveness: increase intensity in stages (not all at once).
- Quality > quantity: it’s better to have 45 clear minutes than 1.5 hours.
- Retrieval: at least 1 “easy” day per week (mobility, walking, gentle cycling).
- Intensity scale (RPE): rate effort out of 10. Most sessions should remain at 6-7/10; peaks at 8-9/10 are short and prepared.
- If pain is unusual or persistent: reduce the load and consult a healthcare professional.
3 simple tests to measure your progress
No need for a laboratory: the idea is to have reproducible benchmarks.
- Footwork test: 5 short lateral returns (same distance, same surface), timed, with 2 minutes rest.
- Test “serve”: first 30 balls (same target area) and you note the percentage passed + the quality of the following shot (neutralized / advantage / fault).
- Pressure rally” test: 3 sets of 8 exchanges in which you must follow instructions (e.g. mandatory depth). Note the number of points “given” (direct error or ball too short).
Repeat the same tests in week 3 and week 6, under the same conditions if possible.
Load management: two typical weeks (3 sessions or 5 sessions)
The plan below remains the same, but the breakdown changes according to your schedule. The idea is to maintain a balance between the short and the long, and to avoid two “hard” days in a row.
Option of 3 sessions per week (easiest to maintain)
- Monday or Tuesday: “technical” court (RPE 6-7/10).
- Thursday: physical (strength/footwork) + mobility (RPE 6-7/10).
- Weekend: constrained “match” court (a theme set or a match) (RPE 7-8/10).
5 sessions per week option (ambitious, but on condition of retrieval)
- Monday: “net and transitions” court (RPE 6-7/10).
- Tuesday: physical strength (RPE 7/10).
- Wednesday: active retrieval (RPE 3-4/10).
- Thursday: “serve/returning + scenarios” court (RPE 7-8/10).
- Saturday: practice match or scripted tiebreaks (RPE 7-8/10).
Summary table: your 6-week cycle
| Week | Schedule |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | Diagnosis + basics: moderate volume, reference points, review of footwork and playing areas. |
| Week 2 | Stabilization: “clean” repetitions, promotion of regularity (serves/returns + net). |
| Week 3 | Acceleration: increased intensity, shorter, more explosive sequences, tactical constraints. |
| Week 4 | Pressure: work in pairs, scripted points, quick decisions (without rushing). |
| Week 5 | Match-specific: tie-breaks, end of set, mental routines, adjusted physical volume. |
| Week 6 | Sharpening + review: lower load, higher freshness, re-tests and “statement match”. |
Week-by-week schedule (concrete sessions)
Week 1: tidying up (without burning out)
Goal: lay a clean foundation. You want to leave the week saying “I know what I’m working on” and not “I’ve played a lot”.
- Field (session A, 60 min): net routine with bandeja and target volleys (3 blocks of 12 balls, short rest, zone goals).
- Court (session B, 60 min): glass defense + recovery lob or globo (instructions: depth before speed).
- Physical (40 min): mobility + “foundations” reinforcement (legs, posterior chain, anti-rotation sheathing).
- Match (optional): 1 set using a single instruction (e.g. prioritize ball length).
Week 2: gaining in consistency (and first intentions)
Here, you’re looking for repeatability: same gesture, same reading, less waste.
- Court (session A, 70 min): serve/return + 3rd ball. You note your % of firsts and the quality of the next shot.
- Court (session B, 60 min): controlled low game with chiquita (goal: get a playable ball, not “steal” the point).
- Physical (45 min): lower-body strengthening + footwork (lunges, controlled squats, unipodal balance work).
- Recovery: 20 min hip/ankle mobility + walking.
Week 3: speeding up… without losing shape
We increase intensity and reduce sequences. You need to be able to restart quickly, brake quickly and restart quickly.
- Physical (30-35 min): intermittent endurance in a court fraction (short efforts, short recoveries, controlled intensity).
- Court (session A, 70 min): string together “lob received → decision overhead” (play placed or accelerate according to height and position).
- Court (session B, 60 min): glass exits + bajada attack (goal: choose the zone, don’t look for the direct point).
- Match: practice tiebreak (with routine between points).
Week 4: pressure and coordination in pairs
This is the week when tactics become visible: rotations, zones, communication. We work on points that “look like the real thing”.
- Court (session A, 75 min): themed games (half-court, forbidden areas, depth requirements) to encourage quick decisions.
- Court (session B, 60 min): “serve + 3 strikes” with variations (you alternate plan A / plan B depending on the opponent’s returning).
- Physical (40 min): controlled explosiveness (short jumps, changes direction, dynamic sheathing).
- Video (15 min): 3 points gained + 3 points lost, and you note the cause (placement / choice / execution).
Week 5: match specifics (the points that count)
We reproduce reality: end of sets, deuces, break points. The aim is to be stable when the tempo is promoted.
- Court (session A, 75 min): sets starting at 3-3, or games starting at 30-30 (high mental density).
- Court (session B, 60 min): “net” routine (volleys + bandeja) with fictitious score and zone constraints.
- Physical (25-30 min): intensity booster (court) + mobility.
Week 6: sharpen, re-test, play statement match
We lower the load to keep fresh. The gains are often seen when you arrive “lighter” on the court.
- Re-tests: same 3 tests as before, same conditions.
- Court (session A, 60 min): clean repetitions (no “butchery” session).
- Statement match: 1 complete match, with a simple goal (e.g. to hold your zones and routines).
- Review: you keep 2 priorities for the next cycle (one technical, one tactical/physical).
How to move the plan forward without overloading it
- Change only one slider at a time: either the duration, the number of repetitions or the tactics.
- If you finish a “clean” session twice in a row, add a small block (e.g. a series) the following week.
- If you notice a marked drop in precision, reduce the volume and return to the goal (fatigue blurs your bearings).
- Before an important match, you keep the intensity but slice the duration: the energy has to stay on the court.
Adjustments to suit your profile (without distorting the cycle)
- Motivated beginners: opt for the 3-session option, and make week 1-2 your foundation (serve/returning + footwork + regularity).
- Intermediate: play fully in weeks 3-5, but keep one “easy” day fixed, non-negotiable.
- Regular competitor: 5-session option possible, provided you plan a real day off and keep week 6 light to arrive fresh.
Success criteria: what should your “before/after” look like?
Without looking for unrealistic figures, here’s what you should see if the cycle is run properly:
- Footwork test: more stable time from one repetition to the next, with less “snatching” sensation on changes direction.
- Test serve: more useful firsts, and above all a simpler follow-through (fewer points given on the 3rd ball).
- Rally under pressure: fewer short balls under pressure, and a better ability to keep to instructions when the score gets tight.
A useful tool for situating yourself (and avoiding lopsided matches)
Before starting the cycle, you can also give yourself a level benchmark to help you choose your partners and formats: the Next Point padel level test can serve as a starting point.
Conclusion
Padel doesn’t change in six weeks “by miracle”, but a well-constructed cycle changes the trajectory: less waste, more stability under pressure, and above all a legible progression. Once the plan is complete, stick to the logic: test, target, repeat, play under pressure… then start again, a notch above.
Key takeaway
- A 6-week cycle works if each week has a clear theme (base → intensity → pressure → sharpening).
- Measure three simple things (footwork, serve, rally under instructions): you’ll see the difference.
- The court makes you progress… but well-dosed physical preparation protects your footwork and your consistency.
- In week 6, we lower the load: this is often when the game “breathes” best.
