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17 February 2026

ARTICLE 6 – Preparing and Winning

Why Warm-Up, Focus, and Inner Activation Determine the Flow of the Game

A match does not start with the whistle.
It starts earlier — in the body, in the nervous system, in focus.
Those who are prepared react faster, decide more clearly, and settle into the game sooner.

“You don’t have to see the whole staircase.
Just take the first step.”
— Martin Luther King

Note: from the YouNr1 e-book

Joshua Kimmich

Kimmich is known for structured match preparation and clear routines.
Focus before kick-off is not a coincidence for him, but part of his performance strategy.

Preparation improves performance because it regulates the inner state.
An activated, yet calm state enables more precise decisions from the very first moment.

Continuation follows in Article 7.


PART I – Reality in Numbers

A match does not start with the whistle.
It starts earlier — in the body, in the nervous system, in focus.

A look at basic figures:

  • Time window for the first match decisions: seconds
  • Reaction time under match conditions: 200–350 milliseconds
  • Time to activate the nervous system: minutes
  • Brain energy consumption under stress: increased
  • Impact of the first touch on the flow of the match: high

These figures show:
Match performance depends decisively on
how the inner state is prepared before the match.


Why Preparation Is More Than Warm-Up

Classic warm-up often focuses on:

  • muscles
  • joints
  • mobility

But match performance is not created by the body alone.
It emerges from the interaction of body, perception, and focus.

Without inner activation:

  • reaction capability remains reduced
  • decisions are delayed
  • energy is used inefficiently

The Transition from Everyday Life to the Game

Before the match, two states meet:

  • everyday life (thoughts, distraction, stress)
  • competition (tempo, pressure, decision)

Preparation means:

  • shaping this transition consciously
  • switching the inner state

Whoever leaves this transition to chance
also leaves their performance to chance.


PART II – Structure and Context

Warming Up the Body

Physical activation serves three functions:

  • increase blood flow
  • prepare the musculature
  • reduce injury risks

But warm-up works optimally only if:

  • movement is performed consciously
  • breathing is integrated
  • focus is already directed toward match situations

Pure mechanics are not enough.

Activating the Nervous System

The nervous system determines:

  • reaction speed
  • coordination
  • decision quality

Too little activation:

  • sluggishness
  • delayed reactions

Too much activation:

  • restlessness
  • energy loss
  • imprecise movements

The goal of preparation is:
a regulated activation state.

Inner Activation Through Breathing and Focus

Breathing and focus are the fastest tools to steer the inner state.

Consciously applied breathing:

  • stabilizes CO₂ balance
  • regulates heart rate
  • reduces unnecessary tension

Focusing:

  • organizes thoughts
  • directs energy
  • prepares decisions

This creates a state that is:

  • alert
  • calm
  • ready to act

Mental Preparation for Match Situations

Preparation also means:

  • tuning into match situations
  • anticipating decisions internally
  • building confidence

Short mental sequences:

  • first touch
  • initial contact
  • 1-vs-1 situation
  • finish

stabilize action patterns,
without creating physical fatigue.

Why the Start of the Match Is Crucial

The first minutes of a match:

  • shape confidence
  • influence decision quality
  • determine the further energy flow

Good preparation:

  • reduces early mistakes
  • stabilizes focus
  • allows you to “arrive” in the match faster

Practical Relevance for YouNr1

For training, this knowledge means:

  • preparation is trainable
  • it does not begin on match day
  • it can be built systematically

At YouNr1, preparation is integrated into:

  • structured warm-up sequences
  • breathing and focus work
  • mental activation before match situations
  • stabilization in the opening phase

Preparation does not replace training.
It determines how available training is in the match.

Outlook

If warm-up, focus, and inner activation can be deliberately controlled, the next logical question is:

How can mental strength be kept stable across an entire match?

This question leads directly to the next article.

Final End Note (EN)

The content presented is based on established findings from physiology, neuroscience, and sport psychology (e.g., Guyton & Hall; Kandel et al.; Schmidt & Lee; Weinberg & Gould; West).

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