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17 February 2026

ARTICLE 3 – Thoughts and Winning

Why Every Decision in Football Happens Before the Movement

Before you move, you decide.
Not with your feet, but in your mind.
Those who can organize their thoughts direct energy—and make the right decision faster.

“Our life is what our thoughts make it.”
— Marcus Aurelius

Note: from the YouNr1 e-book

Lionel Messi

Messi’s game thrives on anticipation and decisions made before movement.
This is no coincidence, but the result of extremely efficient thought–movement coupling.

Thoughts are so powerful because every movement is first prepared in the brain.
When this preparation is clear, the body reacts faster, calmer, and more precisely.

Continuation follows in Article 4.


PART I – Reality in Numbers

Every action in football begins with perception.
And every perception is evaluated in the brain before the body reacts.

A look at key figures:

  • Decisions in the game: within 200–350 ms
  • Share of unconscious decision processes: over 90%
  • Energy consumption of the brain: approx. 20%
  • Time between perception and muscle activation: milliseconds

These numbers clearly show:
Movement is the end product—not the beginning.

Thoughts as the Control Center of Movement

Thoughts are not abstract ideas.
They are neural activity.

Every thought:

  • activates nerve cells,
  • distributes energy,
  • prepares action.

In football, this means:

  • clear thoughts → fast, clean actions
  • disordered thoughts → delay, errors, energy loss

PART II – Structure and Context

From Thought to Action

Every football action follows the same internal sequence:

  1. Perception
  2. Evaluation
  3. Decision
  4. Movement

Movement is always the final step.
Those who intervene earlier—at the level of thought—gain an advantage.

Thoughts Under Pressure

During the game, multiple factors act simultaneously:

  • tempo,
  • opponent pressure,
  • changes in space,
  • expectation.

Under pressure, thoughts become faster—but not automatically clearer.
Disordered thoughts lead to:

  • delayed decisions,
  • imprecise movements,
  • unnecessary energy loss.

Thoughts Direct Energy

Thoughts determine:

  • where attention is directed,
  • how energy is distributed,
  • how stable decisions remain.

An organized mental state:

  • saves energy,
  • increases reaction speed,
  • improves action reliability.

Why Thinking Is Trainable

Thoughts follow patterns.
Patterns arise through repetition.

Through targeted training:

  • thought–movement sequences become automated,
  • reaction time is shortened,
  • stability in the game increases.

Thought training does not replace technical training.
It ensures that technique remains available under pressure.


Practical Relevance for YouNr1

Thought work complements football training.
It improves decision quality and reaction speed.

At YouNr1, thought control is integrated into:

  • 1-vs-1 situations,
  • shooting techniques,
  • visualization,
  • mental match preparation.

Thoughts do not decide whether you can do something,
but when you can execute it in the game.

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).

Keywords (compact)

thoughts in football, decision-making, anticipation in the game, thought–movement coupling, reaction time football, nervous system and performance, mental control, focus in the game, modern football training

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