STEP 1 Audit & baseline · Days 1–7
The first week is diagnostic. You want to know exactly where your athlete is — measurably — so you know exactly what to work on. Don't skip this. Athletes who jump straight to "training harder" without a baseline waste the first two weeks fixing problems that aren't the real problems.
Test the metrics that will be tested. What evaluators measure varies by sport — and you need to test the same things at home, on the same field or court, with the same equipment. Write every number down. The notebook becomes your scoreboard for the next 30 days.
Sport-specific metrics to test in Week 1
- Basketball: Vertical jump, lane agility (5-10-5), suicide times, free-throw % at fatigue (10 straight after sprints), 3-point % from 5 spots.
- Football: 40-yard dash, 3-cone drill, broad jump, vertical, position-specific work (route running for WR/TE, backpedal for DB, get-off for DL).
- Soccer: Beep test or 1-mile time, juggling reps, 1v1 win rate vs. equal opponent, 30m sprint time, weak-foot accuracy.
- Baseball: Exit velocity, 60-yard dash, throwing velocity from position, fielding ground balls (success rate over 20 reps).
- Gymnastics: Beam routine clean reps, vault distance, flexibility benchmarks, conditioning (plank, V-ups, handstand hold).
- Swim: 25/50/100 splits in primary stroke, stroke count per lap, dive-start to 15m, flip-turn time.
Identify the bottom 3. Whatever your athlete's worst three numbers are — those are your targets for the next 3 weeks. Don't try to fix everything. Pick three. Top performers are people who fix specific things on specific timelines, not people who train harder in general.
Get the eye test honest. Ask a coach (not a parent) to watch your athlete play and tell you the truth about what stands out — good and bad. This is the one outside opinion that matters. Parents see effort. Coaches see technique. Many of our free first sessions get booked specifically for this — a single outside eye-test from an Apex coach before tryouts can be the difference between guessing and knowing.
Metrics to log this week
- ☐ All sport-specific baseline numbers (with date stamp)
- ☐ Outside coach's 1-paragraph evaluation
- ☐ Bottom 3 weakness areas circled
- ☐ Next 3 weeks of training mapped out
STEP 2 Skill-specific high-volume work · Days 8–14
This is the hardest-working week. Now that you know the gaps, you attack them. Plan 4–5 training days. Each day should hit 1 of the 3 weakness areas hard, plus general conditioning. Volume is high, but the work is specific — no "general practice" allowed.
This is also the week to film. Record reps, watch them back, fix what's broken. Most athletes never see themselves move, and what they think they're doing is rarely what they're actually doing. The athletes who watch their own film — even a few minutes a night — improve at 2-3x the rate of athletes who don't.
Sleep 9+ hours. Hydrate aggressively. Recovery isn't optional — it's literally when the body adapts to training. Skipping recovery during this phase means you're training without earning the gains. The work is only as good as the recovery.
Sample Week 2 schedule
- Monday: Weakness #1 focused work (60–75 min) + 15 min conditioning
- Tuesday: Weakness #2 focused work (60–75 min) + film review (20 min)
- Wednesday: Active recovery — light mobility, walking, stretching
- Thursday: Weakness #3 focused work (60–75 min) + 15 min conditioning
- Friday: Cross-training (different sport or general athletic work) + film review
- Saturday: Mini re-test of 1–2 weakness metrics. Compare to Day 1 numbers.
- Sunday: Full rest. Sleep, eat, hydrate, mental prep.
Metrics to log this week
- ☐ Sessions completed (target: 4–5)
- ☐ Film reviewed nightly (yes/no)
- ☐ Sleep hours per night (target: 9+)
- ☐ Mid-week re-test of 1–2 weakness metrics
STEP 3 Game-pace & pressure work · Days 15–21
Week 2 (of the count, Step 3 of the plan) shifts from skill volume to pressure simulation. The work needs to start happening at game speed, with consequences. Skill in isolation doesn't transfer cleanly to tryouts — athletes need reps under social and physical pressure, against people who don't care that they're tired.
If possible, get your athlete in pickup games, scrimmages, or open runs at facilities where the competition is at or above their level. South Florida is full of these — Pine Trails Park in Parkland, Mullins Park in Coral Springs, Patch Reef Park in Boca Raton — all have weekly open runs and pickup-style competitive play.
Cut overall volume by ~20% from Step 2 to manage fatigue. Quality over quantity. Every rep should be at intent. If the athlete is sleepwalking through reps, end the session early and rest. The point is sharp, focused, pressured reps — not high count.
What "pressure" means in this phase
- Social pressure: Drilling in front of a live audience or competing against peers.
- Time pressure: Drills with a stopwatch and a target time.
- Score pressure: Win-or-lose drills. Win the rep, you continue. Lose, you do conditioning.
- Fatigue pressure: Run conditioning first, then execute the skill. This is what tryout day actually feels like.
Metrics to log this week
- ☐ Number of pressured (game-pace) sessions: target 3–4
- ☐ Volume reduction vs. Step 2 (~20%)
- ☐ Tryout-day logistics confirmed
- ☐ Sleep hours per night (target: 9+)
STEP 4 Sharpen, recover, peak · Days 22–30
The taper week. Counter-intuitive for parents but critical for performance: do less, not more. Cut training volume in half. Maintain intensity (short sessions at full speed) but radically reduce duration. Sleep more. Eat clean. Hydrate. The fitness is built — now you're letting the body absorb it.
This is the phase parents most often sabotage. The instinct is to panic and cram more reps into the final week. The science is unambiguous: a properly tapered athlete outperforms an over-trained one by 5–15% on competition day. Coach Michael's rule for the Apex peaking protocol: if it's tryout week, the answer to "should we squeeze in another session?" is almost always no.
Mental prep matters too. Visualize tryouts. Walk through what success looks like. Eliminate the unknowns: know the location, the time, what to wear, what to bring. Confidence comes from preparation, not from a pep talk.
The final 7-day taper
- Day 22–24: Volume cut ~30%. Intensity stays at game speed in short bursts (15–25 min sessions).
- Day 25–27: Volume cut ~50%. Sleep hard. Final logistics check.
- Day 28–29: Volume cut ~70%. Light skill work only. No conditioning. Mental walkthrough nightly.
- Day 30 (tryout day): Light breakfast 2–3 hours before. Full warm-up. Confidence walk-in. Leave nothing on the table.
Tryout day checklist
- ☐ Light, balanced breakfast 2–3 hours before
- ☐ Hydration through morning (target: pale yellow urine)
- ☐ Arrive 30+ minutes early
- ☐ Full warm-up (15–20 min)
- ☐ Mental cue ready ("trust the work")
- ☐ Phone on silent, parent presence calm
The bottom line on tryout prep
The 30-day tryout prep plan isn't magic. It's discipline applied to four phases: audit, build, pressure, taper. Most athletes never do this — they show up and hope. The ones who follow this plan walk in knowing they're peaked, knowing they've fixed their weaknesses, and knowing exactly what they're going to do.
If you want help running this with your athlete — including the outside-coach eye test, sport-specific baselines, and weekly check-ins — that's literally what an Apex small-group session is. Book your session and we'll baseline your athlete in Week 1 and ride it through to tryout day with you.
