In the world of football, technical prowess is often seen as the foundation upon which victory is built. Many aspire to elevate their game, dreaming that natural talent alone might suffice to master the sport’s demanding skills. However, recent research conducted by the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) challenges this notion, revealing that innate ability is far from enough. According to the study led by Professor Hermundur Sigmundsson, excelling in football demands precise, targeted training of each individual skill rather than relying on a generalized improvement across the board.
This groundbreaking study delved into the intricacies of football technique, focusing on eight distinct skills essential to the game: juggling, precise long-distance passing, heading, kicking, dribbling, corner accuracy, shooting precision, and wall-volley passing. Each skill embodies a unique set of motor and cognitive demands that are not simply intertwined but stand largely independent of one another. To explore this, the research team recruited 23 semi-professional players from an elite Icelandic club, ensuring uniformity in baseline training quality and playing experience to provide reliable data.
The players underwent a battery of eight technical assessments, collectively called the “Test of Technical Skills in Football” (TTSF), which quantitatively measured their proficiency in these key areas. For instance, juggling required maintaining the ball airborne for a full minute, demanding balance, coordination, and exceptional touch. Passing tests evaluated accuracy over a challenging 25-meter distance, encouraging both precision and power in delivery. In addition to these, heading and kicking tests measured precise timing and force control, while dribbling evaluations focused on ball control and agility under game-like pressures.
Perhaps most revealing were the corner precision and shooting accuracy tests conducted from 16.5 meters – the penalty spot distance – which gauge fine motor control, spatial awareness, and power modulation, critical for set-piece execution. Finally, the wall-volley task assessed players’ ability to control rebound passes, a skill central to maintaining possession during quick transitions, requiring anticipatory skills and rhythmic footwork. These diverse testing modalities captured a comprehensive snapshot of each player’s technical skillset across multiple domains.
The core finding was striking: the correlations between these eight skills were minimal, if present at all. This indicated almost complete independence among them, demonstrating that excelling in one skill area does not inherently translate to improved performance in another. This challenges common coaching assumptions that developing general football competence automatically enhances all technical skills simultaneously.
Professor Sigmundsson interprets these findings as evidence for the motor specificity of football skills. In other words, the architecture of how athletes acquire and refine football techniques is compartmentalized. This means that the muscle memory, neuromuscular control, and perceptual learning involved in, say, perfecting a curling shot, are quite distinct from those underpinning agile dribbling or aerial heading. Each skill taps into different motor control pathways that require focused practice to cultivate.
For coaches and training staff, these insights cannot be overstated. Football preparation programs must eschew one-size-fits-all approaches and embrace differentiated, skill-specific training modules. When constructing training sessions or rehabilitation programs for injured players, emphasis should be placed on isolating and rigorously practicing individual skills with precision drills and exercises tailored to the exact motor demands involved.
This research further invites a reevaluation of talent development paradigms in football academies. Emphasizing a broad, technically versatile curriculum ensures each critical skill receives adequate attention, promoting balanced player development. Conventional training emphasizing endurance or tactical gameplay without dedicated technical skill drills may overlook areas where athletes lag, potentially hindering their progression to elite performance levels.
The methodology used by the researchers also signals important strides in sports science. Employing statistical analysis on homogenous athlete samples strengthens data validity and helps isolate true skill interdependencies unaffected by extraneous variables like training disparity or experience differences across teams. This approach might pioneer similar studies across various sports to decode complex skill interaction matrices.
Physiologically, the necessity for targeted technical training is congruent with contemporary understanding of motor learning. Neural plasticity, the basis for skill acquisition, is highly specific to practiced movements and contexts. This specificity explains the study’s conclusion that proficiency gains in one technical area do not “spill over” to others, underscoring the importance of repeated, goal-oriented training session designs.
In conclusion, this study contributes a vital piece to the puzzle of athletic development, dispelling myths about innate talent and painting a clear picture of what effective football training entails. Precision, focus, and varied practice targeting each discrete skill compound into genuinely superior performance. For aspiring footballers and their coaches, embracing this nuanced approach may unlock unprecedented potential, transforming natural gifts into finely tuned expertise.
For sports scientists and psychologists, these findings open fresh avenues for exploring how cognitive strategies and physical training best mesh to optimize athlete skillsets. Future research could build on this by investigating how mental rehearsal or augmented feedback technologies might accelerate mastery of these independent skills. As technology and science evolve hand in hand with sport, such evidence-based insights will become indispensable tools shaping the future of football excellence.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: The association between eight different skills in football: an explorative study
News Publication Date: 10-Mar-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.footst.2026.100033
References: Hermundur Sigmundsson, Rúnar Páll Sigmundsson, Monika Haga, Remco Polman, The association between eight different skills in football: an explorative study, Football Studies, Volume 1, 2026, 100033, ISSN 3051-2689
Keywords: Technical skills, football training, motor skill specificity, skill independence, targeted practice, skill correlation, semi-professional football, motor learning, skill acquisition

