Nordic hamstring curl schedule for football: build up safely over 8 weeks
A Nordic hamstring curl schedule for football should be small enough to repeat and strong enough to matter. Start with an 8-week build: learn the technique first, add range and repetitions gradually, then keep a short maintenance dose in season. Place heavy Nordics early enough before match day, keep at least 48 hours away from the hardest sprint or match load, and reduce the dose if the hamstrings clearly react the next day.
In brief
For football players, a Nordic schedule works best when it fits the training week. Trials in football found that Nordic hamstring programmes reduced hamstring injury rates, but the practical value depends on gradual loading and consistent execution (Petersen et al., 2011; van der Horst et al., 2015). Use Nordics as one strength layer alongside sprint exposure, recovery and normal team training. For the broader context, read preventing hamstring injuries in football.

Who this schedule is for
This schedule is for healthy football players who want to start Nordic hamstring curls for prevention or performance support. It is not the first step for a fresh hamstring injury. Sharp pain, bruising, clear strength loss or symptoms that return during sprinting need assessment and a tailored rehabilitation route. If you are returning from a complaint, start with the guide on hamstring injuries in football. Clinicians can pair this with the physiotherapy hamstring protocol.
The 8-week Nordic schedule for football
Weeks 1 and 2 are about technique: one session per week, two sets of three controlled repetitions, hands ready to catch the fall and only the range you can control. Weeks 3 and 4 add control: one to two sessions, two sets of four to five repetitions and a slow lowering phase. If the football week already has a lot of sprinting, stay with one session.
Weeks 5 and 6 build useful volume: two sessions per week, two to three sets of five repetitions and a three to four second lowering phase. Weeks 7 and 8 prepare maintenance: one to two sessions, two to three sets of five to six high-quality repetitions. After that, many players do better with one good maintenance session than with an ambitious plan they skip.

Where to place Nordics in the football week
With a Saturday match, place the main Nordic session on Monday or Tuesday. Thursday or Friday is too late for a new heavy stimulus, especially if the player is still adapting to eccentric hamstring loading. In a two-match week, use maintenance only: two sets of three to four controlled repetitions, or delay the heavy work until the week is normal again.
Technique and setup
Keep the execution simple: ankles fixed low and firmly, knee-hip-shoulder line straight, slow forward lowering, hands ready to catch, and no need to pull the whole way back up with the hamstrings. The main Nordic hamstring curl guide explains the exercise, while the How-to guide covers the practical setup.

When to progress or step back
Progress only after the current step has been tolerated twice: no sharp pain during the exercise, no clear next-day stiffness increase and no worse sprint feeling in the next training. Step back if the athlete bends at the hips to escape the work, drops in less than two seconds, reacts the next day, or already has a high sprint and match load that week.
Reviews support eccentric hamstring training as a useful part of prevention and risk-factor management (Rudisill et al., 2023; Medeiros et al., 2020). But adherence is the limiting factor in the real football environment, so a schedule that players keep doing is better than a perfect plan that disappears after two hard sessions (Ripley et al., 2021).
How it fits with football prevention
Nordics are not a full prevention programme. They are a strong hamstring-strength layer inside a wider system: gradual sprint exposure, recovery rules, sensible match planning and attention to previous symptoms. Nordbelt helps when you want repeatable ankle fixation on the field, at home or in a clinic, without a large machine or training partner. Use it to make execution consistent, not to rush the schedule.

Common mistakes
The first mistake is adding volume too quickly. A small Nordic step can create a lot of soreness when the exercise is new. The second mistake is placing Nordics right before a match. The third mistake is ignoring sprint load: if Tuesday already includes a lot of sprinting and small-sided games, you do not need to force a heavy Nordic block on top.
FAQ
How often should a football player do Nordic hamstring curls?
Start with once per week. After a few weeks, twice per week can work if recovery and the match calendar allow it. In season, one maintenance session is often more realistic.
How many repetitions are enough?
In the first weeks, two sets of three controlled repetitions are enough. Build toward two to three sets of five or six. Quality matters more than a high number.
Should Nordics be done before or after football training?
Heavy Nordics fit better after training or in a separate strength block, not right before intense sprinting or match play.
Can this schedule run during the season?
Yes, but keep it smaller. A short session early in the week is usually enough during busy periods.
What if I get a lot of soreness?
Reduce range, sets or frequency. Mild soreness can happen, but the schedule should not disturb football training for several days.