The Fatigue Control Factor

June 02, 20262 min read

Speed, Balance & Game-Changing Athleticism

“The athletes who perform best late in games aren’t always the fittest—they’re the ones who can still move well when tired.”

Why More Conditioning Isn’t Always the Answer

I was watching an athlete train recently.

Early in the session, everything looked sharp.

  • Feet were clean

  • Cuts were controlled

  • Reactions were quick

Then fatigue started to build.

And little things began showing up.

  • Extra steps to stop

  • Coming out of cuts too tall

  • Losing posture when reacting

Nothing dramatic.

But enough to change everything.

The Difference Between Fatigue and Breakdown

It made me think about how often athletes assume they need more conditioning whenever they feel tired late in games.

And sometimes they do.

But a lot of the time, that’s not the real issue.

The issue is that movement quality disappears once fatigue arrives.

That’s a completely different problem.

Because if your mechanics fall apart when you're tired, adding more conditioning won’t automatically fix it.

In some cases, it simply gives you more opportunities to repeat poor movement patterns.

When Harder Work Isn't the Solution

We see this all the time.

An athlete wants to become quicker.

So they add:

  • More running

  • More conditioning

  • More volume

  • More work

But the real issue is that they can’t maintain quality movement once the pace increases.

Their body loses control.

Their positions deteriorate.

And performance starts dropping off.

Why Fatigue Exposes Weaknesses

Fatigue has a way of revealing what training has missed.

Ask yourself:

  • Can you still decelerate efficiently?

  • Can you maintain balance during reactions?

  • Can you stay organized when the game becomes chaotic?

Those are the questions that matter.

Because games rarely happen when you're fresh.

Performance often comes down to what happens when you're tired.

What Separates Great Athletes Late in Games

The athletes who hold up best late in competition usually aren’t just the ones with the best conditioning.

They’re the ones who can maintain control when fatigue sets in.

They can:

✅ Decelerate without falling apart
✅ React without losing balance
✅ Change direction without needing extra steps
✅ Stay connected under pressure

That’s what carries over.

Look Beyond Conditioning

So if you feel yourself fading late in games, don’t automatically assume you need more conditioning.

Take a closer look at your movement quality.

What happens when fatigue arrives?

Do your positions stay strong?

Or does everything start breaking down?

Because more conditioning isn’t always the answer.

Sometimes the answer is learning how to maintain control when it matters most.

— Coach Shelby & The Shelby Trained Team

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