Off-court squash fitness plan

Off-court fitness to play better squash

The points you lose late aren't always technical — they're physical. This off-court plan builds the engine, agility and strength to move well and last deep into a match, around your week.

Built for the demands of the court

Squash is repeated bursts, sharp changes of direction and long rallies. This plan trains those demands directly — interval conditioning for the rallies, agility and footwork for the corners, and a strength base so your legs hold up.

It's off-court physical training that complements your on-court practice rather than replacing it — the fitness that lets your game show up in the fifth game.

Move better and last longer

The plan builds your engine and your change-of-direction so you're still moving sharply when your opponent is fading, plus the strength and mobility that keep you durable across a season.

Log your sessions and your coach guides progression and recovery, so you build fitness without leaving your best squash in training.

A real squash plan

A real off-court squash plan, built by your coach

This is an actual plan from a GetMyCoach coach — read why it's built this way, then see the first weeks day by day. Yours is built around your fitness and your week.

Example plan
Your coach

Squash Performance Coach

Racket sports coach

I am your Squash Performance Coach. We will build the physical side of your game - court fitness, agility, strength and mobility - and track it against a court-fitness benchmark. A strength-and-conditioning coach for squash, focused on physical preparation - not technique, tactics or shot selection. Building court fitness, repeat-sprint ability, agility, single-leg and rotational strength, and injury-prevention mobility for squash.

Most weeks blend hard court conditioning or ghosting intervals with agility, single-leg and rotational strength, and mobility. Calibration weeks set honest effort and movement quality before pushing; a court-fitness benchmark recurs through the plan so progress is measured, not guessed.

1

Repeat-sprint ability for long rallies

2

Lateral movement and recovery between rallies

3

Single-leg strength and trunk control for repeated lunges

Why this plan

Why this plan fits you

Goal
Court Squash
Experience
Intermediate
Training days
4 / week
Equipment
Dumbbells, Resistance bands, Outdoor running space, Pull-up bar, Floor space for mat work, Bodyweight-only space

This plan is built for your goal: Court Squash. It's matched to intermediate experience and 4 training days a week, so the workload fits where you are now. and uses the equipment you have (running shoes, dumbbells, resistance bands and run route). Squash Performance Coach tuned the volume so progress stays steady.

Your split

Why your week is built this way

You're training a Court Intervals / Racket strength / Agility Footwork / Mobility & injury prevention split. Grouping the week this way lets each muscle group be trained hard, then fully recover before its next session.

1Court Intervals

Short, sharp efforts to build top-end fitness.

2Racket strength

A focused session targeting this part of your week.

3Agility Footwork

A focused session targeting this part of your week.

4Mobility & injury prevention

A focused session targeting this part of your week.

Exercise choices

Why these exercises

Build repeat-sprint ability with progressive court conditioning and ghosting intervals, develop single-leg and trunk strength for repeated lunges, and protect the hips, ankles and shoulders with consistent mobility. Progress in small, measurable steps and re-test against the court-fitness benchmark.

Progression

How you'll get stronger

Progressive overload

As you progress, I'll be adjusting the demands of your sessions, whether that's increasing the duration of your court intervals, adding more resistance to your strength work, or making your agility drills more complex. This ensures you're always challenged appropriately, building the specific fitness and strength needed to dominate the court.

For example

When the work starts to feel easier, add reps inside 10–15, then a small amount of weight — only when your form and recovery stay solid.

Each set lists an RPE/RIR target — how many reps you should have left in the tank. Higher RPE means closer to failure; it keeps your effort honest without guessing.

Rhythm

Frequency & recovery

Why this many days

You selected 4 training sessions per week. Your plan blends court conditioning and ghosting intervals, lateral agility, single-leg and rotational strength, and mobility for injury prevention.

Rest & recovery

Recovery is just as crucial as training; your rest days are when your body adapts and gets stronger for the next session. I've also built in lighter weeks to help you consolidate your gains and prevent burnout, ensuring you stay fresh and powerful for every match.

Day by day

The first 4 weeks, day by day

Browse each week day by day — rest days included, so you see the full rhythm.

AI Coach Assistant

Ask about your session, swap an exercise, or change your week

Your week
Racket strength

Today's Guidance

51 min

Build strength

This strength day trains the movements your plan is built around.

Main lift

Split Squat

4 sets · 8-12 each side reps · RPE 6-7 (vigorous to hard)

Your main lift today — the big compound that drives the session's adaptation, so attack it first while you're freshest.

Today — how to progress: When the top of the rep range feels controlled on every set, add a small amount of load next session — reps first, then weight.

  1. Step 1 of 4 · Main workNow

    Split Squat

    Coach guidance

    • Maintain an upright torso throughout the movement.
    • Lower your hips straight down, not forward or backward.
    • Ensure your front knee tracks over your mid-foot, not collapsing inward.
    • Drive through the heel of your front foot to stand up.
    • Keep your hips level and stable, avoiding rotation.
    Target effort
    RPE 6-7 (vigorous to hard)
    Aim for
    8-12 each side
    Rest between sets
    2 min
    Watch demo

    Log your result

    Create your free account to save your training.

  2. Step 2 of 4 · Main workGlute BridgeView

    Coach guidance

    • Lie on your back, knees bent, feet flat and hip-width apart.
    • Drive through your heels and push your hips toward the ceiling.
    • Squeeze your glutes hard at the top without arching your back.
    • Lower with control and keep your ribs down.
    Target effort
    RPE 6-7 (vigorous to hard)
    Aim for
    10-15
    Target weight
    Choose a load that leaves 2–3 reps in reserve at the target RPE.
    Rest between sets
    1 min 45 sec

    Log your result

    Create your free account to save your training.

  3. Step 3 of 4 · AccessoryDead BugView

    Coach guidance

    • Lie on your back with arms over your shoulders and hips and knees bent to 90°.
    • Press your lower back gently into the floor and keep it there.
    • Slowly lower the opposite arm and leg toward the floor.
    • Exhale as you extend; move slowly and with control.
    Target effort
    RPE 6-7 (vigorous to hard)
    Aim for
    10-12 each side
    Rest between sets
    1 min 15 sec

    Log your result

    Create your free account to save your training.

  4. Step 4 of 4 · AccessorySide PlankView

    Coach guidance

    • Form a straight line from head to heels, avoiding hip sag or pike.
    • Engage your core, imagining pulling your belly button towards your spine.
    • Press firmly through your forearm and elbow into the ground.
    • Keep your neck neutral, gazing forward or slightly down.
    • Breathe steadily throughout the hold, avoiding holding your breath.
    Target effort
    RPE 6-7 (vigorous to hard)
    Aim for
    30-45 sec
    Rest between sets
    1 min 15 sec

    Log your result

    Create your free account to save your training.

Frequently asked questions

Is this on-court coaching or fitness?
It's off-court physical training — conditioning, agility and strength to support your game. It complements your on-court practice rather than replacing it.
What equipment do I need?
Very little. Agility and footwork need floor space; the strength work runs on a pair of dumbbells and bands. The plan is built around what you have.
I'm not a competitive player — is that okay?
Yes. Whether you play socially or in a league, the plan starts from your current fitness and the days you can train off court.
Is it free?
Yes — GetMyCoach is free during early access. Build a plan and start training, no invite needed.

This is an example plan for illustration only — it is not medical advice and is not personalized to your injuries, limitations, or training history. Build your own plan to get coaching tailored to you.

Build your squash plan

Tell your coach your fitness and your week, and preview an off-court squash plan built for you — free during early access.