Episodes

  • Why are Premier League clubs under-performing in Europe this season?
    Apr 1 2026

    Why are Premier League clubs struggling in Europe this season?

    In this episode of Strain on the Game, Stephen Warnock and Adrian Lamb break down why four English clubs crashed out of the Champions League last 16, despite such a strong start to the campaign. With only Liverpool and Arsenal left in the quarter-finals, the conversation turns to fixture overload, player fatigue, lack of recovery time, squad rotation, and whether the intensity of the Premier League is now working against English teams in Europe.

    The hosts dig into the data around games played, minutes logged, creativity levels, and why clubs in other leagues may be better protected when it matters most. They also ask whether the Premier League needs to rethink its schedule, its style, and even how the game is being refereed.

    Plus, Stephen tells the story of finally landing a hole in one.

    If you enjoy the episode, make sure to like, comment and subscribe.

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • Inside Injury Rehab in Football: Dave Fevre on Scans, Setbacks and Getting Players Back
    Mar 25 2026

    In part two of this special with Dave Fevre, the conversation turns to the work fans rarely see: what really happens when a player goes down injured, how decisions are made in those first critical moments, and what the rehab process actually looks like behind the scenes.

    Drawing on decades of experience across the professional game, Dave explains the pressure of pitch-side assessments, why staying calm matters most, and how quickly a “simple” injury can become something far more serious. He also shares why he still believes in clinical judgement over over-reliance on scans, the dangers of treating the MRI instead of the player, and how lifestyle, stress and even alcohol can impact recovery.

    From Roy Keane’s rehab mentality to working with top-level professionals like Thiago Silva and Mateo Kovacic, this episode is packed with stories, insight and hard-earned lessons from one of football’s most experienced physios.

    A fascinating look at the balance between science, instinct, psychology and trust — and why getting a player back on the pitch is about far more than just healing the injury.

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    59 mins
  • From the Treatment Room to the Treble: Dave Fevre Tells All (Part 1)
    Mar 18 2026

    In part one of this episode, Stephen Warnock and Adrian Lamb sit down with one of the most respected figures in elite sports medicine, Dave Fevre.

    A chartered physiotherapist with more than 30 years at the highest level, Dave has worked with Manchester United’s treble-winning side, Blackburn Rovers, Burnley, Chelsea, Leicester City and Manchester City in the WSL. In this conversation, he looks back on his journey from rugby league into top-level football, the realities of working in elite sport before the modern era of huge performance departments, and the principles that shaped his approach to player care.

    Dave shares stories from behind the scenes at Manchester United, explains how sports medicine and rehabilitation have evolved, and gives a rare insight into the relationships, trust and decision-making that sit behind every return to play.

    A fascinating first part with one of the game’s most experienced voices.

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    48 mins
  • From the Farm to the Premier League: Adrian Lamb’s Journey Through Elite Football
    Mar 11 2026

    In this special episode of Strain on the Game, Stephen Warnock turns the spotlight onto co-host Adrian Lamb — the performance coach whose career has taken him from a farm in Cumbria to some of the biggest environments in world football.

    Adrian shares the remarkable journey that led him into elite sport, beginning with his upbringing on a working farm next to the Sellafield nuclear plant in the Lake District. From the values of hard work and resilience learned there, to joining the Merchant Navy as a teenager, Adrian explains the unexpected path that eventually took him into sports science and professional football.

    Along the way he reveals the defining moments that shaped his career — including the university lecture that changed everything, the opportunity that brought him into Newcastle United, and the lessons learned working with world-class players and managers across the Premier League, MLS, international football and beyond.

    Adrian and Stephen also revisit some brilliant stories from their time together at Blackburn Rovers, discuss the reality of working behind the scenes in elite sport, and reflect on the people and moments that shaped their careers.

    From dressing room characters to career setbacks, unexpected opportunities, and the philosophy that “luck is where preparation meets opportunity,” this is a fascinating look at life inside the high-performance side of professional football.

    It’s honest, insightful, and packed with stories from a career spent helping athletes perform at the very highest level.

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    1 hr and 39 mins
  • Football’s Hardest Transition: Stephen Warnock on Retirement
    Mar 4 2026

    In this special “Meet the Presenters” episode of Strain on the Game, Adrian turns the mic on Stephen Warnock — to unpack the story behind the voice.

    Stephen and Adrian kick off with a bit of life catch-up (Utah, Sydney, Kuala Lumpur), a few birthday shoutouts… and then get properly stuck into Stephen’s journey: coming through Liverpool’s academy, the influence of iconic youth coaches like Steve Heighway, and what it’s really like stepping into a first-team dressing room packed with elite names and expectation.

    From there, it’s the full, honest timeline — loans that toughened him up, the realities of rotation at a giant club, and the difficult call to leave Liverpool. Stephen opens up about adapting to constant managerial change, the whiplash of football politics, and the brutal “bomb squad” experience that can break even the most professional players.

    The heart of the episode goes deeper: Stephen speaks candidly about the mental toll of those years, retirement, losing structure, and the moment he realised he was struggling — plus the unexpected conversation that helped pull him back from a dark place. Adrian and Stephen also dig into what clubs and the PFA should be doing to support players before and after the final whistle.

    They finish with quickfire questions (Rooney, Ronaldo, Big Sam, Anfield…), a favourite performance he’d relive, and a message Stephen would give his 18-year-old self: train your mind like you train your body.


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    1 hr and 22 mins
  • The Hidden Work That Wins Football Matches
    Feb 25 2026

    his week on Strain on the Game, Stephen Warnock and Adrian Lamby Lamb flip the script with a reflective episode — looking back on recent guests and the big themes that keep coming up behind the scenes of elite football.

    From Paul Brand’s eye-opening look at how analysis has evolved (six-person departments, live-coded training, drones over set plays and half-time tweaks that change games), to the debate every modern dressing room is having: are we analysing football into autopilot — and stifling creativity along the way?

    They dig into set pieces (and why some set-piece coaches might be taking a bit too much credit…), the importance of execution over invention, and why one message keeps repeating across performance, nutrition, recovery and tactics: ask the players — because too much information can switch a dressing room off before the meeting even starts.

    Then it’s onto Luke Young, the first player guest — standards, frustrations, honesty about the modern game, and the difference between “moaning” and demanding things are done properly. Plus: training realism, the infamous four-goal game, and whether football is actually more entertaining now… or just more organised.

    Finally, they reflect on Ryan Nelsen — his unconventional path, humility, captaincy fatigue, and his compelling counter-arguments on FIFA, World Cup expansion, and why opportunity for smaller nations matters. The through-line? Trust, togetherness, communication — and what it really takes to perform when the margins are tiny.

    Plenty of laughs, a few strong opinions, and a look ahead at more big guests to come.


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    59 mins
  • “I’ll Punch You in the Face” - Ryan Nelsen on High Performance vs Mediocrity
    Feb 18 2026

    Ryan takes Stephen Warnock and Adrian Lamb inside the 2010 World Cup campaign with New Zealand, revealing the behind-the-scenes chaos that nearly derailed everything. From players forming a literal human conveyor belt for baggage in an airport transfer, to staff decisions that screamed “amateur hour,” Ryan explains how elite performers clash with mediocre structures — and why he ended up effectively taking control just to protect the team. The stories are hilarious in hindsight… but also a masterclass in what high performance actually demands.

    The conversation swings back to Blackburn and the realities of dressing-room culture: big personalities, standards, and that “collective first” mentality. Ryan and Warnie reflect on how quickly environments can change, how much leadership is about raising everyone (players and staff), and why today’s football has shifted — with players having more power, more sensitivity, and less of what Ryan calls the “smell for the game.”

    Then comes the management chapter — and it’s brutally honest. Ryan breaks down why his time at Toronto FC drained him, what he got wrong, and the truth about leadership when you’re stuck between players, staff, owners, and executives. He explains the importance of “managing up” (and why ignoring it can end you), why delegation is survival, and how one press conference moment spiralled into the end.

    From there, Nelsen opens up about something most ex-pros don’t admit: he likes to be liked — and management is a job where people are angry with you constantly. It’s why he ultimately stepped away, despite opportunities to continue.

    Finally, Ryan talks about life now: working with FIFA on building elite pathways for nations by focusing on the crucial 12–16 age group, why the 48-team World Cup matters for global development, and his balanced take on fixture congestion and competitions like the Club World Cup.

    Part 2 is packed with leadership lessons, football reality, and the kind of stories you only get when players stop sugarcoating it.

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    44 mins
  • Ryan Nelsen: The Accidental Pro — From Stanford to the Premier League (and Beyond)
    Feb 12 2026

    Ryan Nelsen’s football journey is anything but traditional — and that’s exactly why it’s so valuable.

    In this episode of Strain on the Game, Stephen Warnock and Adrian Lamb sit down with the former New Zealand captain, Blackburn leader, and ex-Toronto FC head coach to unpack a career built on graft, perspective, and a proper “do it your way” mindset.

    Ryan takes us from Christchurch United to the US college system at Stanford, where football wasn’t even the main plan (law school was). He explains how a “couple of years” in MLS turned into a title-winning spell at DC United, before a preseason game against Blackburn Rovers opened the door to a trial — and ultimately the Premier League.

    He shares the reality of jumping from MLS into England: the relentless physicality, but also the shock of suddenly having every detail looked after (“a chef making you chicken” felt like Disney World). And he’s brutally honest about how fine the margins are — one pass, one moment, one Brad Friedel save — and the entire narrative can flip.

    The lads also go deep on captaincy and culture: why Ryan never loved the armband, how Kiwi “collective-first” thinking shapes leadership, and what happens when elite environments clash with mediocre mindsets. Ryan’s World Cup stories are wild — from baggage chaos and logistical meltdowns to having to create order inside an undercooked high-performance setup… and still pulling off three iconic draws in 2010.

    There’s plenty of Blackburn nostalgia, dressing-room truths, and a big conversation on the mental toll of injuries, why players feel “helpless” when they can’t contribute, and how clubs can keep injured players meaningfully involved.

    Finally, Ryan reflects on the leap into management at Toronto FC, what he learned the hard way about “managing up,” and why knowing your own coaching DNA matters — plus what he’s doing now with FIFA helping nations build high-performance pathways from ages 12–16.


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    46 mins