Coaching engine

AI training plans that the coach still owns.

Personalised multi-week plans, generated from the player's profile, their active goal, and your club's coaching language. Every exercise editable. Every set re-orderable. Court-side delivery built in.

Training plan clipboard with rows of exercises and an AI sparkle motif.

Generated from the player, not the template.

Click Generate plan on a player and Summit feeds the AI everything it actually needs: the player's six-axis profile, their active SMART goal, their age category, the time they have to train, and the focus areas you care about most. What comes back is a structured plan — not a wall of text. It already understands the difference between warm-up, shadow, 1v1, 2v1, 2v2, 3v2 and matchplay exercises.

The plan lives in the database as a real hierarchy: Plan → Week → Day → Set → Exercise. That means every level is editable. You can re-write the AI's intro for a week. You can delete a set. You can re-order exercises inside a set. You can swap a shadow drill for a 2v1 drill. The plan is yours from the moment it lands.

An exercise library, not just exercises.

Summit ships with a curated exercise library covering every session phase — warm-up, shadow, technical, tactical, conditioning, pairs work, matchplay. Your club can add its own exercises to its own scoped library: name, description, default duration, default reps. Once an exercise is in the library, it's available to every coach in your club and every plan they build. Each coach can also hide library items they don't use, so their picker stays tidy.

This is the bit that quietly pays itself off. Every club has a few signature drills. With Summit, those signature drills are first-class citizens. They show up in plans, in session-planner blocks, and on the player's day view with the same name and the same description every single time.

Court-side delivery, not a PDF.

A training plan that lives in a Word document dies the moment the session starts. Summit's plan delivery view is a clean, large-text, tap-friendly read-out of the day's session — the kind of surface a coach can actually use on a phone with sweaty hands between rounds. Players tick exercises complete as they finish. Coaches add diary notes against individual sets. The whole loop closes in the same surface that produced the plan.

Built-in completion reporting.

Coaches get a per-day completion report for every plan they've assigned, so the question "did the player actually do the work?" stops being a guess. Players see their own progress on their dashboard. Plans that aren't being completed surface naturally, so the conversation in the next session is data-led, not accusation-led.