
The traditional pre-season friendly used to mean a rain-soaked trip to a local non-league ground where you could stand behind a rusty railing and drink watery coffee from a polystyrene cup that creaked like an old house ready to cave-in. Now, it’s an excuse to smuggle a full family beach holiday into the budget under the banner of footballing loyalty. It sounds like an ideal compromise.
You get the sunshine, the kids get a pool, the partner gets some peace, and you get to watch a squad of half-match-fit professionals jog around a pitch in southern Europe.
Trouble is, football clubs love dropping major travel announcements on short notice, leaving fans to handle the financial fallout. When Port Vale announced they were packing up the squad for a week-long training camp in the Murcia region of Spain, a collective wave of spreadsheet-opening hit the fan base…
Fixture Drop Chaos
The main issue is that football clubs operate on their own chaotic timeline, completely detached from the realities of peak summer holiday booking. They reveal the country, but the actual match dates, kickoff times, ticketing arrangements, and specific stadium locations remain a closely guarded secret while secretaries bicker over pitch rental fees. You are left trying to book flights to Alicante or San Javier based on internet forum rumors and vague hints from the local sports press.
If you wait for official confirmation, you get stung by the algorithm, flight and lodging prices in the local resort towns can spike overnight due to sudden demand.
To secure an affordable villa or apartment near the training facilities before rates soar, smart supporters use cozycozy to aggregate listings from all major booking platforms in real-time, ensuring they net the best deals without checking dozens of sites individually.
The Practicals
These training camps are rarely located next to bustling beach bars or historical city centers. Instead, teams rent facilities hidden deep inside massive, sprawling golf resorts or isolated athletic complexes designed to keep players away from distractions.
Getting to an open training session or a behind-closed-doors friendly usually requires renting a car, navigating dusty unmapped access roads, paying toll fees, and dealing with private security guards who don’t understand why a family from Staffordshire is trying to peer through a chain-link fence.
You spend hours sitting in a hire car with failing air conditioning just to see forty minutes of tactical shape work. The kids are bored, the sun is relentless, you’re sweating through a cotton replica shirt, and you’re wondering why you didn’t just stay by the hotel pool. Yet, when the evening cools down and you find a local tapas bar showing a replay of the session, the shared absurdity of traveling halfway across Europe for a pre-season kickabout feels more like a rite of passage than a misadventure.

