Read the team daily readiness board
Open the morning overview to see who's ready and who needs a conversation — before you plan.
In five minutes you'll read the morning board across your group and know who's ready, who needs a conversation, and whose load to ease — before you write a single session.
Before you start
What you'll do
You'll open the readiness report for your group, read the three inputs for each athlete, and decide who to act on. By the end you'll be able to:
- Open Team daily readiness in Analytics and point it at your group.
- Navigate to today's overview.
- Read the three inputs per athlete — health status from Medical, device recovery, and wellness.
- Spot the flags and read the athletes' notes.
- Decide who to talk to and whose load to adjust before you plan.
Steps
Open the Analytics menu and choose Team daily readiness from the left report picker. It opens into the standard report layout — a report picker on the left, a Filters block, a period navigator across the top, and the report body below.
In the Filters block, set the Group dropdown to the squad you're about to plan for. The board redraws with one row per athlete in that group.
Use the period navigator in the top bar to land on today's date, so you're reading this morning's self-reports and recovery — not history. Fill the questionnaire and check the board before training; readiness data is only useful ahead of the session.
For each athlete the row combines three things: the health status from the Medical module — the training-limitation flag, green for full training, amber for modified, red for none; device recovery for athletes who wear a device (for example WHOOP recovery or Garmin Body Battery); and wellness from that morning's questionnaire (for example sleep, stress, mood, soreness, fatigue). Read them together — a green medical status with poor sleep and low recovery is a different morning than green across the board.
Scan for the colors that need attention — amber and red training-limitation flags, and low recovery or wellness scores. The athletes' notes from the questionnaire are surfaced alongside, so when something's off ("slept badly, travel") you read it next to the numbers. Device columns are empty for anyone without a device connected — that's expected, not a problem.
Turn the read into two short lists: who to talk to (a red or amber medical flag, a worrying note, a sharp wellness drop) and whose load to adjust today (low recovery, accumulated fatigue). That's the board's job — it tells you where to look before you open Plan.