One sign of a well coached team is the quality of the ball placement after the tackle. These vital moments can give you the best chance for recovery and continuity. Your players need to use a variety of styles of placement, depending on the type of contact they take.
One sign of a well coached team is the quality of the ball placement after the tackle. These vital moments can give you the best chance for recovery and continuity. Your players need to use a variety of styles of placement, depending on the type of contact they take.
Warm up time: 5-7
Session time: 5-10
Development time: 8-12
Game time: 15-20
Warm down time: 5-7
What to think about
There are five placement techniques.
Traditional: The ball carrier places the ball back from the tackled position. He can either keep the ball close to his body or at an arm’s length.
Jack knife: The tackled player thrusts his upper body back towards his own team.
Long placement: The tackled player lies prone with his feet towards the opposition.
Squeezeball: The tackled player rests on his knees and posts the ball through his legs.
360s: The ball carrier rolls in the tackle before placing the ball.
Each has strengths, and not every type is suitable for the situation the ball carrier finds himself in.
set-up
Fight to the ground when you are tackled, to give yourself the upper hand in the tackle situation.
Use the ball placement technique that secures the ball first for your team and then provides the best ball to play with.
What you get your players to do
Split into groups of three with a ball. Nominate a type of placement. Have the ball carrier run into another player. He drops to the ground and places the ball.
Rotate the players and the types of placement Also, change the height of the tackles, using ruck pads and tackle suits to act as different stimulus.
Finally, have the third player act as support to drive off or over the tackler.
Four different ways to place the ball. Players need to choose which one suits them and the tackle situation best.
Development
Set up the players as in the bottom picture. Throw the ball to either player 1 or 2 and call out letter “A” or “B”. The ball carrier aims to score at the other end, whilst the lettered player comes out to tackle him. In the meantime, the other players run to the nearest corner to support their team mate.
Related Files
Advanced-218-ball-placement.pdfPDF, 155 KB
The tackled player uses his forward momentum to roll over once before placing the ball, creating a moving target for would be poachers.
Game situation
Split into two teams. Put some of the players from each team in the box and throw in a ball. The team in possession has to retain possession for 20 seconds or score a try. They get one point for either. After each attempt, change personnel. Ensure that sometimes the attacking team has more or less players than the defence.
Shout out the letter of the tackler as you pass the ball to an attacker. The other players run to a corner before supporting.
What to call out
“Land on your body not the ball when you fall”
“Use your legs and shoulders to twist and turn in the tackle”
Dan is a practising RFU Level 3 coach and coach educator. He is head coach of Bristol Schools U18s, assistant coach with City of Bristol Schools U16s and the Rugby Performance coach for Bristol Grammar School. Dan is also a coaching and development consultant for World Rugby Development Programmes, and club performance adviser for St Mary's Old Boys.
He was a lead coach with the Bristol Bears DPP programme, head coach of Swansea Schools U15, Young Ospreys Academy, assistant coach ...
Register now to get a free ebook worth £10
Get this brilliant ebook worth £10 for FREE when you register now
This session works on players taking the ball into contact in groups of four. This is most likely in a game when you know the opposition is ...
Newsletter Sign Up
Join over 75k coaches that are saving time searching for fresh coaching ideas with our free email newsletter: ✔ New drills ✔ New games ✔ New warm-ups. Delivered direct to your email inbox
"A practical and value-for-money great investment"
Gary Lee Heavner
"Rugby Coach Weekly is an invaluable coaching tool! I find myself going to it more and more to prepare for our coaching sessions. The ideas and drills seem endless."
Subscribe Today
Weekly Magazine
Online Library
Email Newsletter
Discover the simple way to become a more effective, more successful rugby coach
In a recent survey 89% of subscribers said Rugby Coach Weekly makes them more confident, 91% said Rugby Coach Weekly makes them a more effective coach and 93% said Rugby Coach Weekly makes them more inspired.
Rugby Coach Weekly offers proven and easy to use rugby drills, coaching sessions, practice plans, small-sided games, warm-ups, training tips and advice.
We've been at the cutting edge of rugby coaching since we launched in 2005, creating resources for the grassroots youth coach, following best practice from around the world and insights from the professional game.