Chipping over the midfield
Against a rush defence, the chip kick is an important weapon. It requires co-ordination from the kicker and the chaser. The kicker needs to take into account the speed of the chaser for the angle and height of his chip kick.

Against a rush defence, the chip kick is an important weapon. It requires co-ordination from the kicker and the chaser. The kicker needs to take into account the speed of the chaser for the angle and height of his chip kick.
Warm up time: 5
Session time: 5-8
Development time: 6-9
Game time: 15-20
Warm down time: 7
What to think about
Unlike a winger chipping his opposite number, the chip kicker is not intending to chase his own kick. Instead, he must disguise his intentions by running first before slowing down to kick.
It is a set move so the chasers should know when and where to make their runs.
Try kicking against the direction of play. You can wrong-foot a defensive line that is sliding across the field in line with the angle of your attack. Kick the other way – to a blindside winger for example – and you can catch the defence by surprise.
set-up
- Kicker: Run forward to entice the defence and then chip the ball.
- Chasers: Stay behind the kicker and then run to where the ball will land.
What you get your players to do
Spread out four cones about 10 to 15m away from a set of posts. Put a player behind the posts to retrieve the ball.
A kicker starts somewhere behind the cones, runs to one of the cones and then towards the posts.
As he runs towards the posts, another player passes the ball to him. The kicker catches and chips the ball between the posts so it lands inside the dead ball area. Repeat the drill but the kicker runs through the cones in a different direction.
Be a more effective, more successful youth rugby coach
- Win more games, without sacrificing the crucial element of fun
- Develop every player, regardless of vast differences in ability
- Run a respected, professional programme - even with a full-time job and limited time
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