Rugby Coach Weekly

Dan Cottrell
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Mar 25, 2026 • 48min

The biggest myths in rugby stats, with Sam Larner

Send us Fan MailWhat really wins rugby matches — instinct or insight?In this episode, Dan Cottrell sits down with rugby analyst, journalist, and coach Sam Larner to unpack the growing influence of data in the modern game — and what it actually means for coaches on the pitch.From Six Nations trends to grassroots realities, Sam brings clarity to the numbers behind performance. Together, they explore why territory often matters more than possession, how 22 entries shape outcomes, and why some of rugby’s most quoted stats might be misleading.The conversation goes beyond the spreadsheets. Sam challenges the idea that the game can be “solved” by data alone, arguing for a balance between analysis and feel — and offering practical ways coaches can use simple metrics to improve decision-making without overcomplicating their sessions.You’ll also hear:Why kicking is often the right decision — even when it frustrates fansThe truth about penalties and disciplineHow to use data effectively at grassroots levelWhich stats actually matter — and which ones to ignoreClick here to buy the book. To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach WeeklyTo find out more about our Partner Club offerCLICK HEREAlso, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Mar 18, 2026 • 53min

What Instagram clips don’t show about coaching, with Sam Mace of SMPerformance

Send us Fan MailIn this episode of the Rugby Coach Weekly podcast, Dan Cottrell speaks to coach and former professional player Sam Mace about the journey from playing to coaching and the lessons that shaped his philosophy.Sam played professionally in Major League Rugby with the Toronto Arrows, before concussion injuries forced him to retire early. That experience changed the direction of his career and sparked a passion for coaching that is now reaching thousands of players and coaches online through his SMPerformance platform.In this conversation, Sam explains what truly energises him about coaching. For him, the biggest influence was the feeling of being supported by great coaches and the opposite experience of feeling small or unwanted. That contrast shaped his commitment to creating environments where players feel belief, ownership and agency over their own development.Dan and Sam explore how honest conversations build trust, why players improve more when they understand why they are not selected, and how coaches can balance challenge with care.They also dive into coaching contact skills, discussing the technical side of tackling, the importance of control rather than aggression, and why the best defenders focus on precision and positioning rather than simply hitting harder.Along the way, Sam reflects on social media coaching, the limits of short-form content, and why great coaching is always about the human connection behind the technique.Key themesBuilding belief and agency in playersHonest feedback and player ownershipCoaching confidence after mistakesTeaching tackling through precision and techniqueThe difference between social media coaching and real coachingIf you want to connect with Sam, you can find his coaching content at SMPerformance on Instagram. To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach WeeklyTo find out more about our Partner Club offerCLICK HEREAlso, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Mar 11, 2026 • 58min

Sustainable performance in high-pressure environments

Send us Fan MailWhat does sustainable performance actually look like in elite sport and leadership?In this episode of the Rugby Coach Weekly podcast, Dan speaks with Lúcás Ó’Ceallacháin, a high-performance coach and leadership specialist who has worked across rugby, wrestling, artistic swimming, ballet and Olympic systems worldwide.Lúcás helps leaders build performance “one brick at a time” through social learning, psychological safety and deliberate coaching design. From coaching in Russia and Kazakhstan to supporting Olympic programmes and even ballet companies, he shares powerful lessons about:• Why psychological safety is misunderstood• The balance between accountability and freedom• How culture shapes coaching effectiveness• Why framing matters more than motivation• How small check-in rituals can transform team dynamicsThis conversation goes beyond theory. It explores what it really means to be the adult in the room — to create clarity, set standards and invite contribution without losing performance edge. To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach WeeklyTo find out more about our Partner Club offerCLICK HEREAlso, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Mar 4, 2026 • 60min

Be the adult in the room, with Tara Lynn

Send a textWhat does it really mean to be the adult in the room?In this powerful and honest conversation, I sit down with Tara Lynn, transformational coach and trusted adviser to high performers who have reached the edge of what got them here. We explore how leaders and coaches can regulate themselves under pressure, avoid slipping into “parent” or “child” reactions, and communicate with clarity instead of ego.Tara shares her A.D.U.L.T framework, breaks down the difference between training and coaching, and explains why language, timing and self-awareness determine whether challenge feels like growth or threat.We also unpack:How to stay calm when others are notWhy attachment to outcomes undermines leadershipThe fine line between coaching and rescuingHow men can communicate with women without patronisingWhen to engage… and when to walk awayTo find out more about Tara and get in contact with her:https://www.linkedin.com/in/taralynncoaching/www.taralynncoaching.com  To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach WeeklyTo find out more about our Partner Club offerCLICK HEREAlso, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Feb 25, 2026 • 59min

Skill Acquisition Without the Noise and Coaching Through Mistakes with Job Fransen

Send a textIn this episode, Dan Cottrell is joined once again by skill acquisition specialist Job Fransen, Associate Professor at Charles Sturt University and Managing Director of SkillACQ.Together they explore what really matters in coaching practice design, feedback, and player development.Job shares why elite coaches rarely need “disrupting,” why most coaches intervene too quickly, and why sometimes the best coaching decision is to step back and let players solve the problem.They dig into:Coaching through mistakes rather than stopping at phase threeWhen feedback helps learning… and when it creates dependencyWhy prescriptive feedback should be used sparinglyHow confidence and competence are not the same thingThe controversial place for drills in developing short-term performanceWhy skill acquisition science cannot prescribe one “best” method🔑 Key TakeawaysPlayers often detect and correct errors themselves. Coaches may be over-intervening.Feedback is powerful. Use it deliberately, not habitually.Prescriptive feedback can create dependency if overused.Letting play continue through errors can enhance collective learning.Not all improvement is conscious. Players do not need to verbalise change to learn.Drills can build short-term confidence, but they do not equal long-term learning.The best coaches are obsessive about craft, but open to nudges, not disruption.There is no universal “best practice.” Context and coach intuition matter.Find out more here:www.skillacq.com www.skillacq.com/pathways/build To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach WeeklyTo find out more about our Partner Club offerCLICK HEREAlso, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Feb 18, 2026 • 48min

Inside The Rugby Paper: How rugby stories are built every week

Send a textWhat actually happens on a Saturday night when the final whistle blows and rugby stories still need to be told?In this episode of the Rugby Coach Weekly podcast, Dan is joined by Ben Jaycock, assistant editor at The Rugby Paper, to explore how parts of a national rugby newspaper are produced under extreme time pressure.While much of The Rugby Paper is planned days in advance, Ben explains how key match reports, ratings, and analysis are written live as games unfold and filed within minutes of full time, ready for a Sunday morning readership that already knows the score.The conversation lifts the lid on writing for readers who have watched the game, not those discovering the result, why creativity matters more than formula, and how editors balance honesty, criticism, and respect for players, coaches, and referees.They also discuss the importance of grassroots coverage, why The Rugby Paper resists clickbait, and what excites Ben about the modern game despite its financial challenges.A thoughtful insight into rugby journalism, storytelling, and why good reporting still matters to the health of the sport.Reach Ben on XSubscribe to The Rugby PaperGet weekly rugby union coverage from internationals to grassroots attherugbypaper.co.uk/subscriptions To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach WeeklyTo find out more about our Partner Club offerCLICK HEREAlso, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Feb 11, 2026 • 53min

Building the future of English rugby, with Steve Grainger

Steve Grainger, Executive Director of Rugby Development at England Rugby, oversees community participation, coach development and club support. He discusses grassroots change from schools to clubs. Topics include workforce evolution, coach mentoring and digital learning. They cover T1 Rugby, connecting clubs and balancing club, school and pro commitments.
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Feb 4, 2026 • 52min

Building a Coaching Playbook That Actually Changes Clubs, with Charlie Farrell

Send a textWhat does it really take to align dozens of volunteer coaches, hundreds of players, and a whole club around one clear development pathway?In this episode of the Rugby Coach Weekly podcast, Dan Cottrell is joined by Charlie Farrell, Age Grade Rugby Director at Banbridge RFC, to unpack the thinking behind the club’s new Coaches Playbook. Designed to guide player development from first contact to First XV, the Playbook goes far beyond drills and session plans.Charlie explains why Banbridge needed a shared framework, how the five pillars (Technical, Tactical, Mental, Lifestyle, Physical) were shaped by lived coaching experience, and the very real challenges of rolling out change in a large, multi-sport community club. The conversation explores volunteer buy-in, consistency versus creativity, session planning, player behaviour, and what “success” actually looks like in age-grade rugby.Key takeawaysA shared Coaches Playbook improves consistency and clarity in rugby coaching across all age groups.Effective player development combines technical skills with mental, physical, and lifestyle habits.Volunteer coaches need support, mentoring, and simple frameworks rather than rigid rules.Organised, game-based training sessions create better experiences for players and parents.Long-term development and retention are more important than short-term wins in youth rugby.Topics coveredRugby coaching frameworksPlayer development pathwaysGrassroots rugby coachingSupporting volunteer coachesCoach education and mentoringAge-grade rugby systemsBuilding club culture through coaching To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach WeeklyTo find out more about our Partner Club offerCLICK HEREAlso, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Jan 28, 2026 • 52min

Coaching with conviction, with Nash Cohen

Nash Cohen, performance coach and Programme Director at Elite Rugby Academy, shares coaching conviction from halftime turning points to youth development. He explores teaching through gamified drills, tackling as a momentum tool, pass mechanics, and using simple principles like time, space and possession. Short cues, tempo, and pedagogy over content recur throughout the conversation.
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Jan 21, 2026 • 54min

Why Toughness Is Misunderstood in Rugby, with Jack Heald

Jack Heald, Director of Rugby at Barnes RFC and an experienced rugby professional, challenges traditional notions of toughness in rugby. He redefines it as resilience and consistency rather than aggression. The discussion highlights the importance of creating competitive yet safe training environments and how tailored feedback can enhance player confidence. He emphasizes core skills like catching and passing as crucial for long-term success, arguing that coachability often trumps raw talent in player development.

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