Rugby Coach Weekly

Dan Cottrell
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Apr 5, 2020 • 55min

Powerful game coaching and improving efficiency in training

Send us Fan MailRhys Davies is an Academy Coach Development Officer at London Irish, as well as head coach with HAC mens team in London and Berkshire Ladies. He has taken social media by storm with his great resources around being more effective as a coach when using different games. In this podcast, we develop his themes around challenges, effective coaching and how to manage training to give players a fantastic game experience. Here are the main areas we coveredHow do you challenge coaches positivelyCommon threads/areas that need to be challengedWhat are you challenging in the way they are coaching though their types of practiceWhat is the balance between games and other activities in trainingDrills – why this is still okay to use as a wordPreparing questions before training to help guide a planHow to react to a session which goes off in a different directionUsing constraints to change ways to succeed Why innovation shouldn’t always be a surprise to youGood ways to create problem-solving situationsDo all players want to play games in training, all the timeHow drill videos online are relatable to playersWhat makes games in training more powerfulWhat’s the most efficient way to introduce a gameWhat’s missing because we concentrate on winningHow do we intervene effectively during a gameGiving players more autonomy in training – practically, so all players can be access the opportunitiesThe benefits of using balls from other sports and the right balance What are the measures of success in a gameHow do we create differentiated questions, because not all the players need them same challengesTo get in touch with Rhys to find out more:@rugbyrhys9Rhys.davies@london-irish.comTo 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 29, 2020 • 20min

Effective communication policy with parents

Send us Fan MailGordon MacLelland, CEO of Working With Parents in Sport, outlines the key elements for an effective communication policy between the coach and parents.He identifies the key difficulties, practicalities and what parents want to hear and when.It is part of a series of podcasts on working effectively with parents.To find out more visit Working With Parents In Sport.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 22, 2020 • 50min

Video analysis: loads of great ways for you to get more from your footage

Send us Fan MailMark is head coach of Scottish Premiership one club, the Currie Chieftains. He is also co-founder of Coach Logic, a collaborative video analysis platform for sports. Their mantra is to #connectthegame through video. In this pod we talk about the how video analysis can be used positively by coaches, recognising that it can come with some health warnings and pitfalls. Here are some of the areas we cover:From a novice coach's point of view, where do you start when you look at footageWhat is meant by "priming" the player through videoFilming effectively with your phoneExamples of how we can watch back footage more effectivelyQuestions around players who are "off the ball"Effectively communicate our findingsHow to avoid too many "targets"Positive outcomes which makes players who want to be on filmWays to keep all the different positions involved, even if they have less "ball time" than others.How to use video of yourself to improve your own coachingDue to the extraordinary circumstances that face clubs, Coach Logic are offering their platform free to coaches for the next three months ('til June 2020).For more on Coach Logic, click here.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 15, 2020 • 47min

In practice, what should good practices really look like

Send us Fan MailGed Hall coaches across a wide range of ages and abilities. A deep thinker about his coaching, he shares with us practical solutions and thoughts around what a good training session might look like.Ged is a DPP coach with Sale Sharks, youth development manager with Sandbach RFC and a coach at Haberdashers’ Abraham Darby School.In this podcast, we delve into:What does practice design really look likeGetting the right balance between planned and unplannedWhat mastery means for different age groupsDefining purposeWhat does your coaching plan look like on a piece of A4 paperHow long should run an activity for - getting your timings rightHow to use skills zones at the right timeCoach interventions: when, how and what should be saidThe detail of coaching the tackleContesting possession: what might a good practice session look likeWhat mistakes do you see your players making and how do you help them resolve themCreating "shape" even in a chaotic game - why that might workTo 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 8, 2020 • 47min

A vision for women's game and coaching a men's team

Send us Fan MailSophie Spence, former Irish XV’s and 7’s rugby international player and now coach of Penclawdd Men’s Division 1 team, talks about her coaching journey as a converted netball player with Liza "Bird" Burgess. Her passion, love and enthusiasm for the game shines through the podcast, along with her relentless drive to become a better coach.In the pod, Bird and Sophie discuss:Moving late from netball to rugby, and how sports skills can transferFrom international rugby player into coaching, women's and men'sMoving the game into becoming professionalAdvice to aspiring coachesHow to learn from listening to others, and being vulnerableFrustrations in developing the gameCreating a girls rugby academyThe differences between women's and men's rugby coachingCoaching a men's team in WalesTo 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 1, 2020 • 57min

Learning how learning happens: creativity, practice design, Cruyff

Send us Fan MailAre your training sessions giving the players the best learning? Is your coaching allowing them to become more creative?Paul Kirschner and Carl Hendrick are leading experts in the learning world. In their latest book, How Learning Happens, they introduce us to 28 giants of educational research and their findings on how we learn and what we need to learn effectively, efficiently, and enjoyably.Using Paul and Carl's expertise, we translate their findings into sporting contexts.Here are some of the many areas we cover:The difference between playing and learningHow the coach can intervene in play to enhance learningThe inefficiency of discovery learningWhat's too much coachingHow spaced practice can accelerate learningThe key differences for learning between the classroom and the training groundWhat does "expressing yourself" really mean - and where it can go wrongWhy we might have to suppress fun and playfulness at timesMotivation and success - the mythWhy you should be thinking more about your retrieval practicesWhy schools don't kill creativity and what lessons you can learn from thatTop tips on practice designLearning why what you do works, so can keep doing it, or change to doing something elseHow Learning Happens: Seminal Works in Educational Psychology and What They Mean in Practice is out now (4th March 2020). Click here to order.And as a special offer to our listeners, you get a 20% discount if you apply this code: BSE20Paul A. Kirschner is Emeritus Professor of Educational Psychology at the Open University of the Netherlands as well as Guest Professor at the Thomas More University of Applied Science in Belgium.Carl Hendrick teaches at Wellington College, UK, and holds a PhD in Education from King’s College London.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 23, 2020 • 36min

RFU's Head of Age Grade reviews half a game rule: Gains and challenges

Send us Fan MailMark Saltmarsh, who is Head of Education and Age Grade Rugby at the RFU, tells us how the "Half a game" rule (HGR) has worked so far, and what have been the challenges.Mark gives an honest assessment of the current roll-out, with plenty of practical ways to make it work for all clubs.We covered:The principles behind the ruleWhy have a rule when good coaches should be doing this alreadySome of the main issues that have caused problems: cup games, keen players becoming demotivatedThe role of sanctions How conversations before games make it easier to implementHow HGR is being integrated into courses.For more resources on HGR go to the RFU website. Click here.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 16, 2020 • 45min

Power up your coaching and get players to think for themselves

Send us Fan MailMark Bennett MBE, a leading coach and coach developer, explains how he helps coaches to help players to think for themselves. He has very powerful methods to work across all levels of the game, to suit the player in front of you.In this podcast, we explored these areas:What is meant by a coachable playerHow to make players think for themselvesWhat tools to use, with players and with coachesThe rule of three - how it is for you, not for themWhat to set as targets so there are intrinsicHow to work with mixed ability groupsCreating Ninjas in your coaching worldMark is a former British Commando and senior instructor with the Army Physical Training Corps. He has had over 30 years of practice and research into developing his coaching and learning consultancy, Performance Development Systems (PDS).He currently works as a consultant, coach trainer and mentor with various professional and national sport organizations, teams and universities around the world, as well as schools and community sports.For more information and to contact him to see if he can help you, visit:www.pdscoaching.comTo 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 7, 2020 • 47min

How to use video analysis for training design and player learning

Send us Fan MailGeraint Davies, who coaches level 5 men's club rugby and school teams from under 11 upwards, also publishes some of the best video analysis of top professional games on YouTube. He is currently just completing his level 4 coaching award.In the podcast, Geraint explains...The benefits you and your teams get from reviewing video footage from top class games.How you translate what you see in the footage into training design.How you can vary your feedback on the footage to suit different age groups.Different ways to introduce a new technique or tactic.The right focus on when you are watching back videos.How can we watch our games in real time.You can visit his YouTube channelOr contact him via TwitterTo 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 2, 2020 • 43min

Coach like a champion: Vital insights into how to improve learning

Send us Fan MailDoug Lemov, author of Teach Like a Champion and world-renowned educational speaker, shows us how we can use simple and effective techniques on the practice ground. He has worked with sports organisations as well as his crucial work in the classroom context to create better learning outcomes.He's studied thousands of hours footage and observed teachers and coaches in wide range of situations. His work is a reflection of the best practice at work.In this podcast, we discuss:Why the classroom and sports field share so much common groundWhy most weekly planning goes wrongHow to mix up your training programme to create deeper learningHow to correct mistakes effectively and quicklyUsing "Cold calling" for engagement and your own checkpointsUsing "Turn and talk" to improve communication skillsUsing "Wait time" to help feedbackHow to avoid "rounding up" poor answersTo find out more about Teach Like a Champion, go to https://teachlikeachampion.comAlso, his sports bloghttps://teachlikeachampion.com/category/blog/coaching-and-practice/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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