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How touch rugby can allow your players to experiment and extend their core skills.
The first try in 2006 Tri Nations tournament included a beautiful looped pass from Australian centre Matt Rogers for Loti Tuqiri to score. To me, you don't tend to coach this type of pass on a regular basis, it comes from experimenting whilst playing. And playing touch rugby is an ideal way to try this out!
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But touch rugby offers more than a chance to try out a few fancy passes.
Fixing a defender – the most difficult basic?
Fixing a defender means committing him to the tackle just before the ball carrier releases the pass. The receiver will then have one less defender to beat.
It is a basic requirement of rugby to take a defender out of the game, albeit momentarily, because it creates spaces. But it is a tough skill to learn and perform every time.
Touch rugby makes the problem doubly difficult because defenders do not need to shape themselves for the tackle. The distribution of weight being balanced makes it easier to defend, and so defenders are less likely to be "fixed".
Solutions
Depth: avoiding lazy flat pass problems
Touch rugby can encourage a player with the ball to run up towards the defence and, with a deft pass, release a player through the gap. This type of pass does not improve either the attack or defence, and often fails anyway.
It fails because the tacklers are not lining up to take physical contact. They are therefore more balanced, so not as many gaps appear.
But more crucially, this type of pass is lazy. Players in possession know they are not going to lose the ball. The potential receiver is not braced for contact. It would be better to pass deeper to enhance skill levels.
Solutions
To encourage depth, try the following variations to the game of touch rugby:
Defence: too easy
Defence in touch rugby is easier than normal rugby because the attack cannot beat players by "bashing" through. A one hand or two hand touch allows the defender an extra 18 inches / half a metre to work in, to prevent the attacker beating them.
If the defence can be worked in a more rugby realistic way, then the benefits accrue to both sets of players.
Solutions
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