‘Stay in the Boat’ is a maxim I heard being used by the New Zealand Rowing teams during the Olympics so crews would mentally concentrate on the task at hand and not think about the finishing line.

It was identified that crews were taking a lead because of superior technique but were then getting run down over the last 500 metres because their concentration and focus moved from what was happening in the boat to what would be happening in the future, specifically at the finishing line.

“What has this got to do with Rugby” I hear you say. “Plenty” is my reply.

STAY IN THE BOAT.Having your team focus on the task at hand sounds obvious but if you have a look at any scrum in the Singer School Rugby League you will see at least one of the loose forwards preparing to depart the scrum before it is completed. Thinking about the next thing before completing the task at hand. STAY IN THE BOAT.

PaulToiaColumn

set-piece is the set-piece itselfPlayers must understand that the first part of any defence from a set-piece is the set-piece itself. Putting pressure on the opposition at scrum and line out time when you don’t have the ball is part of defending as a team. The entire team is responsible for defending just as each member of the team has a different role to play. These roles, and the resulting responsibilities, must be clearly defined so players understand where their focus lies at any one time.

Let us take defending a scrum five metres from your own try line as an example of how the forwards each have a role to play. Once the scrum is called, and before it is set, we need the communication lines open between the leaders and the rest of the forwards. Encouragement is given and the pack is reminded of how we defended this situation in training during the week. ommunicating how we are to defend against them.The link between the forwards and the backs is vital. The loose forwards and the backs need to communicate so each attacker is identified and allocated to a defender. Eye contact is important to let our team mates know that we are on the same page. Our halfback starts looking at the formation of the opposition backs, identifying threats and communicating how we are to defend against them.

All of this is happening before the referee has initiated the scrum. Now once the scrum sequence starts the importance of our eight forwards working together cannot be understated. The hooker asks the binds to be tight with his props and the whole front row must be square with the correct body shape so the power of the pack can be transferred through them to put pressure on the opposition. The locks must be low and tight as they are the engine that provides the power for our scrum. The flankers fire the props into contact and are constantly stabilising the power of the forwards to keep the scrum square. The number 8 keeps the locks tight and fires the whole pack into action as CROUCH - BIND - SETthe referee calls CROUCH – BIND – SET. Vocal communication now plays a part so all eight forward push together in unison remaining low, square and stable as the ball comes in. Does the scrum have the skill to promote the right hand side forward to hinder the pass from the halfback to the left? Can our scrum drive forward so the opposition number 8 is forced to pick up the ball while going backwards? Are we able to STAY IN THE BOAT and focus on the job at hand, each playing a role in disrupting the supply of ball for the opposition?

Untidy ball from a scum that is travelling backwards gives a defensive backline the best opportunity to close down an attack so the forwards can get out of the scrum and connect with the backs in forming a defensive wall.

So now we have successfully defended a five metre scrum our focus moves to the next task of defending our line. But that is another story for another day.