RUGBY FITNESS
TRAINING
By
Brett
Burdick
Coaching Coordinator
Virginia Rugby
Union
Over the last few years I
have been asked frequently about the availability of
information on Rugby Fitness Training. In general,
there is no readily available information about how
to train for our sport. As an initial attempt to
rectify this I have cobbled together this program. I
have used it myself, have given it to several of the
teams that I coach, and have found it to be a pretty
good system. Before you get too deep into it,
however, I need to provide a couple of
caveats.
I am not a fitness guru nor a trained
fitness instructor-I am a user of fitness
information. There is no doubt in my mind that this
system can (and should) be improved upon by
professionals in this field. What I am providing in
this system is one that I have found to be useful. I
can tell you for a fact that it works to increase the
overall fitness level of Rugby players. I will leave
it to those who do this sort of stuff for a living to
find (and correct) any deficiencies.
The
sources of this information are several. The weight
training stuff was inspired by a book written many
years ago about the Penn State Football Strength
Training Program. It provides a template for
effective, efficient, and rapid strength gain. The
Interval Program is stolen (unabashedly) from some
stuff handed-out by former ERU, MARFU, and USARFU
Coach Clarence Culpepper many years ago. The
Plyometrics information was gleaned from many sources
in this relatively new field and, frankly, one that
is poorly understood by Rugby coaches in
general.
If you already have a fitness program
for your players or yourself, good. I offer this
program as a comparison to what at least one other
Rugby coach is doing. If you do not have such a
program in place, I am providing this as a place to
start. I encourage each coach and player to review
it critically and to modify it to meet your
needs.
Cheers
Another excellent
rugby fitness link. Click here.
EXAMPLE RUGBY
FITNESS TRAINING PROGRAM
CLUB TRAINING
SCHEDULE
Offseason- From the end of
previous season to eight weeks before the first Club
Practice of the next season.
Monday Weight
Training and Plyometrics
Tuesday Interval
Training or other activity
Wednesday Weight
Training and Plyometrics
Thursday Light and Easy
Interval Training
Friday Off
Saturday Any
Sports Activity or Fartlekking
Sunday Long Slow
Distance
Preseason - Eight weeks before the
first Club Practice of the next season to the first
Club Practice.
Monday - Weight Training and
Plyometrics
Tuesday - Interval
Training
Wednesday - Weight Training and
Plyometrics
Thursday - Interval Training
Friday
- Off
Saturday - Fartlekking
Sunday - Long
Slow Distance
Inseason - From the first Club
Practice through the end of the season.
Monday
- Weight Training and Plyometrics
Tuesday - Club
Practice
Wednesday - Interval Training
Thursday
- Club Practice
Friday - Off
Saturday - Club
Match or Fartlekking
Sunday - Long Slow
Distance
NOTES ON
TRAINING
1. WEIGHT
TRAINING
At a minimum, the following
exercises should be performed. The emphasis is on
upper body strength since all of the running involved
will work the lower body a lot. Still, some strength
and flexibility training of the lower body should be
included.
1. Military Presses-- From a
sitting position pushing weight directly over your
head.
2. Deltoid Lifts-- From a sitting
position lifting weight outward and to the
side.
3. Biceps Curls-- From a sitting
position lifting weight by bending your
arms.
4. Triceps Extensions-- From a sitting
position lifting weight by extending your
arms.
5. Pull Downs-- From a sitting position
pulling weight downward and behind your
neck.
6. Butterflies-- From lying on your
back with your arms either fully extended or bent at
the elbow lifting weight from your sides without
bending your arms (i.e.-not using you biceps to lift
the weight).
7. Leg Curls-- Like Biceps Curls
except using your legs while lying on your
stomach.
8. Leg Extensions-- Like Triceps
Extensions except using your legs while
sitting.
9. Anything Else that Suits Your
Fancy-- Hand and wrist strengthening exercises, neck
work for front row players, situps, stomach crunches,
or whatever.
Choose a weight with which you
can perform at least 8 reps and no more than 12. If
you cannot do 8, go on to the next exercise and
remember to pick a lower weight next time. If you can
lift more than 12, move on and next time pick a
higher weight. All lifts are done to a count of TWO
TO LIFT, a count of FOUR TO LOWER. The goal is to
reach "momentary muscular failure," that is that you
cannot lift any more weight without resting. Move
immediately to the next exercise. YOU NEED ONLY TO
PERFORM ONE SET PER TRAINING PERIOD.
As a
general rule, the Offseason is the only time you will
see significant strength gains. In the Preseason and
Inseason periods there are too many other activities
going on and too many nagging little injuries for you
to concentrate on strength. Encourage your players
to continue weight training in the Offseason and you
will see a stronger, fitter team come next
season.
br>2. INTERVAL
TRAINING
A simple interval training
exercise set is as follows:
One 25
One
50
One 75
One 100br>One 75
One 50
One
25
Total for one set = 400
yards.
Between runs walk back to the starting
line and run the next sprint. The 25's and 50's are
run at full pace, the 75's and 100's at 80% or so.
The best way to run them is to find a football,
soccer, or Rugby pitch. For a Rugby pitch, begin at
the midline and sprint to one 22, turn around and
sprint to the far 22, turn around and run (80%) to
the goal line, turn around and run (80%) to the other
goal line, turn around and run (80%) to the far 22,
turn around and sprint to the other 22, turn around
and sprint to the midline. That's one
set.
You will do better if you can run these
with a partner. Your brain will tell you that you
are tired long before you need to stop. Running with
a partner will probably keep you going through the
exercise.
In the Offseason and early Preseason
you should shoot for four (1,600 yards) to six (2,400
yards) sets. In the later Preseason and during the
Inseason period you should be looking at five (2,000
yards) to eight (3,200 yards) sets. Remember, one
mile is 1,760 yards.
The purpose behind
Interval Training is to stress your body and to
decrease the recovery time you need to take. In the
Offseason, allow a work to rest ratio of one-to-four.
In the late Preseason and the Inseason the work to
rest ratio should be around one-to-three or
one-to-two (very businesslike).
I have also
attached a nine week Interval Training Program
(below) that details an alternative and more
structured approach.
3. INTERVAL
PROGRAM
This Interval Training
Program is a two night per week, nine week course
designed to develop acceleration, speed, and
endurance. All Intervals are run at either FULL
SPEED (flat out) or at FAST SPEED (75% to 85% of
maximum effort) with a brisk walk and/or jog back to
the start. Alternate starting foot with each run.
The Program is quite demanding and NO SUBSTITUTE
ACTIVITIES ARE ACCEPTABLE!
WEEK ONE
(yards/miles)
Tuesday 2 x 440 yards
(FAST)
4 x 220 yards (FAST)
(1,760/1.00)
Thursday 4 x 330 yards
(FAST)
2 x 110 yards (FAST)
2 x 110 yards
(FULL) (1,760/1.00)
WEEK TWO
Tuesday
3 x 440 yards (FAST)
3 x 220 yards (FAST)
(1,980/1.13)
Thursday 2 x 330 yards
(FAST)
2 x 220 yards (FAST)
2 x 110 yards
(FAST)
2 x 110 yards (FULL)
(1,540/0.88)
WEEK THREE
Tuesday 4 x
440 yards (FAST)
5 x 85 yards (FULL)
(2,185/1.24)
Thursday 1 x 440 yards
(FAST)br>2 x 220 yards (FAST)
5 x 110 yards
(FAST)
4 x 85 yards (FULL)
(1,770/1.01)
WEEK FOUR
Tuesday 4 x 85
yards (FAST)
4 x 110 yards (FAST)
1 x 220 yards
(FAST)
8 x 55 yards (FULL)
1 x 220 yards
(FAST)
4 x 110 yards (FAST)
4 x 85 yards
(FULL) (2,440/1.39)
Thursday 2 x 220 yards
(FAST)
4 x 110 yards (FAST)
WEEK FIVE
Tuesday 11 x
25 yards (FULL)
7 x 85 yards (FAST)
3 x 110
yards (FAST)
3 x 220 yards (FAST)
3 x 110 yards
(FAST)
2 x 85 yards (FAST)
11 x 25 yards
(FULL) (2,635/1.50)
Thursday 2 x 220 yards
(FAST)
6 x 110 yards (FAST)
9 x 25 yards
(FULL) (1,325/0.75)
WEEK SIX
Tuesday
4 x 220 yards (FAST)
3 x 110 yards (FAST)
3 x
110 yards (FULL)
5 x 85 yards (FAST)
5 x 85
yards (FULL)
1 x 440 yards (FAST)
(2,830/1.61)
Thursday 2 x 440 yards
(FAST)
2 x 220 yards (FAST)
6 x 110 yards
(FULL) (1,980/1.13)
WEEK SEVEN
Tuesday
2 x 330 yards (FAST)
12 x 55 yards (FULL)
1 x
330 yards (FAST)
10 x 85 yards (FULL)
1 x 330
yards (FAST)
10 x 25 yards (FULL)
(3,080/1.75)
Thursday 1 x 330 yards
(FAST)
10 x 85 yards (FULL)
9 x 25 yards
(FULL)
10 x 55 yards (FULL)
9 x 25 yards
(FULL) (2,180/1.24)
WEEK EIGHT
Tuesday
10 x 110 yards (FAST)
10 x 85 yards (FULL)
10
x 55 yards (FULL)
26 x 25 yards (FULL)
(3,150/1.79)
Thursday 19 x 25 yards
(FULL)
15 x 55 yards (FULL)br>10 x 110 yards
(FULL) (2,400/1.36)
WEEK NINE
Tuesday
15 x 25 yards (FULL)
10 x 55 yards (FULL)
5 x
85 yards (FULL)
3 x 110 yards (FAST)
2 x 220
yards (FAST)
3 x 110 yards (FULL)
5 x 85 yards
(FULL)
10 x 55 yards (FULL)
15 x 25 yards
(FULL) (3,800/2.16)
Thursday 3 x 220 yards
(FAST)
2 x 110 yards (FULL)
10 x 85 yards
(FULL)
10 x 55 yards (FULL)
14 x 25 yards
(FULL) (2,630/1.49)
4.
FARTLEKKING
Fartlek is a Scandinavian
word meaning "speed play." The exercise is
unstructured and allows you to sprint, run, and walk
over varied terrain. Rugby Fartleks, however, are a
bit more structured.
Use a High School or
College 440 yard track. Starting at the middle of
one straightaway jog to the middle of the first turn
(110 yards). Sprint through the rest of the turn (55
yards) and jog to the middle of the straightaway (55
yards). At this point an exercise is performed (10
jumping jacks, 10 pushups, 10 star jumps, or 10
situps, rotating through). Following the exercise
the jog-sprint-jog is continued to the next
straightaway and exercise. Once through all four
exercise stations is one-half mile. Keep it up for
at least 30 minutes. 60 minutes is even better, once
you get to that fitness level.
5. LONG
SLOW DISTANCE (LSD)
This is what
everyone thinks of as jogging. LSD by itself will
not get you fit enough to play Rugby! It is useful
to build a good aerobic base upon which all other
training is based. Shoot for 30 to 40 minutes (or
more) of running at an enjoyable pace. It is
especially useful for spreading out and eliminating
the lactic acid built up during a match (hence its
use on Sundays). The Sunday runs may be as little as
15 to 20 minutes. At no time, however, should LSD be
considered a realistic substitute for any other
training activity given in this Program. The "guts"
of this Program are the Intervals and the Fartleks.
You need to do them (religiously) in order to get the
benefit!
6. RUGBY-SPECIFIC
PLYOMETRICS
Plyometrics require a
complete warm-up (high knee marching, stretching,
skipping, lunging, slow running with exaggerated
movements, etc.). They are not high intensity/long
duration exercises (like sprints). They are more
like explosive, ballistic, maximum power exercises
with a fairly long recovery time in between. We need
to focus on quality of the exercise rather than
quantity. The recovery time is necessary to allow
your body to replenish the creatine phosphate energy
system. If you do not allow recovery time, you are
dipping into the lactic acid cycle and, eventually,
the aerobic system. Neither of these produce the
power we are seeking. (Be sure to wram-down at the
end of the session, too.)
This means that
there is a lot of "down time" when doing plyometrics.
This is OK! Do them on days when you won't be
running much-- maybe in conjunction with upper-body
weight lifting/strength training-- as they focus on
leg work. Use the down time for mental rehearsal and
imagery of what you will be doing next Saturday on
the Rugby pitch!
This program is only
suggestive. It involves about "400 foot contacts"
(that's a lot!) through various plyometric exercises
(do not count warm-up exercises as "foot contacts").
You can alter the composition of the program, but do
not exceed the 400 foot contacts. Work to rest ratio
means the ratio between the time it takes to complete
a sets of repetitions and the rest time between
sets.
1. Depth Jump with 180 Degree
Turn:
Jump/step off of a bench (18" high or
more), land on both feet, immediately jump as high as
you can turning 180 degrees and land on both feet.
Repeat. Alternate direction of turn with each
repetition. Increase the difficulty by jumping up
onto another bench or box (not really necessary,
though). Perform 10 sets of 4 with a work to rest
ratio of 1:5 or 1:10 to allow complete muscle
recovery between sets (i.e.- if you perform 4 jumps
in 20 seconds, rest for 100 to 200 seconds-- 1.5 to 3
minutes-- between sets).
40 foot
contacts
2. Depth Jump with 360 Degree
Turn:
Same, but increase power of turn so that
you go 360 degrees. Perform 10 sets of 4 with work
to rest ratio of 1:5 or 1:10.
40 foot
contacts
3. Pyramiding Box Hops:
Set up
three benches, boxes, stools, chairs, etc. (18" high)
two to three feet apart. Start from the ground
hopping up (swinging both arms at same time) onto the
bench/box, then the ground, then the next bench/box,
then the ground, etc., walk back to the start.
Perform 10 sets of 4, work to rest of 1:5 or 1:10.
120 foot contacts
4. Barrier
Hops:
Set up three hurdles (can be anything),
18" to 24" high. Hop over each in line. Walk back
to beginning. Perform 10 sets of 4.
120 foot
contacts
5. Alternate Bounding:
This is
actually an exaggerated running action. Begin with a
short (10 yard) jog to get up to speed. At the
starting line begin "bounding," pushing off hard with
each step. The trailing leg should be extended, the
knee bent (kick up your heels), and the leading leg
extended as far forward as possible before landing
without "braking" your momentum.. Go as far as
possible and stay in the air as long as possible with
each step. Bound 10 steps and walk back to the
beginning. Perform 8 repetitions.
80 foot
contacts