
Players line up in two equal lines facing the coach on the Black cone. Coach throws the ball to one of the two players in the front of the lines. And calls 3 vs 2, 4 vs 5, etc. Higher numbers is on attack lower is on defense. Players run around cones and into the drill. Attackers try and put the ball in spac and score at the opposite cones.
Communication, allignment, and knowing where to pass the ball to make the score
This practice has no coaching points
This practice has no progressions
in more ways than one
The offload is one of rugby's most devastating weapons when executed well, turning a defensive collision into a second-phase attacking opportunity. This article breaks down the technique, timing, and training progressions coaches need to develop confident offloaders at every level.
Defensive line speed is the single most important factor in shutting down attacking opportunities before they develop. This guide explores how to coach your defensive line to push up as a connected unit, communicate under pressure, and deny the opposition time and space.
The teams winning in 2026 aren't taking risks - they're grinding out territory with relentless pick-and-go phases. Here's how to coach it.