Netball: fun games

The 2025 Netball Super League season has introduced a rule that will change close games forever: no match can end in a draw. If scores are level after 60 minutes, two 5-minute periods of extra time will be played, with a one-minute break between them. If still tied, play continues until one team establishes a two-goal lead.

This is high-stakes netball. Are your players ready for it?

Understanding the Rules

The structure is straightforward:

  • Regulation: 60 minutes (4 x 15-minute quarters)
  • Extra time (if tied): Two 5-minute periods with 1-minute half-time
  • Extended extra time (if still tied): Play continues until a team leads by 2 goals

The Super Shot rule applies during extra time, adding another layer of tactical complexity. Centre passes alternate as normal. The team that wins gets 3 points; the loser gets 0.

The New Points System

The NSL has also changed the points allocation:

  • Win: 3 points
  • Loss by 5 goals or fewer: 1 point
  • Loss by more than 5 goals: 0 points

This means extra time carries enormous weight. A draw that would have given both teams 1 point now produces a winner with 3 points and a loser with 0 (unless it was already close). The stakes are higher than ever.

Physical Preparation

Extra time demands fitness. Players must maintain execution quality in potentially the 70th or 75th minute of play. Traditional 60-minute conditioning isn't enough.

Extend training games. Run scrimmages that go beyond normal match length. Players need to experience decision-making and skill execution when genuinely fatigued.

Interval conditioning. Extra time is high-intensity bursts separated by brief recovery. Design fitness work that replicates this pattern - repeated efforts with incomplete rest.

Simulation sessions. Occasionally simulate extra time scenarios in training. After a full scrimmage, announce "scores are level" and play on. This normalises the experience.

Related Drills: Build your team's endurance with our Fitness Drills for extended play conditioning.

Tactical Preparation

Substitution Strategy

You can't save substitutions for extra time if you haven't won regulation. The balance is keeping your best players fresh enough to perform in extra time while not losing the game in the fourth quarter.

Consider which players are best suited to high-pressure, fatigued conditions. Mental resilience and composure may matter more than pure skill in extra time.

Super Shot Strategy

The Super Shot applies in extra time. A single two-goal conversion can swing a game. Have a clear plan for Super Shot usage during these periods - and ensure your best long-range shooter is on court.

Extended Extra Time Awareness

If the game reaches "next two goals wins" territory, tactics simplify. Every possession is sudden death. Turnovers become catastrophic. Train your team to play with maximum care and composure in these moments.

Psychological Preparation

Extra time is as much mental as physical. Players who've never experienced it can freeze. Players who've practiced it perform.

Visualisation. Have players mentally rehearse extra time scenarios. What does it feel like to take a shot with the game on the line? To defend knowing one mistake could end it?

Positive framing. Extra time isn't a crisis - it's an opportunity. You've earned the chance to win a game that was on the edge. The team that sees extra time as exciting rather than terrifying has an advantage.

Process focus. In pressure moments, outcome focus ("we must score") creates tension. Process focus ("see the target, trust the technique") creates flow. Train your players to narrow attention to the next action, not the consequences.

Managing the One-Minute Break

Between extra time periods, you have one minute. This isn't long enough for complex tactical changes. Use it wisely:

  • Hydration and physical recovery
  • One or two key messages maximum
  • Energy and encouragement
  • Reminder of process focus

What you don't want is panicked tactical reinvention. Keep it simple, keep it positive, keep it short.

Learning from Experience

As the season progresses, some teams will accumulate extra time experience. Each situation is a learning opportunity:

  • What worked? What didn't?
  • Which players performed under pressure?
  • What would you do differently?

Document these lessons. They'll inform future preparation and give your team an edge in subsequent close games.

The Competitive Advantage

Many teams will neglect extra time preparation, focusing only on 60-minute netball. The teams that practice extra time scenarios, condition for extended play, and psychologically prepare their players will win more close games.

In a competition where points are precious, turning potential draws into wins could be the difference between finals and missing out. Prepare accordingly.

Where to Go Next

Prepare your team for the demands of extra time with these resources:

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What is the best age for girls to start netball training?

What is the best age for girls to start netball training?Submitted by email

Sportplan Team Coach, United Kingdom

Help with coaching 8 year olds what drills should i?

Help with coaching 8 year olds what drills should i use as they are playing netta netball.

brenda rogers Coach, Australia

How do I motivate my u/9?

How do I motivate my u/9 girls to continue practicing and playing netball? They are playing for a 2nd season and have not won a game yet. They only starting playing netball last year for the 1st time.

Archived User Coach

Are the rules for sub-Juniors the same as for Nettas and Juniors?

Are the rules for Sub-Juniors that same as those for Juniors or Netta?  Haven't got our rule books as yet and have our first training session this week! Any advise appreciated!

Kelly Martin Coach, Australia

How to coach kids that have never played netball before?

This year I was given the u/10 and u/11 netball girls to coach but none of them has ever played netball where do I start

Elizmari van der Watt Coach, South Africa

what if my team dont want to train? what do i do?

my team always sit down and they never want to run so what do I do. we lose nearly every game and they blame the coach but its their own fault

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Fun session to boost moral for senior girls

I would like to do a fun session with my 17 year old as we are at the bottom of the ladder and will not make finals now.

Caroline Woodford Coach, Australia

Mother and daughter netball camp

I am having a mother and daughter netball camp and would like you to help me. Do you have any suggestions on this? It is going to be helping the mothers to inspire their daughter to have the love towards netball. Thanks Dawnita

Dawnita Coach, South Africa

First training session, get to know each other

What drills should I do on the first training session for everyone to get to know each other? The girls I'm coaching are in year 3 and 4.

Zoe Coach, Australia

First Time Coach Need Guidance for 10 year olds

What easy drills can be used for 10 year olds as I have never coached before. I would like to have some fun games as well if anyone has some easy ones. Throwing skills are needing attention as well.

Kerrillea Ryde Coach, England

IN NEED OF AVDICE, girls bored at netball training

Our girls have recently become unmotivated and bored with netball, i want to make training tonight fun and exciting, does anyone have any ideas of what we can do. Drills and or bonding excersies? xx

Archived User Coach

1 player struggling what do I do!?

Hi I have a new team of 7/8 year olds and we have one very weak player that doesn't move or listen nor catch the ball. Any advice? I need to play her in all positions as they move around to learn them all but feel she needs to learn one at a time. She says she just wants to shoot but that's difficult when she can't catch. Other players aren't passing to her either as she doesn't movebinto position. Any advice would be great! The rest of the time are thriving!! Asked using Sportplan Mobile App

Coach, Australia

Planning a 12 week Junior session (6-12 yr olds)

I'm due to start coaching some 6-12yr olds in February (have a meeting ahead of that in a week). At the moment I don't have any idea about abilites or previous experience but plan to ask about that next week, though I am guessing it won't be much, especially the younger ones. At the same time, I will be hepling to mentor some new coaches to help them progress (they will be Level 1 so assistant level in England). Any good tips for starting points? I have 12 weeks with them (all 1 hour sessions). My thoughts were to start with things like basic techniques for passing and getting footwork correct before moving onto attacking and defending principles as well as making sure there are plenty of fun games they can take part in.

Anne-Marie Clegg Coach, England

First Time Coaching Year 2s.

I have played netball pretty much all of my life, but this week I will be starting to coach year 2's (age 6/7/8). I am sure they will all be new to the sport, and I could really use some advice on what to do. Any tips, or training excersices, or videos I could watch would be amazing.

Matilda Mackie Coach, Australia

hello

how to coach a yr7 team

Grace king Coach, New Zealand

Small group of mixed ages

I am coaching family netball to teach the basics. I have 3 x adults and 3 x children. Anyone got any good games I can play with them that would work for such a small group (of different heights) please?

Georgia Johnson Coach, England

Fun session to boost moral for...

I would like to do a fun session with my 17 year old as we are at the bottom of the ladder and will not make finals now.

Caroline Woodford Coach, Australia

Keeping girls motivated when l...

Hi, I'm co-coaching an U13 team. The players are a mix of experienced, but mostly inexperienced players, with a couple of players who are really talented (these are two of our inexperienced players). All players are new to each other. The girls won every game at the district grading days and we were upgraded two levels. We are now in round 6 of the competition and the girls have lost every game and we just lost from the team that was below them on the ladder. We've had a couple of injuries and one was quite bad in round 4 requiring surgery which has shaken the girls as well. They are starting to lose heart and their game is deteriorating. How do we keep them motivated?

Coach, Australia

Training with kids and parents...

Hi, This week I'm planning an extra fun training session for my U9's. After an all day carnival on the weekend, I thought having the parents join in our session could be fun. Has anybody done this and got any good ideas for games that would work for the kids and parents - any ideas for fun ways to modify the rules for a full court game that would even up the girls and parent's skills would be appreciated too. Thanks in advance.

Michelle Evans Coach, Australia

1 player struggling what do I ...

Hi I have a new team of 7/8 year olds and we have one very weak player that doesn't move or listen nor catch the ball. Any advice? I need to play her in all positions as they move around to learn them all but feel she needs to learn one at a time. She says she just wants to shoot but that's difficult when she can't catch. Other players aren't passing to her either as she doesn't movebinto position. Any advice would be great! The rest of the time are thriving!! Asked using Sportplan Mobile App

Coach, Australia

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