“It’s Important, but It’s Not Everything”: Practitioners’ Use, Analysis and Perceptions of Fitness Testing in Academy Rugby League
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Sampling and Participants
2.2. Procedure
2.3. Semi-Structured Interviews
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Findings and Discussion
2.5.1. Fitness Testing Use
2.5.2. Practitioner Interviews
2.5.3. It’s Important, but It’s Not Everything
“It’s (fitness testing) good at certain stages of the season; pre-season especially for working out loads etcetera but other tests can be misleading on how a player actually is. Some players will play a hell of a lot better than what their testing will show. So, there’s always going to be players that are just good at rugby and just switch off at (gym) training. Now they won’t switch off so that you bollock them but they won’t concentrate or exert themselves. But then you put them on a field, and you’ll be like “how’s he done that”. So, as a coach, it’s very important, just like it is with any other discipline not to just put all your eggs in one basket with fitness testing. Especially at our level, there’s too many players that get progressed through because they’re showing really good at testing, likewise if there’s a few other kids who get f****d off because they’re not strong enough”
“It’s (fitness testing) not the be all and end all, it’s in conjunction with… on the pitch. A number of other factors… you’ve got to take the individual, I suppose injuries (and) things like that, if you’re injured, you’re not going to perform to your max, there’s a lot of other factors. I suppose the big one from me, the S&C might have a different view; is that it’s in conjunction with other skills and performance and that. I suppose there are those unique players that the stats don’t particularly reflect their performance. It’s an important component in any sporting environment, I suppose if you’re not fit enough or strong enough then you can have the most skilful game but then after 20 min of the game you’re walking around and you can’t repeat the efforts then it doesn’t really matter”
“I use it (fitness testing data) to make decisions, absolutely, team selection too. But as you know yourself, there’s guys who are strong in the gym and not strong on the pitch and vice versa. There’s always been people like that. But for me, it’s as long as you are strong on the pitch”.
“(fitness testing) allows us to compare athletes of certain age groups and positions, and it helps guide us and inform our training regime. It also gives us something to take to coaches and allows us to check the effectiveness of our training programmes.”
2.6. Monitoring
“Observing wrestle and contact (sessions) which I do regular(ly). I’ll take these sessions; I can see if someone’s been put on their back. When I watch, I can see if its (the) technical aspect of the wrestle, your levers, your hips, your weight, where your head is or it’s a physical one. We had one kid last year who wasn’t strong enough and he was getting b****ed. So…. then I had another kid who wasn’t that strong in the gym, but he was that technical (he could do well). When I watch someone wrestle, you’d presume they were strong in the gym, but then you watch them, and they can’t lift a weight (in the gym)”.
We actually set up drills specifically to see whether someone has got not just physical strength but the actual attitude. We get four (tackle) shields so it’s really close, and they ramp it up through them. That’ll tell me if someone’s got like that mental and physical strength that’s needed to be a rugby player. I can tell within five minutes if somebody’s going to be any good, I’m not being big headed but if you run into those shields and you’re cowering off a little bit then you’re not going to make it (in professional rugby league). The game’s that easy, you run hard, you tackle hard”.
“I’ve nothing to do with them in the gym. I don’t really monitor so I don’t use this. What I say to [S&C coach] is “how is it going with the strength at the beginning of the year? Are there any concerns?” We’ve had players who are losing weight so we’re saying; “what’s going on here”? So, I usually just speak to [S&C coach] if (there are) any concerns. We have a meeting on a Monday, and we all have our little sections for what we speak about. So [S&C coach] will say “I’ve got a concern with this or what do you think about this”. He’ll [S&C coach] tell me what volume he wants of a typical week. I don’t say “I want all this time” I say to him “right, you tell me what you need, and I’ll work around you” it’s worked really well so far”.
“Observing in the gym, their loads, technique. I think observing in matches (is important), watching the games, sometimes you might see a lad doing really well in testing, but actually in a game situation suddenly (he) doesn’t seem to have the legs. So, I think that is then good feedback, so it’s always observing”.
“My opinion as a coach vs S&C coach. If I’m told by sport science team that were doing three kilometres today, and the sessions been poor and we’re approaching that threshold where we’ve been told to stop, then I’ve got to get that balance right knowing that I don’t want to disregard what (sport scientist) is saying. But, (if) I’m not happy with that session, (then) we need to do a bit more. I use sport science as a bit of marker where to be but it’s not everything. I’d use it as a bit of a guide and I stick to it as much as I can, but the odd time (the sport scientist) might give (me) thumbs up through (the) window, and I’ll say “we’ve got a bit more to do just yet” because we need to do this so… so that’s the challenging part”
2.7. Evaluation and Decision Making
“If I had a kid at U19 that was really strong but not the quickest and I wanted to get him powerful I’d obviously work on speed development. Again, if we got a kid that’s showing up really fit but he’s lacking on other things… there’s going to come a point in time where we know that if we don’t sort him… get him stronger, we’re going to bottleneck him. Let’s say if I’ve got an 18 year old and we like everything about him, but I’ve got a first team coach who’s going to me “he’s not big enough for what I want” obviously we need to then worry about… “right we need to do a bit of hypertrophy” so they fill out a little bit. So that’s when that will come in”
2.8. Motivation
“(we use testing data in) goal setting, development, encouragement and as a motivation tool I suppose for all the boys to sort of reflect as well and look at their data. See how they’re doing themselves and areas they need to improve on, areas they thought they were better at. If a player is falling off standards, then you can go back to analysis from 3 months ago and show… You can set goals for 3-month periods and if you’ve not achieved them you can see”
“It’s good for players to see what they’re up against. They get to see the team’s results. At the end of the day, you’re in competition. That’s professional sport, there’s literally no boundaries to where the game goes. I’d open it up to show what others (clubs) have got. I’d let every single player show their data, some players won’t give a f*** they’ll just be worried about themselves. But then all of a sudden there’s someone here who thinks they’re the bee’s knees, who’s s*** hot then all of a sudden there’s someone bigger than me, stronger and faster than me, then I think that would give them a bit of a drive”
“I’m a massive fan of the traffic light system, so green is good. So, in the gym for example, we’ve got a sheet, it’s there every day, they’re seeing it all the time, staring at it. So, when they’re showing up and they’re thinking “I’m not really feeling it today”, well, you’re at f*****g amber son, you better be feeling it. Simple as that”
“Everyone gets to see (fitness test results), (they’re) up on a board. There’s a bit of that from a psychological perspective; If you’re bang average then you need to know you’re bang average and see what good looks like”
“We’re in a competitive environment, let’s be honest, ‘I wanna get the spot over you’ so we put them in positional groups so they’re against each other”
2.9. External Challenges
“Everybody develops at a different rate so we’re talking about… we’ve got to learn not to write someone off too early. So, in the first year as a 19, just because you’re not big enough, fast enough or strong enough doesn’t mean you’re not going to be. It’s about being patient and taking your time with the player. So, I think patience and timing is the key with that”
“We can’t control everything, what the players do away from the club. But what we can do is look after this environment and make it as good as we can to encourage, guide and mould a champion at home as well as at training”
“I’ll give you a scenario, there’s four players here who are not reaching their potential because they’re physically not fit enough. So, they’ve gone through periodisation from a training perspective to try and improve them from a fitness point of view, but their body breaks down the body can’t cope with it. They have back problems, and shin splints. That’s my biggest challenge, so I’m on the case of our sport science team to try and improve the fitness of our players and bless them they’re doing the best, but these young players bodies can’t cope. Massive challenge that, and I find it very frustrating; seeing players leave the academy at the end of three years having not fulfilled their potential as their lifestyle and physical characteristics let them down. Did we do enough as coaches to help them reach their potential?”
“Speed and sprint performance is the most difficult to develop. Because, rest is required really, and coaches understanding of this. There is too much focus on mass development, and players are pre-fatigued (going) into sessions, (as well as) inappropriate recovery behaviours”
“Speed—the time it takes to do it properly. You don’t have adequate time in-season. You can’t really work on it in-season, it’s hard. It’s frowned upon by coaches, because they don’t understand the time or rest needed. I mean if you want to do… Say if you want your backs to do like 50–60 m so they get to top end speed, then you’ll need it (rest)… well, a large amount of it anyway. Technically, they say 1 min (rest) for every 10 m”
2.10. Applied Implications
2.11. Limitations and Future Research Directions
3. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Question | Coach % (No.) | S&C Coach % (No.) |
---|---|---|
How do you analyse fitness data? * | By the S&C 71% (10) | Compare to previous data 80% (8) |
Don’t know 36% (5) | Statistical analysis 50% (5) | |
Statistical analysis 21% (3) | ||
Compare to previous data 14% (2) | ||
Do you have the necessary facilities/equipment to properly conduct fitness testing? | Yes 64% (9) | Yes 50% (5) |
Fair 29% (4) | Fair 30% (3) | |
No 7% (1) | No 20% (2) | |
Do you have the adequate number of staff required? | Yes 71% (10) | No 60% (6) |
No 29% (4) | Yes 40% (4) |
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McCormack, S.; Jones, B.; Scantlebury, S.; Rotheram, D.; Till, K. “It’s Important, but It’s Not Everything”: Practitioners’ Use, Analysis and Perceptions of Fitness Testing in Academy Rugby League. Sports 2020, 8, 130. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports8090130
McCormack S, Jones B, Scantlebury S, Rotheram D, Till K. “It’s Important, but It’s Not Everything”: Practitioners’ Use, Analysis and Perceptions of Fitness Testing in Academy Rugby League. Sports. 2020; 8(9):130. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports8090130
Chicago/Turabian StyleMcCormack, Sam, Ben Jones, Sean Scantlebury, Dave Rotheram, and Kevin Till. 2020. "“It’s Important, but It’s Not Everything”: Practitioners’ Use, Analysis and Perceptions of Fitness Testing in Academy Rugby League" Sports 8, no. 9: 130. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports8090130
APA StyleMcCormack, S., Jones, B., Scantlebury, S., Rotheram, D., & Till, K. (2020). “It’s Important, but It’s Not Everything”: Practitioners’ Use, Analysis and Perceptions of Fitness Testing in Academy Rugby League. Sports, 8(9), 130. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports8090130