Rugby Coach Weekly

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This podcast has
372 episodes
Language
Publisher
Explicit
No
Date created
2025/01/22
Latest episode
2026/02/04
Average duration
45 min.
Release period
12 days

Description

Dan Cottrell and guests discuss all the hot topics in grass roots rugby coaching from managing concussion to dealing with parents.

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Check latest episodes from Rugby Coach Weekly podcast


Building a Coaching Playbook That Actually Changes Clubs, with Charlie Farrell
2026/02/04
Send us a text What does it really take to align dozens of volunteer coaches, hundreds of players, and a whole club around one clear development pathway? In this episode of the Rugby Coach Weekly podcast, Dan Cottrell is joined by Charlie Farrell, Age Grade Rugby Director at Banbridge RFC, to unpack the thinking behind the club’s new Coaches Playbook. Designed to guide player development from first contact to First XV, the Playbook goes far beyond drills and session plans. Charlie explains why Banbridge needed a shared framework, how the five pillars (Technical, Tactical, Mental, Lifestyle, Physical) were shaped by lived coaching experience, and the very real challenges of rolling out change in a large, multi-sport community club. The conversation explores volunteer buy-in, consistency versus creativity, session planning, player behaviour, and what “success” actually looks like in age-grade rugby. Key takeaways A shared Coaches Playbook improves consistency and clarity in rugby coaching across all age groups.Effective player development combines technical skills with mental, physical, and lifestyle habits.Volunteer coaches need support, mentoring, and simple frameworks rather than rigid rules.Organised, game-based training sessions create better experiences for players and parents.Long-term development and retention are more important than short-term wins in youth rugby.Topics covered Rugby coaching frameworks Player development pathways Grassroots rugby coaching Supporting volunteer coaches Coach education and mentoring Age-grade rugby systems Building club culture through coaching To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Coaching with conviction, with Nash Cohen
2026/01/28
Send us a text In this episode of the Rugby Coach Weekly podcast, Dan Cottrell is joined by performance coach Nash Cohen to explore what it really means to coach with conviction.  From defining winning beyond the scoreboard to building trust under pressure, the conversation digs into principles, skill detail, and creating environments where players think, adapt, and grow. Nash is the Head of Player & Performance Development Jamaica UK and Programme Director Elite Rugby Academy. You can find out more about the work he does at: eliterugbyacademy.co.uk To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Why Toughness Is Misunderstood in Rugby, with Jack Heald
2026/01/21
Send us a text What does real toughness look like in rugby? In this episode of the Rugby Coach Weekly podcast, Dan Cottrell is joined by Jack Heald, Director of Rugby at Barnes RFC and rugby professional at Felsted School, to unpack what toughness truly means in modern coaching environments. Drawing on over 15 years of experience across school, club, and national league rugby, Jack challenges the idea that toughness is about bravado or confrontation. Instead, he reframes it as consistency, resilience, and the ability to turn up and perform week after week, often while balancing full-time work, study, and life pressures. The conversation explores how tough, competitive training environments are created without tipping into chaos, how feedback should be handled to build confidence rather than erode it, and why core skill development is still the most overlooked driver of long-term player success. Key takeaways for coaches Toughness is about consistency and resilience, not bravado or aggression.Competitive training environments must be intense but controlled.Players need psychological safety to make mistakes and keep learning.Feedback works best when it is individual, contextual, and proportionate.Core skills like catch, pass, and running straight underpin everything else.Long-term development matters more than short-term physical dominance.The most coachable players often outperform early physical standouts over time.Instagram: @jhealdcoaching LinkedIn: Jack Heald To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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What Really Matters When You Inherit a Losing Team, with Ross Bundy
2026/01/14
Send us a text What do you stabilise first when you inherit a team at the bottom of the table? In this episode of the Rugby Coach Weekly podcast, Dan Cottrell speaks with Ross Bundy, Head Coach of Leicester Tigers Women, about leading a rebuild in a high-pressure, semi-professional environment. Ross shares an unfiltered account of what really matters when results are hard to come by. Rather than chasing quick fixes, he explains why values, defensive standards, contact dominance, discipline, and law understanding became the foundation for long-term progress. The conversation explores how to be brutally honest while keeping belief high, how to simplify systems without lowering standards, and how to measure improvement when the scoreboard does not reflect the full picture. This is a grounded, practical discussion for coaches who are building from a low starting point and need clarity, patience, and conviction. PS, Ross is one of the youngest pro-coaches in the game right now - only 26! Key takeaways for coaches Stabilise culture before tactics: Values on and off the pitch must be clear, protected, and visible, especially when results are poor.Honesty builds trust: Players respond better to clear, direct feedback than vague reassurance, as long as progress is recognised.Defence and contact set the floor: You cannot compete consistently without collision dominance, defensive connection, and discipline.Discipline is a technical skill: Many penalties come from passive contact and poor post-tackle behaviour, not ill intent.Law understanding creates advantage: Coaching the laws deliberately leads to smarter decisions and fewer “cheap” penalties.Simplify to accelerate learning: Fewer systems, executed well, beat complexity when time together is limited.Progress is more than the scoreline: Improvements in behaviours, effort, and standards often appear before results do.Small wins matter: Tackles made, penalties reduced, values shown, and cohesion built are all markers of momentum.Catch up with Ross on LinkedIn  Or Instagram To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Why better sessions don’t start with better drills
2026/01/07
Send us a text In this episode, Dan Cottrell is joined by Phil Kearney, Associate Professor at the University of Limerick and co-founder of an organisation focused on developing a positive community of practice in skill acquisition Together, they challenge one of coaching’s most ingrained habits: starting session design with drills, outcomes, and end goals rather than with how players actually learn. Drawing on skill acquisition research, coach education, and applied examples from grassroots to performance sport, the conversation reframes what effective practice really looks like. Key points covered: Why engaging sessions can still produce very little learning.How coaches often mistake activity, enjoyment, and busyness for improvement.What skill acquisition actually tells us about how players learn and retain skills.Why starting with outcomes can distort session design and decision making.Practical principles coaches can use to design practices that transfer to the game.The best ways to engage with Phil are: University of Limerick (professional email): mailto: [email protected] LinkedIn: Active in sharing work on skill acquisition, coaching practice, and applied research. Suitable for professional introductions, collaboration requests, and podcast or event invitations. To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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KatieFest and the Power of Inclusive Rugby
2025/12/31
Send us a text In this Rugby Coach Weekly podcast, Dan Cottrell sits down with Darren Rea, John Peel, and Gareth Lewis to explore how inclusive SEND rugby has grown from a few Sunday sessions into a powerful community movement known as KatieFest. Together, they share how simple, values-led coaching has created safe, joyful, and challenging rugby environments for players with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities, while also bringing parents, carers, coaches, and clubs closer together. The conversation goes beyond drills and sessions to unpack confidence, belonging, routine, and why rugby is uniquely placed to adapt without losing its essence. From mash-ups with mainstream teams to national recognition and the ripple effect spreading across clubs and counties, this is a story about coaching with empathy, ambition, and belief. It is not about doing something “special,” but about making inclusion normal, visible, and lasting, and showing how rugby can genuinely be a sport for all. https://www.facebook.com/groups/1477604696958236/ https://checkout.justgiving.com/c/3830429 https://www.ukcoaching.org/news/uk-coaching-awards-winner-darren-rea-captures-hearts-with-‘katie-peel-haka’/ To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Building Stronger, Faster and Ultimately Better Rugby Players in the Girls’ Game
2025/12/03
Send us a text In this Rugby Coach Weekly episode, Dan sits down with Emily Pratt, Strength and Conditioning Coach for the England Women’s U20s, to unpack the brand new U16 Foundational Athletic Development and U18 Athletic Development programmes reshaping the female pathway. Emily explains how England Rugby is shifting the landscape for young female athletes. She and Dan explore: How potential is identified beyond “ready-made” athletesWhy movement competency, aerobic fitness and training age matter more than lifting heavyThe balance between school sport, club rugby, other commitments and recoveryHow to help girls build confidence around body image and trainingWhy injury rehab should be seen as an opportunity rather than a setbackHow coaches can approach conversations around the menstrual cycleWhy the entire development programme has been made freely available to all players, not just those in the pathwayEmily also emphasises that strength training is never about changing how girls look, but about helping them become fitter, faster, more resilient rugby players. If you coach girls rugby — at club, school, college or county — this episode is packed with practical guidance, player-centred insights and a clear breakdown of what “good” athletic development looks like. You can find the full programme, including videos and week-by-week sessions, on the England Rugby website: This link is to the U16 Foundational athletic development section of the website  https://www.englandrugby.com/play/parents-guardians/player-pathway/foundation-phase-girls-pathway#foundational-athletic-development- The next link is specific to the U18 Athletic Development at PDG.  https://www.englandrugby.com/play/parents-guardians/player-pathway/development-phase-girls-pathway#foundational-athletic-development- To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Confidence, Contact, and Change: The Girls Tackle Rugby Approach
2025/11/26
Send us a text In this episode, Dan sits down with India Perris-Redding, one of the driving forces behind women and girls’ rugby in the North of England. Over nearly seven years with Sale Sharks Foundation, India has shaped a transformational pathway for girls’ rugby, from primary school beginners to academy-level athletes. India shares the story behind Girls Tackle Rugby, the groundbreaking programme she built from scratch to bridge the gap between grassroots participation and the elite pathway. She talks candidly about overcoming school barriers, inspiring confidence in young players, designing game-based sessions that work, and the powerful role of female role models in helping girls see what’s possible. We explore the challenges of introducing contact safely, the surprising findings from 18 months of research with Manchester Metropolitan University, and how simple, authentic human connection can unlock a girl’s belief that she can do this. To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Designing the Future: Inside England Rugby’s Girls’ Pathway
2025/11/19
Send us a text In this Rugby Coach Weekly episode, Dan Cottrell sits down with Benny Williams, one of the leading voices shaping the girls’ and women’s game in England. As the Girls’ PDG Coach Lead for England Rugby, Benny oversees the national U18s curriculum, supports coach development, and helps identify the next generation of Red Roses. Benny takes us inside the newly designed U16 and U18 curriculums, explaining how the RFU built a consistent, adaptable, and player-centred framework across the nine development centres. She unpacks key principles like playing to best space, ball and body always moving, and back in the game, and shares how coaches can help players develop adaptable, high-skill profiles that prepare them for future environments, from PWR to BUCS and beyond. We explore: • Why the RFU restructured the pathway and built a fresh curriculum • What “highly skilled and adaptable” really means in practice • How to use walking-through, scenario design, and manipulation to teach game understanding • The role of IDPs and the GROW model in creating truly personalised development • How clubs can use this framework to help more girls stay in the game and thrive Find out more about the programmes here: Foundational Athletic Development Rugby Skills Development To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Managing mismatches, parents, and game-day transfer
2025/11/12
Send us a text Head coach Dan Cottrell is joined by Russell McClusky and Phil Greenaway for a lively, practical chat drawn from years across schools, clubs, and university rugby.  As hosts of the Little and Large Podcast, they bring a wealth of experience from their times as directors of sport and heads of games. They tackle how to handle one-sided school fixtures without punishing your best players, why the referee’s feel for the game matters, and smart ways to bring parents with you.  The trio dig into development versus performance mindsets, what to do when outside “experts” chime in, and how simplifying set piece detail can create immediate gains.  Real examples include yellow card simulations, pre-game parent emails with three clear focuses, and a lineout fix that worked the very next match. If you coach minis to seniors, you will leave with ideas you can use on Saturday. What to try first: Simple constraints and clear goals for uneven gamesWhere to invest: Off-ball organisation for quick winsHow to align: Pre-match parent comms with three weekly focusesWhen it sticks: Simplify set-piece for speed over shapeYou can contact them on the following emails: Russell [email protected] Phil  [email protected] To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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50:22 Say Less, Coach More
2025/11/05
Send us a text How much talking is too much? In this episode, Dan Cottrell and Stuart James explore how coaches can make every word count. From the power of the short, purposeful chat to the art of explaining the how, what, and why in under a minute, they share practical ways to sharpen communication and boost player engagement. Discover why the best sessions often start with fewer words, clearer intent, and more playing time — and how taking the “temperature” of your group can help you adapt what you say (and when you say it). To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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50:22 Stop Chasing Skill: Build Game Sense That Sticks
2025/10/29
Send us a text In this episode of The 50:22 Podcast, Dan Cottrell and Stu James explore why focusing on perfect technique can hold players back.  Instead of trying to tick off isolated skills, they discuss how layering, context, and repetition help players understand what to do and when to do it.  The aim is to move from drills to decisions, from repetition to recognition.  Learn how to guide players toward real game sense and long-term progress in every session. To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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50:22 The Right Kind of Pressure
2025/10/22
Send us a text In this episode of the 50:22 Podcast, Dan Cottrell and Stuart James explore how to use stress as a coaching tool, not through shouting but through smart, purposeful challenge. Discover how the right kind of pressure helps players build resilience, sharpen decision-making, and raise their own standards. Learn simple ways to add competition, intensity, and mindset training into your sessions without losing calm, connection, or control. To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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High Care, Not High Performance – Ben Herring Returns
2025/09/08
Send us a text Ben Herring returns to the Rugby Coach Weekly Podcast to dive deeper into what he’s learned from speaking to some of the world’s top coaches. Drawing on his global coaching journey and his Coaching Culture podcast, Ben shares why grassroots rugby should focus on high care rather than high performance, why the 80% basics matter more than the 1% details, and how resilience and leadership can be actively coached. This episode blends big lessons from names like Joe Schmidt, Steve Hansen and Mike Cron with practical takeaways you can use at club and school level. ✅ Key takeaways High care over high performance: Build environments that reflect what you, as a coach, truly care about.Focus on the 80%: Grassroots players need core skills done well, not the 1% “gold taps” of elite rugby.Delivery is everything: The best coaches make even the simplest drills engaging through presence, tone and standards.Coach resilience deliberately: Use structures, reviews and simple tools (like huddle blueprints) to build grit.Pressure as privilege: High-performance coaches often find joy in pressure – grassroots coaches can too, by reframing challenges as opportunities.Listen to Ben's podcast here, and discover his books as well. To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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Receptive, Resilient, Ready: A New Way to Spot Talent
2025/09/01
Send us a text In this episode of the Rugby Coach Weekly Podcast, Dan Cottrell speaks with Neil Davies – Yorkshire Chair of Coach Development, Director of Rugby at Doncaster Demons, and Lead for the South Yorkshire Girls PDG.  Neil shares their unique approach to talent identification, explaining how Yorkshire’s "Roses" model builds on the STAR framework to assess skills, resilience, and receptiveness in young players. He discusses self-nomination, taster days, individual development plans, and the balance between rugby basics and movement skills.  Some key takeaways: Talent ID works best when it’s holistic, not a box-ticking exerciseSelf-nomination builds ownership and confidence in young playersTaster days reduce nerves and showcase potential in real game settingsCatch-pass, tackle, and movement remain the non-negotiable foundationsPlayer journals and feedback in action drive real long-term growth To find out more about this podcast and many others, go to Rugby Coach Weekly To find out more about our Partner Club offer CLICK HERE Also, tap into the library of 4,000 pages of activities, advice, tactics and tips to help you become the best rugby coach you can be!
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