SPORTSMEN AND WOMEN will always complain about pre-season.
What they love doing is playing games and and competing on the field, but to get to that point they must first present themselves for the seemingly endless slog of training to get through before the big kick-off.
Except, neither โendlessโ or โslogโ are the right words to accompany the modern rugby playerโs summer preparation. At least not any more.
Sports science is having an increasing impact in athletes of all grades rugby. Having come late to professionalism, itโs now essential that elite rugby sides dealing with bigger, faster players and therefore heavier impacts, be at the forefront.
Maybe itโs because Rob Kearney was sat in the clubhouse of Clondalkin RFC this week, closer to grassroots level than usual, that he began talking about the days when the methods were not quite so, well, methodical. The past decade has seen a big shift in how seriously clubs and coaches take sports science and the live information that can be gained from it.
โWhen [Michael] Cheika came in first we were running five or six kilometres a day. Whereas now thereโs a bit more science behind it โ hitting markers, using a lot of
GPS data.โ
Kearney points out that there is no single indicator that would determine how ready a player is to enter a competitive setting. But in the later weeks of a course of pre-season there would certainly be a heavy scrutiny on speed consistency and heart rate to see how hard players were having to work to get to those levels.
โPre-season is very much conditioning and strength based. Our strength coaches will have all your lower and upper limb targets depending on the exercises that you do - thereโs a really small gap between strongest and weakest now.โ
Before he retired, Brian OโDriscoll would often say with a grin that โthere was no hiding placeโ in training. Every lift, every sprint is recorded. The up side for players โ aside from not getting burned out.
โItโs probably not as long, but when youโre working itโs that much harder,โ Kearney says.
โI think weโre starting to realise over the last year or so that less is more. Provided that when youโre working, youโre working really hard and making good gains. Thatโs the mantra that weโre trying to bring to our training a little bit.โ
Most likely, the fullback will not feature in blue before Leinster host Scarlets in the second week of the new season. So he still has a way to go before hitting his key performance indicators and getting out on the field to do what he knows best.
โSome of the guys were back two or three weeks before us. And itโs always been around
week five or six of pre-season that youโre getting fed up. Theyโre at that stage now and just looking forward to getting some games.โ
I would have been willing them on if they hadnโt been playing my Galway. A great team with lots of individuals that deserved their All-Ireland medal. Hopefully Galwayโs time will come soon.