I would think that any S&C specialist would suggest there is a considerable deal more than doing an extra lap, for brilliant fitness. I would have thought the same on kicking accuracy, it's not just the number of practice shots but what you do in the process.
Whether we are talking skills, kicking, fitness, strength, rugby nous, tactics, game play - there is only one consistent theme. Coaching.
Disagree.
The players themselves are also a consistent theme.
They can choose to do no more than their lawyer given rights forces them to do under their RUPA CBA (which was comically short a couple of years ago) , or they can choose to do the extras and work on their basic skills (and that absolutely means working on the accuracy of those skills).
That has absolutely zero to do with coaching in any way, shape or form. It's 100% the fault of the players.
Can't execute a game plan built around 3rd or 4th phase positions if there is little chance of retaining the ball on the 1st or 2nd tackle.
Go ask Wayne Bennet how often he trains players how to pass in his first grade NRL teams... The answer is never - he repeatedly talks about that in his coaching clinics to the high school elite players - he expects they can pass accurately so he can spend his time coaching them the advanced stuff like game plans etc.
No musician walks into band practice and wastes everyone else's time while they do scales. The scales are done beforehand in prep for the practice.
These players are not doing anything like what they should be doing for their own professional development and it shows.