And this in my view is the issue with junior rugby at the moment. If you can't distinguish between a group of elite professional athletes trying to win the most converted trophy available to them and a group of teenage athletes who, may have aspirations to someday do the former but, realistically the majority will be playing for enjoyment of the game and a sense of achievement then there is an issue. Many parents and players putting too much emphasis on winning the competition rather than improving as individuals and as a team to be the best they can be.
In the Rugby Coaching thread Huge Jarse has a great post where he outlines the Canadian Long Term Athletic Development Pathway. This pathway is the basis of many athletic development programs around the world. It focuses on how to get the best out of athletes and developing them to reach their potential. Step 2 in that process is the "training to train" phase. This is where these players are currently situated in their development pathway. The focus here is teaching proper techniques and performance of these techniques on the field rather than a focus on results of games.
There are a couple of links below to the LTPD more specific to rugby
http://www.irbsandc.com/?module=2
http://www.irishrugby.ie/development/long-term_player_development.php
The way that Junior Rugby is currently structured, in Brisbane at least, there are a large number of competitions where teams are not evenly matched. Teams will regularly ask to be put in a lower division so that they have a chance of winning a title rather than competing against other teams of their level or slightly better. In my experience some other teams will be put in a higher grade based on rumour rather than fact. While the competitions managers try and make all of the divisions fair it requires them to be supplied with the correct information by the clubs. The school system is a much better system for players from the U13-U18 age groups where players can move up and down grades as their bodies and skill level develop, or don't as the case may be.
I am not having a go at you here Karl or your Club it is just comments like the one above don't sit well with me.
Separate topic, my boy is trying out for the City Districts u12 team tomorrow afternoon. He'd be playing up a year if he gets in so I don't have any expectations.
Karl, a number of players from the met west region also missed their district trials due to lack of communication. One school even held back their players, which has 2 Brisbane South Emerald U12 reps because of the local district interschool league comp which they lost anyway. Parents of another 3 boys from the same rep side were surprised when they heard that there was even a met west side for rugby in U12's.I think it's really important.
The QRU / ARU miss so many opportunities. Look at my scenario. Ascot State School - full of Brothers players, club round the corner and yet does the School even offer the City Districts Rugby Union for participation? No. They put AFL up. Unless you were hunting for it you'd not have even known these trial games were on. It's a missed opportunity across the State School System.
Shark I think you are on the money, I have witnessed over the past couple of years a lot boys from the U11 and U12 age have switched to league because of the rep pathways. Most (rugby) boys that continue to make these league rep sides don't come back unless they fade off the radar of reps or NRL clubs, who offer development programs for 12-15 year olds, sometimes younger.I knew some of the boys that trialled at same time for the team that Karl mentioned above and made it to the next stage, which was to trial for the u12 Met North team.
That team (u12 Met North)was subsequently selected to take part in the Queensland School Sports u12 Rugby State Championships being held this weekend at the Padua playing fields. The surprising thing and why I mention it, is that I am told it is apparently the first fully sanctioned School Champs for this age in the sport of Rugby.
Rugby League has been putting similar Champs on for u11 and u12 for many many years. I just cannot believe Rugby Union is only getting its act together now.
Is it important in the scheme of things? Probably not. It can be rare for talent (at a Senior level) to be "identified" at such an age. But I am pretty sure that by having rep pathways from a younger age probably increases the attraction of talent to a sport. And once you have them hooked them in, they rarely change codes.
How the Vics go in U14s? I read they made it past the pool stage at least.
How does this work? QJRU run State Champs when the top 46 U16 players (in theory) are down our way representing QRU at National Championships?
There would be hell to pay if that occurred down here.
Anybody happy to keep an eye on the U15 and U17 state tournaments that are happening later this week on the Sunny Coast (I believe)?