L
Linebacker_41
Guest
HJ, INSEAD could do a 10 year study on ARU management between 2004 - 2012 and still come up scratching their heads.
Hmmm - maybe a good PHD topic?
I always wanted to be Dr Linebacker_41.
HJ, INSEAD could do a 10 year study on ARU management between 2004 - 2012 and still come up scratching their heads.
So how many injuries are actually relevant, ie. not one offs from tackles
James O'Connor (hamstring)
Rob Horne (hamstring)
Sitaleki Timani (hamstring)
Stephen Moore (hamstring)
Sekope Kepu (calf)
there's not that many that can be put down to poor conditioning/workload
Genia and Pocock's injuries were unavoidable?
Gaggerland Head of Selectors Qwerty first announced Team Rehab on 9 September.
Assistant Selector Bullrush announced some positional changes:
Last Friday, a soon to be ex Chief Rugby Correspondent had a lash at selecting the team which was not too dissimilar to the Gaggerland Team Rehab.
Once again Gaggerland scoops the snouts with ideas and concepts for them to pinch as if they were their own ideas.
Yes, Nuci seems to be closing the gate after Team Rehab horses have bolted from the canyon. Proactive ---- If this is proactive, then my Aunt Fanny is Uncle Henry.
I am quite familiar with GPS equipment - my club has them - but for the life of me I cannot work out how much additional information such a relatively crude instrument would provide in assessing "training load and intensity" over standing on the sideline and simply observing. In a sport such as ours a GPS unit will tell you that in a scrum, maul or breakdown drill you are not covering very much distance, but not a huge amount more which might be relevant to soft tissue injuries such as those which have apparently sidelined the majority of the players named.Nucifora said new software monitors and processes daily information on a player's welfare, including things like training load and intensity through GPS units, well-being and ongoing physical state.
"A sports medicine expert", eh? That's Twenty-First Century thinking, David. Why haven't the franchises cottoned onto this themselves? I'm getting a real stirring in the nether regions about the prospects for Australian rugby now that we've engaged "a sports medicine expert". And I know it makes sense because my club uses a few of them.A sports medicine expert has been employed by the ARU to monitor the data, help the states use and interpret the system, and identify when players are at risk of injury, he said.
There has been some very unfair sniping in this thread at my favorite journalist, Iain Payten. He is the only member of his profession to have taken an interest in what I write. I would like to reciprocate but can never quite bring myself to do it. In this article whose length must surely have strained the attention span of the average Terror reader, I note a couple of sentences in particular:
I am quite familiar with GPS equipment - my club has them - but for the life of me I cannot work out how much additional information such a relatively crude instrument would provide in assessing "training load and intensity" over standing on the sideline and simply observing. In a sport such as ours a GPS unit will tell you that in a scrum, maul or breakdown drill you are not covering very much distance, but not a huge amount more which might be relevant to soft tissue injuries such as those which have apparently sidelined the majority of the players named.
"A sports medicine expert", eh? That's Twenty-First Century thinking, David. Why haven't the franchises cottoned onto this themselves? I'm getting a real stirring in the nether regions about the prospects for Australian rugby now that we've engaged "a sports medicine expert". And I know it makes sense because my club uses a few of them.
Look out All Blacks, here we come. We've got GPS units and a sports medicine expert and that means we'll be "keeping our best players available for the longest period of time possible, performing at their peak."
Any word on where our Rocky is at the moment
He might be in the siberian wilderness doing this right as we speak.
He's allegedly in France.
Isn't there something in S&C regimes that can be put down to a prevalence of hamstring injuries? I'm sure Bruce has mentioned it but it's a mismatch where the quads are proportionally much more powerful than the hamstrings and place undue load on them in a game situation and increasing risk of a hammy strain.So how many injuries are actually relevant, ie. not one offs from tackles
James O'Connor (hamstring)
Rob Horne (hamstring)
Sitaleki Timani (hamstring)
Stephen Moore (hamstring)
Sekope Kepu (calf)
there's not that many that can be put down to poor conditioning/workload
There has been some very unfair sniping in this thread at my favorite journalist, Iain Payten. He is the only member of his profession to have taken an interest in what I write. I would like to reciprocate but can never quite bring myself to do it. In this article whose length must surely have strained the attention span of the average Terror reader, I note a couple of sentences in particular:
I am quite familiar with GPS equipment - my club has them - but for the life of me I cannot work out how much additional information such a relatively crude instrument would provide in assessing "training load and intensity" over standing on the sideline and simply observing. In a sport such as ours a GPS unit will tell you that in a scrum, maul or breakdown drill you are not covering very much distance, but not a huge amount more which might be relevant to soft tissue injuries such as those which have apparently sidelined the majority of the players named.
"A sports medicine expert", eh? That's Twenty-First Century thinking, David. Why haven't the franchises cottoned onto this themselves? I'm getting a real stirring in the nether regions about the prospects for Australian rugby now that we've engaged "a sports medicine expert". And I know it makes sense because my club uses a few of them.
Look out All Blacks, here we come. We've got GPS units and a sports medicine expert and that means we'll be "keeping our best players available for the longest period of time possible, performing at their peak."