Rugby coaching tips for referees
Key rugby coaching tips for novice referees, with important pointers for the pre-match briefing. The article assumes that the under-19 laws and continuum variations apply throughout.
What should you cover with the front rows?
- The scrum engagement sequence (crouch, touch, pause/hold, engage).
Key rugby coaching tip: Tell the players to let you know if they are not ready when you call "crouch".
- Scrum wheeling (if it's not deliberate and not more than 45 degrees).
Key rugby coaching tip: Tell the players to keep the shove straight, as there is no turnover ball and continual resets will just get frustrating.
- Scrum lifting/dropping. This is dangerous and will be penalised.
Key rugby coaching tip: Tell the players to keep the hips low and backs straight.
- The scrum shove (if it's not more than 1.5m).
Key rugby coaching tip: Tell the players to take two steps forward, then hold.
What should you cover with the lineout?
- Ask the players to step back half a metre from the mark to form the gap. You can do this in the pre-match briefing or leave it to the first lineout in the game.
What should you cover with the scrum half?
- At scrums. Have a quick, straight put in.
Key rugby coaching tip: Tell the players to use your mark as the guide.
- The scrum offside line.
Key rugby coaching tip: For the first few scrums, tell the players to make eye contact with you and ask if it's okay. This also can lead to a positive rapport with these key players.
- Quick tap penalties. These must be visible, near the mark and safe. Tap within one metre of the mark, but this must be in front of you. If they deliberately run into an opponent who has not retreated 10 metres, you'll play on.
Key rugby coaching tip: Tell the players you will shout "no quick one" if there is a pile up or the front rows are still engaged.
What should you cover with the fly half?
- Scrums, rucks, mauls. Keep your backs behind the back foot until the ball is out.
Key rugby coaching tip: Don't commit yourself to letting them know when the ball is out. It's their responsibility.
- Lineouts. Let the players know if/how you will signal/call if the ball is held and when they can advance beyond the 10 metres. This is not usually an issue at youth levels, as the "no supporting" law means the ball usually comes straight out.
Key rugby coaching tip: Raise the arm vertically when the ball is held and drop it when the lineout ends.
What should you cover with the captains?
Discipline. It's the captains' responsibility to keep discipline, not yours.
Key rugby coaching tip: Tell the captains to ensure their teams listen to your instructions and accept your decisions. Any questions or issues should be fed to you via the captain at the next scrum, lineout or stoppage.
Click the link for some rule reminders to help with problematic rugby laws.
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