Ian, along with the coaching staff at London Wasps, have been working with YMI to introduce yoga into the player training regime ahead of the new season. Here Ian discusses why yoga is a valuable tool in elite rugby and how it has benefited the players.
London Wasps are coming to the end
of a grueling pre-season which has seen the players stressed to their physical
limits in an attempt to develop their aerobic and anaerobic energy systems to
cope with the demands of Premiership rugby.
Along with this has been the drive to maximise each players explosive
output in terms of strength, speed and power which is so critical in a
collision and evasion sport. One of the
determining factors for success in the elite tier of English rugby is ensuring
that throughout the attritional nine month playing season that the coaches are
able to pick from a full squad of players.
Last season a number of measures were introduced to ensure players were
robust enough to meet this key requirement and this season it is being continued
along with the addition of yoga sessions.
The players enjoying a bit of freestyle! |
The second aim of the sessions is
to positively impact performance on the pitch by developing increased core
strength, mobility and body control which will translate into more strength,
speed and power being produced where it matters most. Over the course of the pre-season the players
have made significant progress and though none are going to wrap their leg
around their neck they have begun to develop more awareness and control of
their body which will help to make them more durable through the season.
As we enter the competition phase
of training quite often the things that were incorporated In the pre-season
phase fall away and as such you need to question why you performed them in the
first place if they do not merit continuing throughout the season. Only by repeating skills do you become more
competent and reap longer lasting benefits in terms of performance and in this
case injury prevention. Thus the
mobility, strength and stability that is fundamental in many yoga poses will
continue throughout the season as group sessions, warm ups, recovery protocols
or a movement in an individual’s strength programme.
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Warriors |
An additional benefit to these
sessions is that just doing something new with a different voice helps to break
up the monotony of training and provides a psychological break from the normal
day to day rugby activities. Professional
rugby brings a unique type of psychological stress due the immediate feedback
on performance, competition for selection and the need to think clearly under
extreme pressure on the pitch. Yoga can
help to equip players with the mental skills in terms of clarity of thought in
stressful situations as well as a mechanism to encourage relaxation and
recuperation following physical and psychological exertion. The sessions have been well received and a
good deal of laughter has greeted the attempts of players to mimic the poses
Beckie assumes with minimal effort and a few have been humbled by the chair or
tree pose as they crash to the floor.
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