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"The key is to get the person doing it so they
feel comfortable and then with this new skill, they can perform under pressure."
Kicking coach David Alred addresses players at the kicking clinic at Anglesea Road, Dublin
yesterday.
More analysis than paralysis
Johnny Watterson watched as Lions kicking coach David
Alred passed on few tips yesterday.
Kicking clinics and the paralysis of analysis. Ever
get the feeling? Ever line up the golf ball or the rugby ball and prepare to hit or kick
it in a perfect arc. Ever think your way through the shot in the way the coach told you -
position your body correctly, hit through the ball, keep your head down, transfer the
weight. You know the story. You cut the ball into the long grass or the car park. You miss
it completely or it spins way off kilter, like a drunk heading across a dance floor to the
toilet. You don't know why. That's it - the paralysis of analysis.
David Alred, kicking coach to the successful Lions
team on their tour to South Africa last summer was in Dublin yesterday with Welsh and
Lions kicker Neil Jenkins analysing, it must be said, more than paralysing.
"The challenge is to find the key that works for
individuals because you want, more or less, the same sort of bio-mechanic laws adhered to.
But everyone has a different way of doing it. The key is to get the person doing it so
they feel comfortable and then with this new skill, they can perform under pressure."
Alred has worked with England's Rob Andrews and
Australia's David Campese, as well as Ireland's Eric Elwood and Thierry Lacroix and Jean
Luc Sadourny from France. Yesterday, he was at Old Belvedere's ground at Anglesey Road
with 32 Leinster-based players for the Predator Kicking Clinic, going through the drills
that will enhance place-kicking and keep it consistent under pressure.
"In the Lions, it was actually the kicking
strategy that worked very well for them. The kicking game has gotten very, very subtle.
You don't play the touch line, you actually play the area, and if you play the area, you
have to have co-ordination between the kicker and the 14 other members of the team. That
can only work if you've whole-team strategies and that's what I really enjoyed about the
Lions."
Alred was first spotted when place-kicking for Bath.
The brother in law of the general manager of American football team the Vikings sent back
word and next thing, Alred had arrived in Minnesota kicking in the `Franchise' and
breathing in the culture of ultra specialism.
"People have the pre-conceived notion that to be
a kicking coach you must have learned all of it in the States. I didn't actually learn
much technique there. In the States, there are 220 million people and about 28 national
football teams. It's a bit like an infinite number of monkeys and an infinite number of
type writers. If the guy isn't good enough, you just get another one."
Having also worked in rugby league, Australian rules
football and, last Sunday, with a number of Armagh's Gaelic fooballers and rugby union
players combined, Alred's conviction is that kicking is a long-term process. He believes
that it takes 18 months to become an international class kicker. That is, a player who can
consistently return a high percentage of kicks, regardless of their position and
regardless of the pressure.
"Sometimes players come off after a
match and say: `I just couldn't miss today'. They are in the zone. They've a
clinically-clear vision. If you perform the technique in the zone, you've cracked it. Then
you can put your mortgage on a fairly high percentage."Currently studying for a PhD
in `the neurology of skill acquisition in rugby,' Alred is now contracted to Adidas.
Sound-bite friendly, he advises: "Practice doesn't make perfect. Practice makes
permanent - often, though, people practise a fallible style, but they've gotten very good
at it." It's a fact that, with the exception of Australia's John Eales, most goal
kickers have small, rather than large feet, perhaps size eight or nine. What Alred strives
for is perfect contact - like any golfer - and there seems to be evidence to support the
fact that smaller feet might make better contact with the ball.
Ollie Campbell, one of the very best kickers, never
had a coaching guru. He worked it out for himself. To many people, theory is the practice
of making the simple complex, but then they have to ask why some kickers can vary so
extremely week to week and under similar conditions. And who is to say that even Campbell
couldn't have been better than he was.
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Last updated on 17-11-99 |
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