French flair makes skills camp a tour de force

On Rugby: Skills, skills, skills

On Rugby: Skills, skills, skills. More than anything, that's what teenage rugby players should be learning in the years that are the windows of opportunity. But are they? Is the much-vaunted Irish schools/underage system, which undoubtedly helps produce great players, achieving this aim as much as it could? The bottom line, are they even enjoying the game as much as they could?

Sure, they're often playing for schools that have a great tradition and are the lifeblood of rugby in this country. They often compete in front of big crowds and, for better or worse, are exposed to more media coverage than their counterparts in any other sport. They learn much about the nature of high-profile, knockout rugby, how to perform in the context of team patterns and how to win. But winning isn't everything at underage level. It's not even the most important thing. Nurturing talent is, especially if it leads to fulfilment in a senior career.

Summertime, away from competition, provides the best opening, and, along with the schools and others, into this breach boldly steps the Rugby and French camp in Soustons, north of Biarritz (www.rugbyandfrench.com). Held over July and August, and recently having completed a sixth summer, it is run by the former Wanderers centre Nigel Osborne and the one-time Harlequins back-five forward Bill Davison at the impressive Camp Nautique de L'Isle Verte, and is attended by mostly Irish and English kids between the ages of 12 and 15.

Similar camps are held there by the French Federation for young rugby players in the southwest/Landes region. Their players stay in chalets, the Irish and English in tents, which Osborne believes is more conducive to a family atmosphere as well as keeping down costs (excessive at just over €1,000, due in the main to the cost of flights).

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There are three billiard-top pitches adjacent to the lake, a short walk from Soustons village and a 20-minute cycle from the beach, as well as an array of nautical equipment and qualified instructors, to help keep the players in camp busy with kayaking, windsurfing and the like.

All overseen by the professional, unflustered Christophe Andignac, even the restaurant provides three healthy, well-balanced meals a day that Jamie Oliver would approve of.

But what else would you expect from the French? There are also daily conversational French lessons run by two of Osborne's eight-strong staff, Sara McDonald (formerly Francois Pienaar's assistant at Saracens) and Elaine Coughlan. But most of all the emphasis is very much on the rugby skills instilled by Osborne and Davison as well as Henric Gervais, Simon O'Hare, Niall Best, Peter Burns and Ron Boucher, five of Osborne's protégés during his four-year stint as Wanderers under-20s coach.

"Primarily it's a rugby holiday," says Osborne. "It's the first real rugby tour for virtually all of them, with all the good elements of rugby tours, meeting and making mates for life, while enjoying their rugby and developing their skills."

Divided into junior and senior sections, each morning there is an intensive skills session of about 90 minutes. Initially very basic, passing in groups of four off both hands unopposed and then with an emphasis on running at the inside shoulders of one, two and ultimately three defenders, the progress is eye-catching.

With communication the key, the mantra of the week appears to be Osborne loudly intoning "two hands, two hands" as the players become more adept at running straight, passing before or out of contact, keeping the ball alive and moving at tempo, but their tackling techniques and how to take a hit (with an emphasis on safety) and rucking, also improve collectively. They are also encouraged to try things and make mistakes.

And this particular group benefits from having Gary Foley, a mature, driven and talented 15-year-old, and his CBC sidekicks Steve Boucher and David Lewis, as leaders. After their busy afternoons and French lessons, the players put into practice what they've learnt with evening games. An abiding image is of the barefoot, shirtless Osborne and his fellow coaches among their willing pupils as they go through those early evening practice games, the heat having by then relented slightly.

They absorb like sponges, the learning curve is rapid, and proof of this comes with games against their French counterparts on the eighth day, played in 28 degrees, complete with anthems, refereed by Osborne and one of the French staff. The Irish juniors are up against a more talented and bigger French team, but keep their heads to score one try after conceding six.

But the seniors are brilliant. With their first play they set the tone, outhalf Anthony Doyle from Newcastlewest skip-passes to Foley, who draws the man and puts Patrick Simpkin, a fullback from Mullingar who came here two summers previously as a lock, into space. Crucially he has the presence to link again.

Foley opens the scoring with an unstoppable straight run through the middle. Four more Irish tries follow, the last two an expression of their week in camp; awareness in possession, two hands on the ball, passing at pace, offloading in the tackle until eventually they run in their scores untouched. By the end, you'd have reasonably wondered which team was French.

The feedback from the kids was proof they loved the setting, the facilities, the activities, but most of all the coaching. Provincial clubs like Naas, Clonmel and Thurles send groups every year. And many players, such as the most recent Blackrock wunderkind Luke Fitzgerald and his fellow Leinster schools player David Moore, have attended several summers in a row.

Admittedly, how much of what these young players learn in a mere 10 days and can be retained is debatable. But, the more the better, one would guess. gthornley@irish-times.ie

Gerry Thornley

Gerry Thornley

Gerry Thornley is Rugby Correspondent of The Irish Times