How To Think, Train And Win Like The All Blacks

Style

They’re a team with an 87 per cent record and have a win against every side they’ve ever come across – the only international men’s team across all sports to have one. Sometimes you wonder if the New Zealand rugby team, better known as the All Blacks even know how to lose.

Famed for their pre-match war cry known as the haka, they romped to victory in the past two Rugby World Cups, and while they might not have gone into the 2019 Rugby World Cup ranked number one, you wouldn’t bet against them making it a third.

As part of the side’s partnership with luxury watchmaker Tudor, FashionBeans joined four of the team’s current players – second row Scott Barrett, flanker Dalton Papalii, fly-half Richie Mo’unga and two-time rugby world player of the year Beauden Barrett – for a training session to figure how to think, train and win like the legendary side.

All-Blacks Rugby Team

How To Think Like An All Black

The four players perfectly embody the much-talked-about mindset of the All Blacks, which is partly what makes them so successful. One of the number one rules within the team is ‘no dickheads allowed’, as implemented by the team’s mental skills coach Gilbert Enoka. The idea is that to make the team, the individual egos of each player needs to be removed.

“A dickhead makes everything about them,” he told Gameplan A magazine. “They are people who put themselves ahead of the team…often teams put up with it because a player has so much talent.

“We look for early warning signs and wean the big egos out pretty quickly. Our motto is, ‘if you can’t change the people, change the people’. The management might not spot these counterproductive behaviours. The players and leaders themselves should call others out for their inflated egos.”

All-Blacks Rugby Team

Another well-reported mental technique used by the side is ‘Red to Blue’. In the concept, a ‘red head’ is the feeling of being tight and anxious, whereas blue is associated with calm, clear and accurate thinking. During points in a match, a player’s attention will often get diverted and he may descend into red thinking.

The players are taught to recognise these moments before enacting a cue for concentration to move them to the blue. Former All Blacks captain Richie McCaw would stamp his feet as his cue, while you can spot the current skipper, Kieran Read, looking around the stadium.

All-Blacks Rugby Team

How To Train Like An All Black

On the field, not all rugby players are created equal. The training and nutritional regimes for a fly-half will be different than a prop providing grunt in the pack.

“All Blacks range in size from 78kg to 130kg and 170cm to 205cm, so the caloric intake of each player is very different,” says Nicholas Gill, strength and conditioning coach for the New Zealand rugby team. “Their roles on the field are very different with some running up to 10km in a game, and some needing to be able to squat 250kg. “Essentially, each player fuels their body for performance each day, and due to the nature of the sport and the collisions that occur, recovery nutrition is also very important.”

All-Blacks Rugby Team

Taking this into account, we asked Gill for two general workouts that he would do with the team. Just like the All Blacks players, you may want to adjust the regimes depending on your goals. But one thing’s for certain, if you want to mix it with the world-beaters, you’re going to feel it in the morning.

The All Blacks Workout

Workout One: Building Strength

Designed for strength and injury prevention when playing, much of this workout revolves around three supersets that will push every part of your body to the limit.

Superset 1: Back Squat/Sled Push/Box Jump

You’ll want to be moving between exercises as quickly as you can here – no rest until the end. Do three to four of these supersets in total. After each full round, rest for two to three minutes before jumping back into the next set.

Back Squat
For the back squat, you want to be doing ‘heavy triples’ – three repetitions at the heaviest weight you can lift.

  • Set the squat rack height at shoulder level
  • Stand close to the barbell with your feet shoulder-width apart
  • Place your hands an equal distance apart from the centre of the bar
  • Pull yourself under the barbell and squeeze your shoulder blades together
  • Pull the barbell down into your upper back
  • Give yourself three steps to get into position, then step back with your lead leg, matching it with your other leg
  • As you start the movement, keep your back straight, push your hips backwards and bend your knees to squat down
  • Pause for a moment, keeping your upper body braced with tension in your legs
  • Push through with both legs to return to the start position.

Sled Push
You’ll need a 15m track with the sled as loaded up as heavy as you can push for this. It’s tricky to judge at first, but you’ll know if you’ve loaded the sled up too much.

  • Start in a low position against the sled pushing either with straight or bent arms
  • The lower you get your back, the easier it will be to push
  • Brace your core and drive through with your forefoot keeping your feet hip-width apart.

Box Jump

  • Stand in front of a 60cm high box with your feet shoulder-width apart
  • Bend into a quarter squat, swinging your arms back, then swinging them forward to explode up off the ground
  • Land on the box as softly as possible, mimicking the take-off position with your feet flat and knees slightly bent
  • Jump back down or step down slowly one leg at a time. This will further work the glutes and safeguard your joints
  • Jump four times for each set.

Superset 2: Bench Press/Neck Bridge/Nordic Hamstring Drop

Complete three to four sets with two to three minutes rest at the end of each complete round.

Bench Press
For this bench press, you’re going to go down one repetition with each set, starting at six and ending up at three.

  • Lay flat with your back on a bench
  • Grip the bar just wider than shoulder-width apart
  • When at the bottom of your move, your hands should be directly above your elbows which will help you generate as much power as possible
  • Bring the bar slowly down to your chest as you breathe in then push up as you breathe out, gripping the bar hard
  • Keep your eye on a spot on the ceiling rather than the bar, which will help make sure you with the consistency.

Neck Bridge, Front and Back

  • Kneel on all fours on a well-cushioned mat with your head on the mat in the middle of your hands
  • Rise up and straighten your knees, with your hands folded behind your lower back
  • Roll back onto your forehead until your nose touches the mat, continuing forward onto the top of your head until your chin touches your upper chest
  • Continue rolling back and forth for 30 seconds
  • Turn over onto your back with your feet close to your hips
  • Raise your bum and lower back slightly off of the floor and fold your hands over your stomach
  • Extend your hips and knees while pushing your head back into the floor
  • Roll back on your head while arching your spine high off of the floor
  • Hyperextend the neck back in an attempt to bring your forehead toward the mat
  • Return your body close to the mat until the back of your head and shoulders make contact with the mat
  • Continue this movement for 30 seconds.

Nordic Hamstring Drop

  • Kneel on the ground with a mat underneath you
  • Secure your feet either with a training partner holding them down or by tucking them under a bench
  • Lower your torso to the ground as slowly as possible
  • When your hamstrings can no longer support your weight and you find yourself falling to the ground, catch yourself in a push-up position
  • The descent should be as slow and controlled as you can manage
  • Complete six repetitions of this exercise.

Superset 3: Weighted Chin-Up/Dumbbell Shoulder Press/Bent-Over Fly

Complete three to four sets with two to three minutes rest at the end of each complete round.

Weighted Chin-Up
Use a belt which you can attach a strong chain onto and then thread weight plates through. If you have a thick link chain, you can just rope it around your waist. The shorter the chain, the better, as it stops the plates swinging around.

  • Grab the pull-up bar with an underhand grip and your hands shoulder-width apart
  • Keeping your body straight, contract your biceps and lats to pull yourself up as high as you can, driving your elbows down as you do so. Then release. This is one rep
  • Start with six reps for the first set, going down by one rep for each set until you only do three reps.

Dumbbell Shoulder Press
For this exercise, do eight repetitions for one set. Pick up your dumbbells from a standing position. Don’t go overboard on the weight here (you almost want to feel like you’ve picked too light), this is an exercise that suddenly feels very tough halfway through a set.

  • Hold the dumbbells by your shoulders, with your palms facing forwards and your elbows out to the sides and bent at a 90-tdegree angle
  • Without leaning back, extend through your elbows to press the weights above your head
  • Slowly return to the starting position.

Bent-Over Fly
For this exercise, do eight repetitions for one set.

  • Stand with your feet apart, and bend over at 90 degrees
  • Hold a dumbbell in each hand with your palms facing each other
  • Hang your arms horizontal to the ground with your elbows slightly bent
  • Engage your rear delts to raise the dumbbells laterally, tilting your hand forward. Keep your elbows fixed and your shoulders contracted
  • Visualise moving your entire arm and the dumbbell as a whole
  • To finish the rep, lower the dumbbells back down slowly.

Workout Two: Building Power And Speed

This second workout is designed to enhance a player’s power and speed. The amount of repetitions are low so that you can concentrate on lifting heavier weights and ultimately building more mass as a result.

The Power Clean Plus 5m Acceleration

  • Start with the bar on the floor next to your shins
  • Stand hip-width apart, bend down and grab the bar with an overhand, shoulder-width grip
  • Sit your bottom down and stick your chest up
  • Your elbows should be rotated out to the sides with your arms completely straight
  • Looking forward pull the bar off the floor by extending your legs, keeping your back flat and your chest up
  • Once the bar is above your knees, move your torso to a vertical position and re-bend your knees slightly
  • Move into the second pull by jumping straight up, fully extending your hips, knees and ankles while shrugging the bar with your shoulders. Keep the bar as close to your body as possible
  • Quickly drop into a quarter squat position with your back straight and your knees slightly bent
  • Drive your elbows forward to rotate them around in the bar and catch the bar across the front of your shoulders with your fingertips under the bar
  • Now stand up. From this position, drop the bar.

This is one rep. Complete three repetitions, four times. As soon as you have completed three reps for a set, move straight into a 5m accelerated sprint off of a standing start.

Superset 1: Bench Press/Assisted Chin-Up

Bench Press

Follow the instructions from the second superset. Do three repetitions for one set over four.

Assisted Chin-Up

Use an assisted pull-up machine or attach a heavy-duty band to a pull-up station, putting it around just one knee. The tension should be taut enough to pull that lower leg up. You might be strong enough to do this movement without the need for assistance, but the machine will help ensure you keep your form and all while preventing the risk of injury.

  • Grab the bar with an underhand grip with your hands shoulder-width apart
  • Keeping your body straight, contract your biceps and lats to pull yourself up as high as you can, driving your elbows down as you do
  • Release and repeat four times.

Superset 2: Jump Squat/Box Jumps

Jump Squat
The jump squat is exactly the same as the back squat from before, but at the end of the movement you want to engage your core and jump up explosively.

  • Follow instructions for the back squat
  • As you land, lower your body back into the squat position to complete one rep
  • Use control to land as quietly as possible
  • Repeat four times, for three sets.

Box Jumps
Combining the box jump from earlier with a jump squat will help build your practical strength and speed. This is a great idea if you’re looking to improve your performance outside the gym, such as on the sports field.

Additional Exercises

Heavy Quarter Squats
A variation on the traditional back squat, the quarter squat serves as a good segue for those who have only done bodyweight squats before, into a full-on weighted squat.

Skipping
Skipping is great for helping improve your co-ordination and footwork, while really working your core hard as your abs will need to tense to stabilise yourself as you jump.

Plank
A stable core is essential for endurance, speed and preventing injury during a fast-paced rugby game. As well as strengthening key muscles, the benefit of a plank is that you can do it just about anywhere.

Products You May Like