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winger seeking work
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<blockquote data-quote="Peat" data-source="post: 382097" data-attributes="member: 42330"><p>Talk to the half-backs and coach.</p><p></p><p>There are some called moves that involve the winger coming into the line. You'll probably learn them at training and hear them called.</p><p></p><p>Your half-backs and coach might well have preferences as to where the winger should appear. Our coach favours them offering an inside ball to the 10. You often seen at the top level the winger coming round and taking the ball as if he were a 12 while the centres act as dummy runners.</p><p></p><p>In general though it is up to you unless the half-backs say differently. Pick a line, look for a gap and scream for the ball. The inside ball from first reciever is the most common place to pop up but feel free to vary it - pop up in the centres, or on the outside shoulder of fly-half or simply to lurk deep and wait until you see a possible line break and time your run for the offload. What your coach says about getting on the full-back's shoulder is very true and it is worth looking at doing this with the centres, although try to work out when there might be an offload and when there might not. There's no point running a line if they're just looking to crash, you're better off waiting out for the next phase.</p><p></p><p>Does this help?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Peat, post: 382097, member: 42330"] Talk to the half-backs and coach. There are some called moves that involve the winger coming into the line. You'll probably learn them at training and hear them called. Your half-backs and coach might well have preferences as to where the winger should appear. Our coach favours them offering an inside ball to the 10. You often seen at the top level the winger coming round and taking the ball as if he were a 12 while the centres act as dummy runners. In general though it is up to you unless the half-backs say differently. Pick a line, look for a gap and scream for the ball. The inside ball from first reciever is the most common place to pop up but feel free to vary it - pop up in the centres, or on the outside shoulder of fly-half or simply to lurk deep and wait until you see a possible line break and time your run for the offload. What your coach says about getting on the full-back's shoulder is very true and it is worth looking at doing this with the centres, although try to work out when there might be an offload and when there might not. There's no point running a line if they're just looking to crash, you're better off waiting out for the next phase. Does this help? [/QUOTE]
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