Develop your players passing on the run, changing angles and base passing (passing off the ground), while still maintain some social distancing.
It’s easy to set up and can be used as a warm-up or a skills breakout. Why Pythag? You are going along the "adjacent" side of a right-angled triangle before attacking the "hypotenuse" then returning on the "opposite".
Add a defender, who always starts on the red cone and walks forward.
The passer follows their pass and gets into a space to receive another pass.
Adjust the length and width of the areas to suit the skills of your players.
In a recent survey 89% of subscribers said Rugby Coach Weekly makes them more confident, 91% said Rugby Coach Weekly makes them a more effective coach and 93% said Rugby Coach Weekly makes them more inspired.
Get Weekly Inspiration
All the latest techniques and approaches
Rugby Coach Weekly offers proven and easy to use rugby drills, coaching sessions, practice plans, small-sided games, warm-ups, training tips and advice.
We've been at the cutting edge of rugby coaching since we launched in 2005, creating resources for the grassroots youth coach, following best practice from around the world and insights from the professional game.