Community | Copy of Jeu dans la défense - Passe au contact

The 50:22 law, introduced as a trial and now a permanent fixture, has fundamentally changed how teams approach tactical kicking. A kick from your own half that bounces in-field, crosses the 22, and finds touch rewards the kicking team with the lineout throw-in. This single law change has altered both attacking and defensive strategies across the game.

Understanding the Law

The requirements:

  • Kick must originate from behind your own 10-metre line
  • Ball must bounce in the field of play (not direct to touch)
  • Ball must cross the opposition's 22-metre line
  • Ball must then go into touch
  • Kicking team retains the throw at the lineout

These requirements create specific technical demands. The kick must be long enough to reach the 22, accurate enough to hit the corner, and struck correctly to bounce in-field first.

Why 50:22 Matters

Before the 50:22, kicking from your own half that went to touch gave the throw to the opposition. The only benefit was territorial gain. Now, an accurate 50:22 delivers both territory AND possession - a game-changing combination.

The tactical impact:

  • Lineout attacking platform in the opposition 22
  • Defensive scramble if full-back fails to cover
  • Forces back three to position wider, creating space elsewhere
  • Punishes lazy defensive positioning

Executing the 50:22

The Grubber Option

A well-struck grubber can beat the full-back to the corner. The low trajectory keeps the ball in play, and end-over-end rotation makes the bounce predictable.

Grubber technique:

  • Strike through the middle of the ball, toe down
  • Generate end-over-end spin for predictable bounce
  • Aim for the gap between full-back and touchline
  • Follow up - if it doesn't reach touch, contest the chase

The Chip and Chase

A chip kick over the defensive line that bounces in the 22 and reaches touch. Higher risk - defenders can field it before it reaches touch - but effective against narrow defences.

Chip technique:

  • Get under the ball with angled foot
  • Enough height to clear defenders, not so much that chase time is lost
  • Backspin for controlled bounce toward touchline

The Cross-Field Kick

Against a defence shifted to one side, the cross-field kick to the far corner can find space. This is a longer kick requiring more accuracy but exploits defensive imbalance.

Defensive Adjustments

The 50:22 has forced defensive positioning changes. Full-backs can no longer sit narrow - they must cover the width. Wings must be aware of their touchline responsibilities.

Defending against 50:22:

  • Full-back positions wider to cover both corners
  • Wings drop deeper to provide secondary cover
  • Communication about kick threats: "Watch grubber!"
  • Quick identification and reaction to kicks

These defensive adjustments create space elsewhere. If the full-back is wide, the central channel opens. If wings drop deep, the defensive line loses numbers.

When to Attempt 50:22

Good opportunities:

  • Full-back positioned narrow or deep
  • Wide channel space visible
  • Defence rushed up, leaving back field exposed
  • Slow ball where running attack is risky

Poor opportunities:

  • Full-back already covering the corner
  • Quick ball with attacking momentum
  • Wind against making accurate kicking difficult
  • Kicker not in optimal position

Training 50:22 Execution

Individual kicking practice:

  • Set targets at the corner - grubber to specific zones
  • Practice both feet (advantage when on either side)
  • Vary distances - not every 50:22 opportunity is from the same position

Team practice:

  • Live scenarios with defence - read the full-back position
  • Decision-making: kick, run, or pass?
  • Chase organisation when the kick doesn't reach touch

Alternative Outcomes

Not every 50:22 attempt succeeds. But the threat creates secondary benefits:

If fielded before touch: You've still gained territory and forced the opposition to start from deep. Apply chase pressure and compete for their exit kick.

If it bounces out before 22: Opposition throw, but you've gained significant ground. Reset defensive line.

If full-back covers: Your threat has pulled them wide. Subsequent attacks may find more space centrally.

The Mental Game

The 50:22 threat changes how oppositions defend, even when you don't kick. Simply having players capable of executing the kick forces wider positioning and changes defensive dynamics.

Make sure your opposition knows you have this weapon. Execute it successfully early in matches, and they'll respect the threat throughout.

Key Coaching Points

  • The 50:22 rewards accurate kicking with possession AND territory
  • Grubbers are highest percentage - practise them
  • Read the full-back position before deciding
  • Even unsuccessful attempts gain territory
  • The threat changes defensive positioning

Drills to Master the 50:22

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PICCOLIN Coach, France

DESCRIPTION

Objectif : Effectuer une passe précise au contact. Apporter un soutien au plus près du porteur de balle. Si le défenseur se situe à gauche du porteur du ballon, la charge doit se faire avec l’épaule droite et vice versa. Il faut veiller à ne pas se tourner trop près du plaqueur car le porteur du ballon peut alors être retourné très facilement pour faire face à l’équipe adverse. Le corps du porteur du ballon se situera entre le plaqueur et le ballon. Le porteur doit se retourner aussitôt que possible, dans la mesure où la rotation au contact permet au plaqueur d’écarter le joueur de la direction dans laquelle la passe est censée se faire. Pour rester debout, le porteur du ballon doit bien écarter les pieds, avoir le centre de gravité bas ce qui peut être réalisé en abaissant les hanches et en pliant les genoux, plutôt que de se pencher au niveau de la taille. Au contact, le joueur doit se tourner pour montrer son dos au plaqueur. Les joueurs s’élançant avec leur épaule droite en avant doivent se tourner vers la droite et vice versa. En faisant pivoter ses pieds, talons au sol et non pas l’avant du pied, le porteur du ballon fera écran et protègera ainsi le ballon. Le réceptionnaire doit être suffisamment alerte pour ajuster sa trajectoire de course et courir du côté où le passeur s’est tourné, pour profiter de l’écran ainsi formé par le passeur. Le réceptionnaire doit courir plus près du passeur de manière à placer le ballon dans les mains du réceptionnaire.

COACHING POINTS

- S’élancer droit sur un défenseur - Rester debout sur ses deux pieds au contact - Se retourner pour faire dos au défenseur en ramenant son pied en arrière - Protéger le ballon des interférences en faisant écran - Faire une passe (courte) à un coéquipier proche. - Modifier son angle de course pour se porter au plus près du porteur.

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