Netball: team bonding

The 2025 Netball Super League season has introduced a rule that will change close games forever: no match can end in a draw. If scores are level after 60 minutes, two 5-minute periods of extra time will be played, with a one-minute break between them. If still tied, play continues until one team establishes a two-goal lead.

This is high-stakes netball. Are your players ready for it?

Understanding the Rules

The structure is straightforward:

  • Regulation: 60 minutes (4 x 15-minute quarters)
  • Extra time (if tied): Two 5-minute periods with 1-minute half-time
  • Extended extra time (if still tied): Play continues until a team leads by 2 goals

The Super Shot rule applies during extra time, adding another layer of tactical complexity. Centre passes alternate as normal. The team that wins gets 3 points; the loser gets 0.

The New Points System

The NSL has also changed the points allocation:

  • Win: 3 points
  • Loss by 5 goals or fewer: 1 point
  • Loss by more than 5 goals: 0 points

This means extra time carries enormous weight. A draw that would have given both teams 1 point now produces a winner with 3 points and a loser with 0 (unless it was already close). The stakes are higher than ever.

Physical Preparation

Extra time demands fitness. Players must maintain execution quality in potentially the 70th or 75th minute of play. Traditional 60-minute conditioning isn't enough.

Extend training games. Run scrimmages that go beyond normal match length. Players need to experience decision-making and skill execution when genuinely fatigued.

Interval conditioning. Extra time is high-intensity bursts separated by brief recovery. Design fitness work that replicates this pattern - repeated efforts with incomplete rest.

Simulation sessions. Occasionally simulate extra time scenarios in training. After a full scrimmage, announce "scores are level" and play on. This normalises the experience.

Related Drills: Build your team's endurance with our Fitness Drills for extended play conditioning.

Tactical Preparation

Substitution Strategy

You can't save substitutions for extra time if you haven't won regulation. The balance is keeping your best players fresh enough to perform in extra time while not losing the game in the fourth quarter.

Consider which players are best suited to high-pressure, fatigued conditions. Mental resilience and composure may matter more than pure skill in extra time.

Super Shot Strategy

The Super Shot applies in extra time. A single two-goal conversion can swing a game. Have a clear plan for Super Shot usage during these periods - and ensure your best long-range shooter is on court.

Extended Extra Time Awareness

If the game reaches "next two goals wins" territory, tactics simplify. Every possession is sudden death. Turnovers become catastrophic. Train your team to play with maximum care and composure in these moments.

Psychological Preparation

Extra time is as much mental as physical. Players who've never experienced it can freeze. Players who've practiced it perform.

Visualisation. Have players mentally rehearse extra time scenarios. What does it feel like to take a shot with the game on the line? To defend knowing one mistake could end it?

Positive framing. Extra time isn't a crisis - it's an opportunity. You've earned the chance to win a game that was on the edge. The team that sees extra time as exciting rather than terrifying has an advantage.

Process focus. In pressure moments, outcome focus ("we must score") creates tension. Process focus ("see the target, trust the technique") creates flow. Train your players to narrow attention to the next action, not the consequences.

Managing the One-Minute Break

Between extra time periods, you have one minute. This isn't long enough for complex tactical changes. Use it wisely:

  • Hydration and physical recovery
  • One or two key messages maximum
  • Energy and encouragement
  • Reminder of process focus

What you don't want is panicked tactical reinvention. Keep it simple, keep it positive, keep it short.

Learning from Experience

As the season progresses, some teams will accumulate extra time experience. Each situation is a learning opportunity:

  • What worked? What didn't?
  • Which players performed under pressure?
  • What would you do differently?

Document these lessons. They'll inform future preparation and give your team an edge in subsequent close games.

The Competitive Advantage

Many teams will neglect extra time preparation, focusing only on 60-minute netball. The teams that practice extra time scenarios, condition for extended play, and psychologically prepare their players will win more close games.

In a competition where points are precious, turning potential draws into wins could be the difference between finals and missing out. Prepare accordingly.

Where to Go Next

Prepare your team for the demands of extra time with these resources:

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Help-Individuals not gelling a...

One of my young teams is made up of players who play as individuals and fail to see that working together as a team would make them stronger. Obviously we have had the discussion and focussed on this in drills but it continues to be a feature. There are some strong players but together it's chaotic! ..any advice on how to successfully address this so that I may get the best out of them?

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Team bonding exercises | Sport...

I coach a team who seem to lack enthusiasm. They don’t smile - don’t really interact with each other. We have been losing badly each week and I was thinking this may contribute to there lack of cohesiveness? I want them to enjoy there time win or lose and maybe some team bonding may help? Any ideas ?

Sharon Maguire Coach, Australia

Working with teenagers with AD...

Hi, I am new to coaching, but have played all my life.I have taken on a team of 13 year olds this year, and am enjoying it. I have a few challenges, but the main one is that one of my key players, GK, has ADD/ADHD. She is the tallest girl on the team, and would be so effective if she just tried. She doesn't try. She doesn't engage with me or the other players. I have given her plenty of positive feedback, in the hopes that she will be boosted by that, I even partnered with her tonight at our training session, just to see how she would go. In the warm up with me, she was great, kept up and stayed enthused. When we started running drills and working on different things, she just doesn't even appear to be engaged. I know she is medicated when she comes to training, but I need her to switch on in a game situation. At the end of our training sessions, we always play a small game, and she just loses her enthusiasm and just doesn't try. I'm looking for ways to help and encourage her. Any ideas or suggestions welcome!!

Belinda McNab Coach, Australia

Help! My team aren't getting a...

Recently I have noticed some of my team members have started being nasty towards each other on the court and negative towards others. It is affecting their game and everyone else's. I also have a player complaining about another player behind her back. How do I get my team to become more positive towards each other and re-iterate that we need to get along and encourage each other?

Archived User Coach

Helping shy timid players | Sp...

How do I bring the best out in a shy timid girl. To speed up her passing and to call names would help to start with any suggestions. Under 11s.

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Fun session to boost moral for...

I would like to do a fun session with my 17 year old as we are at the bottom of the ladder and will not make finals now.

Caroline Woodford Coach, Australia

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