This is a topic
that creates healthy debate and confusion amongst kickers.
It comes as no
surprise given the variety of tees players are using, plus those available for
purchase. In this post I want to address the question of ‘should I be kicking
off a high or low tee?’ plus offer some clarity to other relevant questions.
So... My answer without
a doubt – a lower tee.
I know what some of
you high tee advocates are thinking… kicking off a high tee works for me!!! I
know, I’ll get to answering that statement soon.
The reason for my
answer of kicking off a lower tee is very simple.
The higher the tee,
the more you move away from a natural leg swing.
The more unnatural
your leg swing becomes the more adjustments you need to make to your technique
in order to kick the ball, and this leads to a reduced likelihood of
progressing your ability to an advanced level.
I’ll give you two
examples.
Firstly, shift your
attention to the game of soccer (or
football for my European friends) for a moment. If I were to stand a rugby
ball up next to a soccer ball and compare the location of the sweet spot
between the two, it would be roughly the same height.
Now we know in
soccer that around 99% of all kicks are made from off the ground, some are low
drive kicks, some are high and curling, and some travel a considerable distance
– 60m plus! Yes folks 60m plus; all from off
the ground!
Now if it hasn’t
become obvious already, I ask the question… Why do we even need to kick off a
tee??? Our soccer playing counterparts can do it off the ground no problem; the
location of the sweet spot for them is roughly equal if not slightly lower to
the ground, so why do we continue to see rugby players teeing the ball up on
‘tower’ tees?
Well I’ll give you
the answers…
“So I can get more
height on the ball” or “I kick the ground when I use a lower tee”.
Sound familiar?
Well those answers don’t totally wash with me.
The picture at the
top is of me making a 50m field goal – off the ground.
I think there is plenty
of height on that ball too.
Secondly, as your
leg swings through to make contact with the ball it will come to a point just
prior to/and during contact where it will transition from descending to
ascending. Meaning, as you foot passes the lowest point in it’s leg swing it
now travels in and upward motion into your follow through and finish.
The lowest point of
your leg swing is approximately the ankle of your non-kicking or plant foot.
Now this is fairly low to the ground, and when you observe your kicking foot
travel past this point, its sweet spot – the hard bone on the top of the arch,
will be slightly higher than your ankle; however, this spot will not be any
higher than where the sweet spot would be located on the ball.
The point – with
correct foot positioning at contact, ankle locked with toes pointed out; there
is no reason why proper contact with the ball can’t be made from off the
ground.
Moving on to those
who kick from a high tee ‘Because I tried it and it works for me’.
Firstly, please
don’t get me wrong here, there are many good kickers who use a higher tee with
very high success rates, and in some cases it is the better option for them,
for example if they have very limited movement about the ankle joint due to an injury
and cant find the correct foot position, or if they are an established player
late in their career who have used a high tee for ever and a day, then the
focus shifts to maximizing accuracy and distance within the realms of that tee
and technique.
But my real issue
here revolves around optimizing ones ability. Considering what is relative and
what is absolute. Extracting the maximum out of someone from both a physical
and mental perspective.
I’ve just completed
my book for players and coaches about the art of kicking. Learn more about
Kicking Essentials: The Ultimate Guide for Players and Coaches here.
Included is a
section on the fundamental skills of kicking (some of which may come as surprise to many), where I discuss at
length the application of each to your kicking technique, and the importance of
them occurring if you desire to kick the ball with accuracy and distance.
With any skill, the
“fundamentals” are the elements which form the basis or foundation for optimal
execution; the things that need to happen; things which are absolute.
Relative things are
the individual preferences of your technique, like how many approach steps you
take, or what you do before you approach the ball. But it must be understood
that if these individual preferences take you too far away from what is
absolute, then your ability to perform optimally becomes compromised.
I ask frankly, ‘How
good do you want to be...?’
Sounds pretty
full-on for just talking about the height of your tee right...
I am always keen to
engage in discussion. Any thoughts on this topic? Please share below...
Nigger
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