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Tackling the data Robot rugby remains a way off but art of coaching is making way for science
The Guardian
|March 25, 2025
Once upon a time coaching sport was deceptively simple.
Many years of experience could be distilled into a gut instinct of how best to respond in certain situations. Selection was more of an art and less of a science and you didn't have smarty-pants analysts telling you stuff you could already see with your own eyes from 50 yards away.
Pray for the old-timers because rugby's tech era is well and truly here. Nowadays, one game spawns millions of pieces of usable data. Wearable technology attached to one player can collect information from 300 data points at a rate of 40 times per second. Skeletal tracking, microchipped balls and myriad other previously invisible markers are now routinely available. Farewell, then, leaky Biros and old-school clipboards.
It is certainly educational - and sobering - to get an update direct from Silicon Valley in California where one of the high priests of the new normal is based. Sitting at his desk, with sport's future at his fingertips, is an Irishman named Stephen Smith, founder and chief executive of Kitman Labs, a global performance intelligence and technology company specialising in injury welfare and analytics.
Among the company's 2,000 clients are the Premier League, the NFL and the Rugby Football Union and it is easy to see why they are interested. Much individual data is meaningless in isolation, but what if it can be distilled down into "actionable intelligence" that can help with everything from how your star player is really feeling to extending the careers of your entire squad?
Denne historien er fra March 25, 2025-utgaven av The Guardian.
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