Tackling is one of the most important skills in rugby.

It stops attacks, creates turnovers, and sets the tone for your team.

But it must be done properly.

Good technique protects you and makes you more effective.

The Foundations of a Good Tackle

Body Position

Stay low, with your knees bent and chest up.

Why it matters:

A low position gives you power and control. High tackles are weak and easily broken.

Head Placement

Your head should be to the side of the ball carrier, never in front.

Why it matters:

This reduces injury risk and improves contact position.

Shoulder Contact

Lead with your shoulder into the target area, usually around the hips or thighs.

Why it matters:

The shoulder creates impact. Your arms secure the tackle.

Leg Drive

Do not stop your feet.

Drive through the tackle.

Why it matters:

This is what brings the player to ground and stops forward momentum.

Wrap and Finish

Wrap your arms and stay connected.

Complete the tackle.

Drills to Improve Tackling

Start with controlled drills.

Work on technique without full contact.

Progress to live situations as confidence grows.

Consistency is key.

Common Mistakes

Going too high
Stopping feet on contact
Reaching instead of committing

Fix these and your tackling improves immediately.

Confidence in Contact

Tackling is mental.

If you hesitate, you lose the moment.

Confidence comes from repetition.

When you trust your technique, you commit fully.

Rugby Bricks Mindset

Tackling is not about being the biggest player.

It is about being the most prepared.

The more you train it, the more natural it becomes.

And when the moment comes, you do not think.

You act.

Final Thought

Great defenders change games.

They stop momentum, create opportunities, and lead with intent.

Master your technique.

Train with purpose.

And step into contact with confidence.

Peter Breen