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Pressure on Ryan to pick squad for Rio

Monday 11 July 2016 | Published in Regional

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FIJI – Time is running out for Fiji’s sevens hopefuls to force their way into the final squad for the Rio Olympics, which will be unveiled on July 16.

22 men and 19 women have spent the past four weeks in their respective training camps, being put through exhaustive fitness sessions, running up sand dunes and playing inter-squad matches against their fellow hopefuls.

Men’s coach Ben Ryan said the plan is coming together and players would have run 50km each last week alone, with the intensity and workload put on players building week by week.

“We fattened them up during the Sevens World Series, we didn’t have as much onus on their fitness scores – we put some of them into tournaments where we knew they were up to three kilograms heavier than they should be.

“We’ve gone on a high protein diet, we’ve thrown carbs out the window and they’ve reacted brilliantly to that – they’ve got tons of energy and dropped all their skinfolds. They actually haven’t lost too much weight because the fats gone but a lot of muscle has been added to those boys.

“They’re robust – the amount of contact work we’re doing in training. With that comes a huge risk – I’m not sure too many other teams would do this, I don’t think they would risk the amount of volume of contact and one on one tackling that we’re doing, but with that risk comes huge reward for us. We know that it works for us and we will continue doing it,” he said.

“We know that, in the past, when we put small sessions of high intensity, huge contact work in we normally reap the benefits in tournaments so I’m pleased with where we are at the moment.”

Much has been made about former rugby league and NFL star Jarryd Hayne’s inclusion in the squad and chances of making the final cut.

Ryan said Fiji’s final 12 players in Rio will be selected on form alone and some hard decisions will need to be made.

“We’ve got 22 in camp at the moment with just Isake Katonibau that’s been moved out of the squad.

“I’ll make a few more cuts probably on Friday and we will cut it down for the final week before we select the 12, so it’s highly competitive.

“Everyone is training so hard and sacrificing so much, I wanted to give every player that was doing that the longest opportunity to try to push their place.

“We’ve lost not a single one of our players from injury from the World Series and that’s meant I’ve got a nice deep cupboard of players – if you told me today to name that side I’d find it very difficult.

“I’d give you 15 names probably with confidence but really I would say there’s about 19 players that are fighting hard at the moment and the fact that we’ve still got 22 in camp shows you they’ve all still got a chance,” he said.

“I’ve got to remind myself all the time that if I’m seeing a world class player on the field I’ve got to make sure he is putting in world class training.

“It’s easy for a coach to pick on a face and hoping that come the big day will come the big performance – but we don’t do that. We will pick on what we see, the boys know that – so they really are having to flog it out every session.

“That has meant I will leave trainings to the last minute for selection and give them every chance and also give me as much clarity as I possibly can.”

“ At the end of the day, we’re about to go to the world’s biggest sporting event and with that comes enormous amount of spotlight on you and different types of pressure.

“We are where we are on form and on merit and we’re going into the Olympic Games in the first sevens competition ever as number one seeds and favourites.

“We’re not hiding away from that fact – we feel we have the best team on the planet and we want to make sure we enjoy ourselves and put in our best performances in Rio.

- RNZI