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Sport

31st Oct 2016

Alex Goode on ‘two unbelievably physical human beings’ that don’t bother lifting weights

Making huge strides.

Patrick McCarry

England are on the cusp of climbing to second in the World Rugby rankings but they are leaving nothing to chance in their pursuit of the All Blacks.

Eddie Jones has been in the England job for less than a year and you almost can’t remember what it was like before he arrived.

Then you remember. Then you regret that you remembered.

The Australian inherited an England team with its confidence at rock bottom after getting dumped out of a World Cup they were hosting – at tremendous expense – before the pool stages were even wrapped up.

Jones arrived off the back of leading Japan to their best ever World Cup performance. The Brave Blossoms failed to make the knock-out stages but Jones masterminded a sensational victory over South Africa that captured the world’s attention.

Taking over the England team, Jones set about making them fitter than they had ever been. It was a work in progress but the training ground grind paid off on the pitch. By the end of his first ever Six Nations, England had ended a five-year championship drought and claimed a Grand Slam.

Alex Goode has only played once under Jones but has trained extensively with the group and will hope to be a key figure of the upcoming November Series.

“As soon as Eddie came in,” he tells JOE, “he emphasised that we should do a lot of work on my speed. It’s not necessarily the distances you have to cover but it’s that explosive pace and triggers to make sure you are alert and first to that ball.

“Urgency of movement is a key area that is now being looked at.”

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Goode is part of an English backline that can certainly motor. Asked to name the quickest players from England’s backs, he mentions Gloucester winger Jonny May before noting he does well in speed tests for Saracens and England. He is about to move on before he adds: “Oh, Anthony Watson. Can’t forget him.”

Most of the hefty gym work, says Goode, is carried out during pre-season with the next nine or 10 months all about maintenance and sustainability. He says:

“At present, most of the backs will be looking to bench press around 120 kilos. You would do around four or five reps of that.

“You are not shooting the lights out in the gym, numbers-wise. Those weights are higher in pre-season but [during the season] it is still competitive in the gym. Phil Morrow has seen to that since he has come in to Saracens.

“He makes strength and conditioning very simple in terms of goals but he also adds that competitive spirit. So it may not be about how much you are bench-pressing or squatting but how quickly you are moving the bar; how smooth your action is.”

The forwards at Saracens, unsurprisingly, put the backs in the shade when it comes to gym records but Goode is not beholden to the numbers. Just because a teammate can shift tin, it doesn’t necessarily mean he will have those rugby-playing instincts to get his team over the gainline when it counts.

The opposite is also true.

“I have never seen Jacques Burger or Schalk Burger lift a weight,” he says, “but they are two unbelievably physical human beings.”

Jonny May, Alex Goode and England captain Dylan Hartley are put through their paces by Mitsubishi Motors’ innovative Performance Tests. 

At 28, Goode is now a settled, pivotal figure in a Saracens side that are masters of all they survey. They claimed their first ever Champions Cup in May and already look the team to beat this season, having defeated Toulon away in an extremely tough pool.

He is also part of an England team gunning for New Zealand – a side Goode helped defeat in 2012 – after whitewashing Australia during their summer tour Down Under. However, it has not always been easy.

“All the knock-backs have ultimately helped my career, I’d say,” he explains.

“Getting left out of the 2011 World Cup squad had a huge impact on me. I had been called up for a couple of training squads and felt sure I had a chance, so missing out stung.

“Rejection makes you want it more. You can sulk about it or get back on the horse and work harder.”

All that hard work is paying off for Goode but a couple of good seasons won’t see him ease off. Not in the slightest.

There’s still so much he can do. So much he has planned.

Alex Goode was speaking on behalf of Mitsubishi Motors, Official Performance Partner of England Rugby. Mitsubishi Motors is using Intelligent Motion to challenge the team ahead of the Old Mutual Wealth Series through innovative Performance Tests.