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Developing Brumbies Women's players
The University of Canberra and ACT Brumbies have a strong partnership (since 2013) that encompasses practical student engagement and research collaboration. In 2023 a University of Canberra High Performance Sport Fellowship was embedded in the Brumbies Senior Women’s Academy to support the players development. Research informed and evidence-based practice has enhanced player performance and safety, taking the Brumbies Super W teams to a new level. In 2024, 10 Brumbies Women players were selected to represent Australia in the Wallaroos, our national women’s rugby team.
Athletic performance lead
Investing in women’s sport is a priority in the University of Canberra’s 2021-2026 Sport Strategy, from investing in infrastructure that will drive participation and supporting talent programs like the Senior Women’s Rugby Academy, to undertaking research with women’s sporting teams, athletes, and sponsoring professional female sports teams such as the Brumbies Rugby Women’s (alongside the men’s team), University of Canberra Capitals and Canberra United.
In 2023, the University and the ACT Brumbies teamed up to launch the first-class Senior Women’s Rugby Academy, run on ϳԹ’s Bruce campus.
The Senior Women’s Rugby Academy plays a crucial role in identifying and developing players into potential Super W and elite Rugby Sevens players, while also serving as a dedicated high-performance environment for Brumbies players who are nationally contracted to the Wallaroos and need to continue training outside the Super W season.
Through the Academy, players have year-round coaching and support – they can train like high performance athletes – which is not offered through community clubs. Year-round training maintains momentum and keeps players engaged. Coaches and staff across the various programs reported a difference in the attitude and commitment form the players.
Embedded within the Senior Women’s Rugby Academy was the ϳԹ High-Performance Sport Fellow position that aimed to improve the performance of ϳԹ sponsored teams or programs through a range of engagement and research activities.
The High Performance Sport Fellowship position was a one-year appointment for a ϳԹ researcher embedded in the Senior Women’s Rugby Academy between January and December 2023. The role aimed to:
- Enhance the performance of ϳԹ sponsored professional sporting teams, their elite athlete program(s) or activities in the ACT region and nationally by sharing research-led expertise across sport integrity, education, and strength or conditioning.
- Facilitate ongoing research, innovation and professional practices within the University’s professional teams or elite athlete programs.
- Support student Work Integrated Learning (WIL) placements with ϳԹ-supported professional sporting teams or elite athlete programs.
- Enhance the research outputs of the successful candidate and their collaborators through industry partnership and integration.
- Share the knowledge and insights gained through the experience through teaching, case studies
- Upskill the successful candidate, with a focus on deepening their industry experience and connections to drive industry-led research in the future.
Billy Mason, lecturer in Sports and Exercise was awarded the fellowship. Mason worked in the role of Athletic Performance Lead across multiple women’s programs over 2023, including: the ϳԹ7s program, which competed in the Queensland Premier Rugby 7s competition; The Brumbies/ϳԹ Senior Women’s Academy, which supported female rugby players from the ACT and surrounds through to international representatives competing for the Australian National team; and the Next Gen 7s program, working with the Rising Stars in a second-tier national Rugby 7s tournament.
Mason help to develop the athletes in various area of their training including strength and conditioning, load management and monitoring, power development, speed, fitness, injury minimisation and competition preparation.
“Mason’s expertise as a coach and his research area directly benefits the development of the players, both seen in individual performance outcomes as well as team performance. It was also Mason’s experience as a teacher that was invaluable to the Academy coaching team – which is a male heavy coaching team. His ability to work with diverse ages and training needs of women was crucial in fast tracking the development of the athletes.”
James Erwin, Head of Women’s Rugby and Pathways
On completion of the 12-month Fellowship, Mason continued into an ongoing paid role as the Head of Women’s Strength and Conditioning with the Super Rugby Women’s and Academy programs.
Through these programs a significant improvement was seen within the first year with the number of players selected at a national level going from 5 to 10 selected for the 2024 Wallaroos team.
Partners
Brumbies Rugby
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Learn more
ϳԹ students head to France for World University Rugby Sevens Championships, ϳԹ News, 2024
Dedicated women's rugby academy launching at ϳԹ, ϳԹ News, 2023
Star on the Rise: April Downey on the path to national selection, UnCover, 2023
Brumbies players awarded inaugural Women’s Emerging Leaders Scholarships at ϳԹ, ϳԹ News, 2023
ϳԹ’s Sport Strategy: highlighting our women in sport, UnCover, 2021
University of Canberra Sports Strategy 2021-2026
ϳԹ teams up with Brumbies Rugby as Education Partner, ϳԹ News, 2018