The junior-to-senior transition presents persistent difficulty for elite sport, often exacerbated by poor integration between talent development and high-performance environments. This case study evaluated Munster Rugby’s integrated model, which merged the academy and senior squad into a single training group. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 16 participants (academy players/coaches, senior players/coaches) and data were analysed using a deductive– inductive thematic content approach grounded in talent development environment frameworks. Five themes were generated to represent how the integrated model influenced the coaching situation: not one track, is this right, right now?, looking ahead, pulling in the same direction, and rubbing shoulders. Our analysis suggested that full-time senior-level training accelerated learning and facilitated earlier selection opportunities. However, these outcomes depended on continuous individual support for younger players and having senior players as role models. Outcomes also varied; while some players adapted, others struggled with the demands associated with preparing a team to win, compromising active experimentation and expansive skill learning. The findings suggest that in Munster’s integrated system, the dominant logic of winning had the potential to cannibalize the subordinate logic of development unless systemically accompanied by structured, individualised support and deliberate opportunities for error-based learning. They also underline the need for organisations to manage the inherent tension between short-term results and long-term player development.
Costello et al. (Wed,) studied this question.