England are gearing up for Rugby World Cup 2011 with the help of Formula One giants McLaren.

The team behind world champion drivers Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button are lending their technical expertise to ensure England head to New Zealand in the best shape ever.

The England management are using McLaren's data analysts to study the players' GPS readings, from which they are tailoring the training sessions to get the best from each individual and to replicate Test match intensity as closely as possible.

When England won the World Cup in 2003, Clive Woodward's philosophy was that his team would do 100 things one percent better than anyone else. That was where the idea of the England players wearing a skin-tight kit first came from.

England's link-up with McLaren over the past two months – managed by the RFU's data analyst partners PGIR Ltd – is similarly designed to seek out a vital edge for Martin Johnson's squad leading into the World Cup.

"If you think back to 2003, the greatest thing that Clive Woodward did was ensuring we were ahead of other people," explained England centre Mike Tindall. "Nowadays it's very hard. Everyone has caught up and is at the same level so you really are looking for that half a per cent.

"The physical and conditioning guys are working with McLaren and trying everything they can to get that little bit more data and feedback. If we can continue to do that hopefully we will steal those half per cents.

"We're making sure we hit the ground running and a lot of the training has been more rugby based. In 2003 it was just hit the line – run, run, run.

"It has been a lot different. They are looking at all the data from the GPS and heart rate monitors, trying to predict when people are in a zone to get injuries. They also see when people are working to an optimum level and making sure they don't go over the edge of that."

England's defence coach Mike Ford added: "We are trying to feed off each other, learn off each other. They are looking at how we analyse our GPS and they are showing us how they analyse their stuff."