Props for making the video, and the question I have is to the comments section, you say it is great or great work - what exactly is great, and what exactly you will use? One of the questions that I like to ask players attending camps and clinics is not - how was it or - did you enjoy it - do you like it..... these are all irrelevant questions. Are people today afraid to speak up? or too ignorant to understand?
I will take a stab at this, I think drills like these help to establish the idea of developing their basketball iq, Creating habits that are options during the flow of the game. Some players get it. Moving without the ball creates movement.
Clearly you’ve never been an athlete. How can they learn if players are not watching the drill to see how it should be done? You want a bunch of people just being active with no effectiveness?
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The pass off of the initial back screen wouldn't go in a game. You'll only get that either if you're lucky, or have your ball side corner guy dump it down to him in time. Also, at this age, most kids are taught to switch on those screens. This offense if for man-to-man defense, which unfortunately, you don't see being taught to kids these days, they're playing a 2-1-2, or more commonly, a 2-3, which you see a lot when watching kids this age. I like the idea, it's just not very effective, that's all.
player cutting for layup off the back screen should never pass the ball, that decision is on the initial passer, if the corner man cheats to help the passer should fake and hit the corner. that defender is late on that cutter and has no position to make a play without fouling, so if that player receives the ball he should be thinking layup every time.
I can't believe how far out they are. When we used to run that in high school, the high players would catch the ball at the top of the key -- right at the elbows. We scored lots of points off of this. It's very handy when teams overplay you in man to man.
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@dookdawg214 In international rules, a dominating post player is minimized because the key is wider. The funny thing is in the last Olympics, USA was #1 in assists, assist/TO ratio and fg%. When US puts our best guys on the court we win. Its rare that you blow a team out in back to back games. Even in NBA series between 1 and 8 seeds that rarely happens. We beat Spain by 37 the first olympic game and 11 the second.
@mrhoopfan1 Weak argument. Firstly, the US dominated internationally in the 90s with no problem, and even before the pros played at the Olympic level, the US teams won abroad regularly. They no longer do. Secondly, the rules are not that different. I had to make the transition from US (high school and NCAA) to Europe. The main difference is the key is wider at the baseline and the refs call travels more. Aside from that, it's just a lot of little stuff that has no impact on play.
You should tell the kid with the orange shirt that his feet are in the wrong position. The guy with the ball can drive inside like a hot knife through butter. First teach them the fundamentals coach!
@scoutsouljademoman Although Naismath was born in Canada. Basketball was invented while he was living in the United States. What does knowing your basketball facts have anything to do with being an African American?