GOLDEN RULE: When your man does not have the ball YOU MUST HAVE 2 FEET IN THE PACK LINE.

Similar documents
The Saunders 50 Defense

2013 Brayden Carr Foundation Coaches Clinic

IV CLINIC INTERNAZIONALE WBSC-CNA-USAP 2007

Jay Wright Innovative Late Game Sets

Ettore Messina - Pick and Roll Defense

Mario DeSisti: Zone offense

Mario DeSisti: Passing

Nike Coaches Clinic Verona NY - May 2012

Thoughts on Building a Zone Attack

Thanks for downloading this free PDF! Inside, we ve pulled together a small sample of the content included with the Basketball Blueprint app.

Introduction. Why use the 1-4 offense?

What are Some Solutions to Various Defensive Ball Screen Tactics?

Rick Torbett Read and React offence

Guidelines for: St. Ignatius CYO Basketball Program

SCREENING Fundamentals of the Screening Game Cutting Principles 166

Motion Offense. Movement creates movement, Intelligent movement creates space, Space affords time, and time ensures accuracy

Hustle Defensive Playbook

CP Motion Offense. CB s C oaching Education and Development. Concepts

Geno Auriemma Teaching the High Post/ Triangle Offense All Drills Are To Be Done On Each Side Of The Floor. Drill 1

Michigan Basketball- John Beilein BCAM Meeting 10/7/ hoops Date of future Michigan Clinic Nov. 3, 2007

As a coach we often try several types of defense but our basic defense remains man-toman.

PLAY ONE-ON-ONE ONLY IF THERE IS A ONE SECOND ADVANTAGE. 1vs0 curl or crossover step 1vs1 read the defence One-on-one live.

The Pass Option Offense

I. 2 on 0, 1 Ball Drills to Use in Teaching Free Offense

Anthony Goyne - Ferntree Gully Falcons

2013 South Dakota High School Basketball Coaches Association

ABC S of Basketball. Sean Juteau Physical & Health Education Helping Teacher P: E: Page 1

Denial Emporia State s Point Zone

Food for thought: Attacking the Rim

Welcome to the ABGC Basketball House League

Decision Making Drill Book Drills to improve your player s ability to make plays & progressive reads

Chris Mack Xavier. Transition Offense

JAY WRIGHT 28 COMPETITIVE DRILLS FOR SHOOTING AND FOOTWORK

Notes by Jim Ponchak, 1

Drill 8 Tandem Defense

BUTLER BALLSCREEN MOTION OFFENSE BASICS Why the Ballscreen Utilizing the On-Ball Screen Teaching Points... 5

COACH MAC s DEFENSE: THREE QUARTER COURT DEFENSES 2009, Forrest McKinnis

Premier Coaches Clinic Presented by DC Sports 10/3/10

-George Raveling bought every member of Donovan s coaching staff three books to read on their trip to Prague, Czech Republic.

Basketball Drills. This drill will help players develop skills for anticipating the pass. (Playing off the ball defense)

TEAM OFFENSE. Zone Offense Fundamentals Attacking Even Front Zones Even Front: Gaps and X Attacking Odd Front Zones Odd Front: 4 Out

2 & 3 post player zone attack 20 Set plays / 2 Quick Hitters 10 Out of Bounds Plays 6 Zone Shooting Drills Plus Zone Transition Offense

Toss Drills. CB s C oaching Education and Development

In the example to the right, the wing player waits until the dribbler crosses the foul line.

ONE FOUR LOW - DRIBBLE DRIVE OFFENSE

Flex Offense - Basic Motion


FIBA EUROPE. Then 4 cuts in the lane and goes on the center position, while 5 replaces 4 in the wing spot with a weak side cut (diagr.

on the air time- jump back to help. On closing out it's 2 steps towards the ball, then close out.

4 Out 1 In Offense Complete Coaching Guide

Practice 12 of 12 MVP LEVEL. Values TIME MANAGEMENT Help the players understand how to manage, school, fun, sports, and other hobbies.

Motion Zone Offense Coach K Duke

Blue Valley West High School Motion Offense

Match-up 3 Defense: "Same Side Cut" # 1- jumps to ball, takes cutter down, and kicks him to # 4 # 2- pressures the ball, forces ball out of middle #

Chris Collins - Quick Hitting Actions for Motion Offense

Breakdown Drills. Page 29

Here are some points for teaching your team to run a simple match-up zone.

Offensive Strategy. Transition Offense

Open Post Offense - Motion Offense, Diagrams, Drills, and Plays

The triple threat SHOOTING

This is a simple "give and go" play to either side of the floor.

Chapter 1 Post Entry Dribble To Wing Pages 4 8. Chapter 2 Post Entry Dribble To Middle Pages Chapter 3 The Wing Entry Pages 12 15

Sixth Grade Basketball Clinic Week 1


JIM SAIA. Offensive System. Plus Drills To Teach

Teaching Footwork Footwork to Dynamic 1 on 1 Attack

Nike Coaches Clinic Notes: Cleveland, Oh Oct. 5 th -Oct. 8 th, 2012

5-Out Motion Offense Domestic Coaching Guide

SCHOOL TEAM COACHING CLINIC

PATRIOT MOTION OFFENSE ROAD MAP

Drills to Start Practice

Eagan Basketball. Traveling Coaches Book

Nike Clinic Notes: October 2014

Hubie Brown: Playbook For Success

Circle Defence DVD by Dave Robbins, Virginia Union University, NCAA Division II National Champions

Zone Offense Clinic Coach Richard Williams Former Mississippi State Head Coach

Dribbling - Attack vs. Control

Transition Offense. Table of Contents. 1. Basic Transition Principles Terminology & The Outlet Push it Up the Rail 3

Notes by Jim Ponchak,

Game Winning Specials

Practice 10 of 12 ALL-STAR LEVEL. Values TEAMWORK Lead the players in a discussion about teamwork. Warm-Up. Building Skills. Team Concepts.

Basic Offensive Fundamentals

50 Series Motion Offense Package

Fundamental Drills Playbook

Australian Development Camp Technical program

Australian Development Camp

BASIC DEFENSIVE PRINCIPLES

Iowa State Playbook

Basic Dribbling Drills

FLEX MOTION OFFENSE. By Brad Stricklin. Introduction to the Flex Motion Offense Basic Motion Corner Options... 8

Section 4 Weekly Session Training Plans

Passing drills. Contents. Passing drills

20 Insider Basketball Plays

Billy Donovan Notes: 10 Aggressive Transition & Conditioning Drills dvd

Matt Stollberg

Alvin Gentry Phoenix Suns

2014 Americas Team Camp Coaching Clinic

Transcription:

Drills to Build The Pack Line Defense -Chris Mack, Xavier Mackc@xavier.edu -Practices their Pack Line every single day. Coaching Point: Have an identity.! -Hard to build habbits if you change your defense a lot.! -They more or less keep the pack line no matter who they are playing Their pack line d is not a soft one where you sit in the lane.! -Their PLD is an aggressive defense, with incredible ball pressure, and you must be smart off the ball. The PLD helps give you a system to play defense. The PLD: 1) Gives players answers and accountability! -Certain things players can/can t do do! -They are given specific rules ex. You can t play behind the post vs Play hard 2) Simplifies Scouting--> Their coaches watch a ton of film but do not give it all to the players. Instead they play certain actions in very specific ways and practice these every day.! Ex. Practice defending staggered screens so when they play a team they already! know how they will defend this and get better at it through out the year. 3) Creates a culture your players can believe in.! Varsity players pass down the defense by teaching your younger players! without a lot of involvement from coaches. ****Mark the pack line in practice every day**** Think of it as a 16 foot 3 point line. (Figure 1a) GOLDEN RULE: When your man does not have the ball YOU MUST HAVE 2 FEET IN THE PACK LINE. Exceptions: If your man is cutting you must chase the cutter. 1) On the Ball: Have extreme ball pressure ---> do not get beat to the outside NEVER! GIVE UP BASELINE! -Keep your butt to the basket! -Don t get beat baseline! -If your man goes towards the middle do not get beat through the elbow, they! can t attack you on a straight line. Post D: 3 quarter the post on the high side! -Undersized teams can front! -Stay low + use and arm bar --> stay on the high side. If the ball is on the wing and the man gets beat baseline it will be a layup.

How you play the post determines how you pay the perimeter:! -Pop back if the post player catches and show the officials yours hands.! -Make the offensive player catch outisde the box so now the perimeter player can help if they need to. Xavier will tape off a box that goes three feet around the block. The offensive player should be forced to catch outside this box (Figure 1a) 2) You must have two feet inside the pack line when your man does not have the ball and you are trying to form triangles Figure 1b! -Be active in your gap! -Stunt on the drive! -Close out with two high hands (be in two places at once)! -Your positioning is constantly changing! -See both Defining Your Team! -How do you close out?! -Close out with two high hands to discourage rhythm shots! -Play in then out **Your positioning is your help** Discourage shots, play the drive, call shot when the shot goes up. Positioning Drills-! Vegas Close Out: Toss the ball out, close out, yell shot. Two big steps then chop your feet, stay low, elbows bent hands up --> Stay square and stay at a good distance. Black Hawk Fig 1c- 1) Coach throws the pass out... jump to gap + swipe + contact cutter 2) Player passes to wing... close out! -Go love when coach calls it out...only allow two dribbles 1-0 Positioning Drill Fig 1d-! -Defense stays in gap positioning!! -Gap!! -Ball! -Offense keeps moving for 15 seconds at a time *Constantly coach or teach positioning in this drill* Post Defense! Drills Fig 1e 3 Out 1 Guarded

! -Stay low, arm bar, initiate the contact! -Push post player down the line! -On the line up the line! -On the reverse pass open up Beat the hell out of him block to block hit then peel **Discipline when the ball goes into the post. 3 quarter to behind (pop back and show ref your hands) Do your work before the post gets it!**! -Boxer s stance when the post catches the ball! -Wall up --> keep your ground and on shots walk through your man Wall Up- On offensive rebounds push offensive player out w/your feet.! Quick Drill- Throw off the glass offense can only pivot defense wall up -->guards look for chargers. 3 Out 1 Unguarded Fig1f! -Don t ever switch! -If the offense interchanges you must change positions.! -Always recover to the gap! **Don t get beat to the outside** Xavier will post trap Big to Big! -Crowd the post and play cat and mouse! -Know who you re guarding (scouting) so you know how much you can help **Scouting personnel is important shooter vs non shooters etc** QUESTIONS: Q) How do you block out if you re playing the high side? A) Physical block outs and seal your man don t just run in. Q) How you do you play the baseline? Where is the defender s foot? A) When their taught to keep their butt to the basket the player will play how they are comfortable stopping the outside. Q) Do you deny really good players the ball? A) No. Help w/accountability. Must pressure the ball especially w/no shot clock. 3 on 3 Identity Fig 1g! -15 seconds!! -No ball screens!! -No post ups Scoring: +2 for 2!! +3 for 3!! +2 in the box (possession starts over)! +2 offensive rebounds (possession starts over)

2 Questions: How do do you guard inbounds underneath + how do you defend screens? 1. The man guarding the inbound pass will shade to protect the basket more than being squared up. Any player that is lined up on the block we will play him with an arm bar seeing both the ball and their man. If a player is lined up in the corner or elbow we will guard him depending on position/scouting. We will guard all guards and posts that can shoot with an arm bar ready to chase of screens. We will sag off non shooting bigs, making it easier to defend cuts to the basket. 2. Ballscreens we are always OVER the screen and the big is HARD HEDGING the ballscreen attempting to keep the ball handler on that side of the floor. Off ball screens we have different rules for all of the types of screens we could see. To simplify: INTERIOR SCREENS (SCREENS BRINGING PLAYERS TO THE BLOCK)- The player guarding the screener always places to TWO EYES ON THE PASSER discouraging the passer from making an easy pass in to the paint. The player getting screened gets to the level of the screen, hits the cutter as he uses the screen with a forearm and rides him out of the play. SCREENS FOR JUMP SHOTS (PIN DOWNS, STAGGERS)- The player guarding the screening action always has a chasing mentality unless the screen is set too high or too low where he will show chase and then go under the screen at the last second (we call it WHIP the screen.) The player guarding the passer will jump and swipe at the ball discouraging the chase dribble as will the player guarding the screener. We call this a THREE ON THE BALL MENTALITY

FIGURES: