
Carla Morrow, Assoc Head Women’s Basketball Coach, Ohio State
In this Glazier Drive video, Coach Morrow shares a collection of baseline out of bounds plays she has compiled. No narration — just the plays, drawn up and shown in sequence. A clean, efficient resource you’ll want to bookmark.
This video is a segment from one of the 120 Videos in Glazier Drive Basketball. Explore coaching clinic replays, practice plans, skill development videos, and more. Click here to see all that’s included.
The full video that this clip came from is available on Glazier Drive: ATO / BLOB / SLOB Design & Execution
If there are some plays that fit your team, you will probably need to watch the videos several times to get all of the cuts and screens.
If you want to steal easy baskets, look no further than your baseline out of bounds situations. BLOBs — Baseline Out of Bounds Plays — are set plays run when your team inbounds the ball from underneath the basket. Coaches who invest practice time here often find themselves picking up two to four points per game that opponents simply give away.
Coach Morrow walks through ten BLOB sets in the video above. Watch for the spacing, the timing of screens, and how multiple plays can be disguised from the same starting alignment — one of the hallmarks of a well-built BLOB package.
These four plays share the same stagger screen alignment — making them nearly impossible to scout individually. Install all four and your opponent will never know which one is coming.
Free throw stagger — single curl
The primary cutter uses the stagger screen and curls hard toward the basket. This is the base play of the series and works especially well when the defense is overplaying the straight cut. The inbounder looks for the curl before anything else.
Free throw stagger — single slip
A counter off the single curl. One of the screeners in the stagger slips early before completing the screen, looking to catch the defense in transition. Timing is everything — the slip must come just as the defense commits to stopping the curl.
Free throw stagger — reject
The cutter rejects the stagger and goes away from it, using the screen as a decoy. This is the change-up of the series and is most effective after you’ve successfully run the curl a couple of times in the same game.
Free throw stagger — flex
The stagger action transitions into a flex cut across the lane, adding a post entry option. Works well against teams that pack the paint to take away the curl.
Box — cross screen flare
Starting from a box alignment, one player sets a cross screen while a teammate flares to the three-point line. This creates a two-option read for the inbounder — the cross screen cutter inside or the flare shooter on the perimeter.
Up screen
Players set screens going toward the basket, freeing cutters to the ball-side corner or wing. A clean, simple play that attacks man-to-man defense effectively and is easy to execute under late-game pressure.
Up screen — grenade
A variation where the action “explodes” in multiple directions simultaneously, giving the inbounder multiple reads in a short window. A great call in late-game situations when the defense is on high alert.
Pin down
A pin down screen frees a shooter coming off toward the wing or top of the key. Effective against teams that trail their shooter, as the screener’s angle seals the defender. Look for the catch-and-shoot on the wing.
Stack up screen 1
Players line up in a stack near one elbow, then use an up screen to free a cutter. The stack alignment disguises the play’s direction until the last moment, making it difficult for the defense to anticipate the cut.
Stack up screen 2
A second variation out of the same stack alignment with a different screen angle or cutter priority. Running multiple plays from identical sets is one of the most effective ways to keep a defense guessing all game long.





