
Rob Brost, Head Boys’ Basketball Coach, Bolingbrook HS, IL
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The full video that this clip came from is available on Glazier Drive: Getting Comfortable Playing at an Uncomfortable Pace
This is a coaching clinic transcript explaining a drill called the “Huppy” (adapted from PGC Basketball about a decade ago). Here’s the breakdown:
Core concept: Huppy is a mental/physical checklist players run through every time they catch the ball in attacking situations, designed to improve decision-making in the lane and cut down on charges.
The five principles:
- Peek — every time hands touch the ball, players peek at the rim (checking for a shot or an open teammate). This applies on both ends, including immediately after a defensive rebound to look for an outlet.
- Powerful, low, wide stance — body positioning once attacking the rim.
- Three points of contact — both hands on the ball plus a third contact point (shoulder or hip), used to protect the ball and absorb contact in the lane.
- Patient in the lane off a one-two step — players land on a two-foot jump stop so they can pivot, then stay patient rather than forcing a play immediately (the coach notes they’ve never had a three-second call on a player using this footwork).
- Fake, then purposeful and decisive — use fakes to let teammates relocate/get open, then commit fully to a pass, shot, or finish.
Drill structure: Five lines (top of the key, both wings, both baselines). The first player in each line starts at least one foot behind the three-point line — intentionally not on it. The coach explains this spacing matters for two reasons: it opens driving lanes, and it sets up “step-in threes” (a player can step forward into a three only if they start behind the line; standing on the line means stepping in turns a three into a long two). Drive-and-kick reads prioritize shots at the rim first, step-in threes second.
The drill is run daily (sometimes twice per practice), starting with fewer balls/lines and progressively adding more to increase chaos and decision-making speed. The coach frames it as a low-cost, repeatable habit-builder rather than a complex scheme — the goal is fewer charges and more disciplined, patient attacks of the rim.





