
Coach Kevin Boyle has won multiple National High School Championships and in the video below he shares a defensive breakdown drill.
SUMMARY
Coach Boyle is demonstating a closeout and baseline drive drill, emphasizing defensive fundamentals, footwork, and offensive technique. Coach demonstrates how players should execute proper closeouts, defensive slides, and reactions to offensive drives, while also explaining the nuances of hand positioning, shot fakes, and reading offensive movement. The session blends physical repetition with teaching moments on decision-making and discipline during defensive and offensive actions.
DRILL STRUCTURE AND PURPOSE
The drill begins with players sprinting to a coach or teammate to simulate a defensive closeout, followed by lateral slides and a baseline drive defense. The goal is to teach defenders how to control their momentum, maintain balance, and anticipate the offensive player’s moves. The repetition of “slide, sprint, close out” reinforces the need for defensive consistency and conditioning.
CLOSEOUT TECHNIQUE AND HAND POSITIONING
The coach discusses the importance of hand placement during closeouts. While many coaches teach closing out with both hands up, this coach prefers raising the hand closest to the middle of the floor to better contest shots and defend drives. He notes that elite shooters (like Ray Allen or Chris Mullin) might require different tactics—sometimes allowing a midrange shot instead of risking an uncontested three-pointer.
SHOT FAKE AND DRIVE MECHANICS
The session transitions to offensive instruction, highlighting the proper use of shot fakes. The coach emphasizes executing the fake with controlled tempo—“slow fake, fast drive”—to sell the move without traveling. Players are encouraged to stay low, maintain balance, and shift the ball outside their body when driving to prevent turnovers. This rhythm trains athletes to deceive defenders while remaining fundamentally sound.
PRACTICAL EXAMPLES AND APPLICATIONS
The coach shares a story about a former player, Dean Kowalski, who wasn’t a strong shooter but mastered the shot fake, helping teammates like Kyrie Irving get open looks. This anecdote underscores the importance of technique and basketball IQ over pure shooting ability—smart movement can create scoring opportunities for others.
KEY TEACHING POINTS
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Sprint to closeouts, then slow into balance and control.
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Use the correct defensive hand positioning depending on the situation.
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Maintain low body posture for quick lateral movement.
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Execute realistic shot fakes—slow the fake, then explode into the drive.
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Don’t drive through defenders; change lanes and attack around them.
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Prioritize game-speed drills that simulate live defensive reads.
OVERALL INSIGHT
The session blends defensive discipline with offensive deception, showing how proper closeout technique and intelligent shot fakes can shift game momentum. It reinforces that basketball fundamentals—balance, timing, and footwork—are key to both preventing and creating scoring opportunities.
This clip is taken from Coach Boyle’s full clinic presentation. For information about how to gain access to that presentation please click the following link: 20 High Energy Drills for Pressure Defense





