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HUPPY Drill to Attack the Paint Under Control

By Brian Williams on June 17, 2026

HUPPY Drill to Attack the Paint Under Control

 
Rob Brost, Head Boys’ Basketball Coach, Bolingbrook HS, IL

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:  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.

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