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Basketball Drills Finishing

Basketball Drills Finishing

By Brian Williams on December 15, 2014

These basketball passing drills were posted in the FastModel Sports Basketball Plays and Drills Library The site has thousands of drills and plays that have been submitted by coaches from all levels and from all over the world.

The first two drills were contributed by Kyle Gilreath, Assistant Coach at Fort Meyers (Florida) High School.

The third drill was contributed by Daniel Murphy, Assistant Coach at Ledyard High School in Ledyard, CT.

You can always add a helping defender, or a coach or manager at the basket with an air dummy to work on finishing with contact if that fits your needs better.

 

 
 

Cone Finishing Drill

This is a drill from the Billy Donovan Skill Development blog article.

basketball-drills-finishing1

Player makes a combo move at the 1st cone and takes 1 dribble past the second cone to get to the rim.

(It is important the player only takes 1 dribble following their combo move..teach them to cover space with less dribbling). “Take off and extend”

Work on multiple finishes and chart them!

 

5 Spot Finishing Drill

basketball-drills-finishing2

At Fort Myers High School we run the Read and React Offense from Better Basketball. If you are not familiar with the offense it consists of five spots that should always be filled. If your defenders feet are above the three point line (Read Line) and you are one pass away we tell our players to immediately cut back door. With that in mind this morning I put a couple of our guys through a grueling session of finishing moves which incorporates this concept.

When finishing from the sides I like to teach my players to get their shoulders parallel with the baseline to product themselves and the ball from a defender.

5 Spots – 12 Makes at each spot

Player starts under rim and sprints to the spot and cuts quickly back door.

1st 3 Shots: Right hand finishes using backboard
2nd 3 Shots: Left hand reverse finishes using backboard
3rd 3 Shots: Right hand floaters
4th 3 Shots: Left hand floaters

Michigan Finishing Drill

Demonstrated by Michigan’s John Beilein at a clinic. Great drill for first step explosion and finishing with contact and defensive pressure. 1 must explode past the defender in order to get 2 on his/her hip. Then finish strong at the rim. 2 should contest but not get in the habit of fouling.

basketball-drills-finishing-3

1 and 2 both face the basket

1 places ball on 2’s back

1 rips ball of 2’s back and attacks basket

2 tries to defend basket as 1 tries to finish

 

 

Basketball Plays 2 David Blatt Sets

By Brian Williams on December 11, 2014

These 2 man to man set plays below are from David Blatt’s playbook that was compiled by Coach Scott Peterman from the Men’s Basketball Hoopscoop

David Blatt’s Playbook is a part of this week’s bundle along with the 2014 FIBA World Cup Playbook

For more information about the Blatt-2014 FIBA Plabyook bundle, click this link.

If these sets do not fit your players, I hope you can at least get an idea from them that might fit your needs.

Diagrams created with FastDraw

 

 

2 Down

basketball-plays-blatt1

5 sets a ball screen on 1.

1 dribbles to the left wing.

5 sets a down screen for 2.

2 cuts to the top right guard spot.

3 sets a cross screen for 4. 4 cuts to the left wing.
 

basketball-plays-blatt2

1 passes to 2.

5 sets a ball screen on 2 and rolls to the basket.

2 attacks the basket.

3 cuts to the right corner.

4 cuts to the left corner.
 

2 Down Wrinkle

basketball-plays-blatt3

A play if you have a 4 who can shoot.

5 pops out to the top of the key.

1 passes to 5.

5 does a hand off with 1.

4 slides to the right low block.

2 cuts to the left corner.

3 slides to the left low block.

basketball-plays-blatt4

3 sets a cross screen.

5 sets a down screen.

4 cuts middle and then goes to the top right guard spot.

1 passes to 4.

 

These 2 man to man set plays below are from David Blatt’s playbook that was compiled by Coach Scott Peterman from the Men’s Basketball Hoopscoop

David Blatt’s Playbook is a part of this week’s bundle along with the 2014 FIBA World Cup Playbook

For more information about the Blatt-2014 FIBA Plabyook bundle, click this link.

If you are interested in adding to your Coaching Toolbox take look at what I believe is our best offer.

CLICK HERE to select from a list of more than 70 eBooks.

 

Basketball Drills Push it 4v4 Transition

By Brian Williams on December 10, 2014

These two transition drills are from Drew Hanlen’s Transition Drill Book.

Drew is an NBA Strategic Skills Coach & Consultant that has helped over 25 NBA and NBA pre-draft players including David Lee and Bradley Beal.

Drew is the Head Skills Coach for Pure Sweat Basketball.

He has run his internationally renowned Elite Skills Clinics in over 30 states and 4 countries over the past four years.

He is also the Head Skills Coach for the Reebok Breakout Challenge and has worked various events for Nike Basketball.

Diagrams created with FastDraw

Push it 4v4

basketball-drills-transition1

Set Up: Players will be divided into four teams. A team of four will start on offense, a team of four will start on defense and another team of four will start on each baseline.

Step 1: Black Team will play live 4v4 against the Red Team in the half-court. On the shot (regardless make or miss), the Blue Team will transition against the Black Team who will transition back on defense.

Step 2: Blue Team will play live 4v4 against the Black Team in the half-court. On the shot (regardless make or miss), the Green Team will transition against the Blue Team who will transition back on defense to continue the drill.

Additional Info: If the defense gets a steal, they will transition in the full-court against the team that turned the basketball over. On the score, the team waiting on the baseline will transition against them to continue the drill.

We Need You Back Conversion Drill

basketball-drills-transition2

Set Up: Players will be divided in two teams. The Black Team will start with a rebounder (1), a defender (5), an outlet player (2), an attacking guard (3) and a player at half-court ready to transition (4) in a two on one situation. The Red Team will start with a defender (x1), a trailing defender (x2), an outlet player (x4), an attacking guard (x5) and a player at half-court ready to transition (x3) in a two on one situation.

Step 1: Player 1 will outlet the basketball to Player 2 who will advance the ball to Player 3, who will attack x1 in a 2v1 situation with Player 4. x2 will sprint back and try to drop to the level of the basketball. Offense gets one shot attempt to score.

Step 2: Offensive player that shoots (or turns the basketball over) must sprint back on defense, while the defender must secure the rebound or get the made field goal out of the net and then outlet the basketball to their teammate at the angle. If the defender gets a steal, they can quickly outlet the basketball to their teammate at the angle as well. As soon as the player receives the outlet, they will advance the basketball to their teammate that is ready to attack on the wing. As soon as the basketball crosses half-court, the waiting offensive player at half court can attack.

Step 3: Offensive player that does not sprint back on defense will rotate to the half-court waiting position. Defender that made the outlet pass will rotate to the outlet line, while the other defender will become the waiting defender in the paint.

Coaching Basketball: Teaching Offense and Shot Selection

By Brian Williams on December 9, 2014

This article was written and submitted by retired High School Coach Dave Millhollin. Coach Millhollin is known throughout the Sacramento area for his Boys Varsity teams’ fundamental soundness, discipline, unselfishness, team defense and overachievement. Dave Coached for 27 seasons and compiled 391 wins. I have included more information about his coaching career at the end of the article.

If you would like to contact Coach Millhollin, email me and I will put you in touch with him.

TEACHING OFFENSE AND SHOT SELECTION

It is important to approach teaching offensive execution and proper shot selection as an “indoctrination” process. You are not just teaching concepts and skills, you are trying to instill a value system and philosophy in your team and program.

The Goal:

You want your team and all your players to understand exactly what proper offensive execution is and what it is not, also you want your team to understand which shots are “good shots” and what shots are not.

Taking these goals one important step further; you want your team to understand how proper offensive execution and good shot selection leads to playing “winning basketball.”

The fact is that most teams do not execute very well offensively and almost every basketball team takes a lot of bad shots each game. So, if your team executes well on offense and takes good shots; their chances of winning improves tremendously – And if your team can do this consistently and understand what they are doing; you are able to build a “culture of winning” on your team and in your program.

Logical reasoning:

When asked about offensive execution and shot selection, each player on your team should have something like this to say:

“Proper offensive execution and good shot selection greatly increases our chances of winning. We really want to win. So we are going to embrace the concepts of proper offensive execution and good shot selection. We want to know as much as we can about it and implement it into the way we play so we can win as many games as we possibly can”.

Before we continue our discussion on teaching offense and shot selection any further; we should examine the teaching process and the establishment of execution standards.

Five powerful teaching ideas to consider:

  1. COGNITIVE TEACHING:
  • Thoroughly explain and demonstrate each offensive and shot selection concept carefully, both to the team and to each individual player. Comprehensively and meticulously go over every appropriate situation and scenario.
  • Ask questions and answer questions to make sure your players understand every concept, use examples and ask for examples.
  • From drill and scrimmage situations, frequently stop the action to evaluate and explain examples of correct and incorrect execution. Explain why for every example and involve your players in the conversation as much as possible. Your players must know what is correct and what is incorrect and why. They must be able to explain and defend every action they engage in on the court.
  1. BEHAVIORAL TEACHING (Rewards and consequences)
  • Reward positive behavior (good shots and good execution).
    Variable Ratio; tailored to each individual
  • Apply appropriate consequences to negative behavior (bad shots and bad execution).
    Fixed ratio, 1:1
  1. CORRECTION TEACHING:
  • In the mind of a child; “Everything that is not corrected…. is accepted”. Therefore we must correct every thing that is not acceptable and reinforce, recognize, reward or praise every thing that is acceptable. (This is the only way I have found to effectively teach what is and what is not acceptable).
  • “Kids do two things; what you make them do and what you let them do”. So; make them do the right things and don’t let them do the wrong things.
  • The way your team plays in games is a direct reflection of the standards you require in practice; whatever you allow in practice will show up in games.

  1. REPETITION TEACHING:
  • Relentless scoring practice is necessary for scoring proficiency and relentless offensive execution practice is necessary if you want your team to be good at offensive execution.
  • “Practice does not make perfect; “practice” makes permanent. Only “perfect practice” makes perfect.
  • Get good at what you work at by working at it relentlessly and working at it correctly.
  1. REMINDERS AND ACCOUNTABILITY TEACHING:
  • It is essential that every player understands how proper execution of concepts and standards affects success and winning. It is also essential that each player possess an obsessive desire for the team to be successful.
  • Once concepts and standards are established; effective teams create an atmosphere where players respectfully remind, correct and reinforce each other’s execution and hold each other accountable.

OFFENSIVE BASKETBALL AND SHOT SELECTION

Coaches must know their team’s strengths and weaknesses each season then develop offensive systems and a style of play that enables their teams to have a chance to have as much success as they are capable of each season. They need to have offensive strategies and tactics that enable their teams to have success against any kind of full, extended and half court defenses they will encounter.

In my opinion, coaches should teach offensive schemes that put the right players in the right places on the court in order to maximize their team’s offensive and scoring potential. Offensive systems should be easy for players to understand and execute.

All Players must understand their team’s offensive systems and understand the style of play they are being taught. They need to understand that if they execute their offense properly, it will result in their team having a chance to achieve their maximum potential (provided that they play good defense and rebound effectively, of course).

It is in the aforementioned context that offensive basketball and shot selection will most effectively be taught.

PRIORITIES:

  1. Proficient execution against defensive pressure; full, extended and half court pressure and presses.
  1. Proficient execution against any kind of half-court defense.
  1. Develop the mentality that “We finish every offensive possession with points; we score every time we get the ball”, and “We do not commit fouls while we are on offense”. Teams that establish this value system are extremely difficult to beat.
  1. Proper shot selection is essential. Each player must be taught and understand his personal scoring role. The team must know under what circumstances scoring opportunities occur.

All players must know who should shoot, when the shot should be taken and from what spot the shot should come from; EVERY POSSESSION.

  • Players must only be allowed to attempt shots during games they have the ability to convert.
    “If he can’t make that shot it in practice, he doesn’t get to take it in the game”.

Coaches must stress the concepts of:

  • “Right time, right spot, right player”………for every shot.
  • “Take shots the other team can’t fast break on”……this is a critical concept.
  1. Players must understand game situations at all times and adjust their offensive decision making appropriately.
  • Execution of offensive play calls from the bench.
  • How time and score should affect each possession.
  • “Bonus philosophy”; players need to know how many fouls the opposing team has each half and know how to use the bonus while on offense to gain an advantage.
  • Possession discretion; players need to know when to push the ball up the court into early offense and when to pull it back and run their half court possession offense.
  • “Fresh clock” kick outs v. offensive put-backs from offensive rebounds. (sometimes possession of the ball is more valuable than quick points)
  1. Coaches must be able to use their “remote control” from the sideline effectively

Many coaches shy away from delving into teaching and discussing shot selection with their players because it is not easy to teach and it can lead to confusion stimulating comments like “……afraid to shoot”, “got my kid all screwed up”, “doesn’t understand his role”, “he’ll take me out if I take that shot”, etc. However, I believe that studying the topic and learning how to approach the subject is very worthwhile for coaches who really want to learn how improve their coaching and win more games.

Teams that shoot high percentages from the field are normally very successful. Opposing coaches and people in the know frequently say things about them like; “those guys really know what they’re doing”, “they play with great discipline”, “I wish my guys had that kind of shot selection”, “they are fundamentally sound”, “what an unselfish group” and “they never beat themselves”. Make no mistake, it is very challenging for coaches to become good at teaching solid offensive execution and great shot selection, but to me, the rewards make it a tremendously worthwhile endeavor.

© Dave Millhollin

About the author of this article, Coach Dave Millhollin In fourteen years at Ponderosa High School, Coach Dave’s teams won 260 games (.665). From 2000 through 2009 Ponderosa won 207 games over a ten year stretch which included four SVC Conference Championships and two CIF Section final four appearances. Over his 27 year Boys Varsity Coaching career, Coach Dave posted 391 wins, produced 20 college basketball players and was named SVC Coach of the Year four times. At Ponderosa, Coach Dave’s teams were #1 in California in team defense five times and in 2008 Ponderosa was the top defensive team in the Nation among shot clock states. Over Coach Millhollin’s last five seasons (2005-6 through 2009-2010; 136 games) Ponderosa averaged a composite 50% total field goal percentage, 58% two point field goal percentage and 32% three point field goal percentage. Since retiring from High School coaching in 2010, Coach Dave has been actively involved in coaching Jr High level School and AAU teams as well as and running instructional basketball clinics from the primary grades through the College level.

Basketball Plays Spurs Need 3

By Brian Williams on December 8, 2014

This sideline out of bands play against man to man defense is used by the San Antonio Spurs. It is posted in the FastModel Sports Basketball Plays and Drills Library The site has thousands of drills and plays that have been submitted by basketball coaches from around the world.

This is a great misdirection play that San Antonio has been running for years.

You can also find out more about FastModel Play Diagramming software by clicking this link: FastDraw

I hope you can find tweak this to fit the skills of your players and use it when you need a three point shot.

This play was submitted by Craig Craig LeVasseur who was a member of the Detroit Pistons coaching staff for 5 seasons.

Craig was responsible for video scouting of all opponents, on-court player development work, and pre-draft workout scouting and preparation.

Before working in the NBA, Craig was a Volunteer Assistant and then a Graduate Assistant at Eastern Michigan University.

basketball-plays-spurs-need31

3 sets a flare screen for 1.

2 and 5 screen for 3.

3 cuts to the basketball.

After screening for 3, 2 cuts to the ball side low block.

4 enters the ball to 2 on the block.

basketball-plays-spurs-need32

 

5 rescreens for 3.

2 looks to hit 3.

 

 

Coaching Basketball: A Champion’s DNA

By Brian Williams on December 5, 2014

This video sample from Kevin Eastman’s CoachingU Live came from his clinic entitled “A Champion’s DNA.” He served as an Assistant Coach for the Celtics from 2004 to 2013. At that time he made the move to Los Angeles with Doc Rivers and was on the Clippers Coaching Staff. Kevin was promoted to Vice President of Basketball Operations for the Clippers. He is now retired from the NBA and serves as a speaker and consultant.

At the bottom of this post, there are more links to other short videos with Coach Eastman on various topics.

Each sample video is a part of his 8 DVD set which includes High Intensity Skill Development, NBA Drills for All Levels, Stimulate Your Offensive Thinking, Defensive Strategies and Teaching Points, Strategies and Philosophy for Coaching Success, Stimulate Your Defensive Thinking, Defending the Pick and Roll the NBA Way, A Champion’s DNA.

If you are interested in finding out more about the DVD set, you can click this link:

This 8 DVD pack of Kevin Eastman’s presentations at his Coaching U Live Event is on sale for 50% off until they are gone.  Coach Eastman is moving his videos to an online version and is clearing out his remaining inventory.  Only 10 copies remain.  The sale will end once those 10 sets are sold.

Kevin Eastman 8 DVD Set

You can also see another 5 minute video on Skill Development from Coach Eastman by clicking on this link below:

Click here for detailed information about purchasing the DVDs at a special price If you need any assistance, email me at [email protected] or call or text (317) 721-1527.

Make sure your sound is on and you click the play arrow to see the video.

The 5 minute video shares some of the core values of his Champion’s DNA and how he defines them

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