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Basketball Drills Jamal Crawford Finish

Basketball Drills Jamal Crawford Finish

By Brian Williams on June 21, 2013

Here is another idea for a move to teach players to use to finish at the basket.

I believe that it is important for players to develop moves to finish at the basket against a good or a large (or both) defender they have practiced and are confident in. The more confidence a player has in his or her ability and moves to finish at the basket, the more they can be the aggressor rather than being dictated to by the defense.

In my opinion, players don’t need a lot of moves. They need a go to move and a counter. I also believe that the moves should be individualized for each player and not moves that everyone on the team uses.

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Even if you don’t like the Crawford move, I hope you will find what works for your players and develop a system to teach then and implement them in you scoring drills in practice and in summer workouts.

Here is another link to another finishing move:

Euro Step

In my opinion, the Euro Step is a good finishing move in both transition and in the half court.

The Euro step is a good way for a player to avoid picking up a charging foul and also to get a clean look at a layup against a good defender.

Basketball Drills Shooting Fastdraw

By Brian Williams on June 20, 2013

This drill was posted by Coach Tom Kelsey in FastModel’s library. The library has hundreds of plays and drills from coaches all over the world and from various levels of coaching. You can check them out here:

Fast Model Plays and Drills Library

Tom Kelsey is currently the Director of Basketball Operations for the LSU men’s basketball program. He has been a small college head coach, winning multiple coach of the year honors.

He has also spent time on the coaching staffs of Don Meyer and Mark Gottfried.

 

 

 

 

Basketball Drills

Drill #8 Frame 1

Gives player opportunity to shoot 3’s for late game situations. Either off the pass or off the dribble. Coming down late in the game and getting the shot off the run or shooting off the dribble going full speed into shot.

 

Basketball Drills

Drill #8 Frame 2

This is a late game shooting situation. Player is running at full speed catches the ball and tries to get to the top of the key or clutch shooting spot on the wing for a spot up 3 point shot.
Allows your players to think about getting the shot quick coming down the floor off the pass or off the dribble.

Basketball Shooting Drills

Drill #7 Frame 1

Receive pass from coach take one dribble hit coach with the pass and make a v-cut away from the pass. With a strong step on the outside foot come back toward the ball hands up, finger tips to the ceiling and call for the ball.

 

Basketball Shooting Drills

Drill #7 Frame 2

Have players to pretend to be coming off a screen for the jump shot and receive the pass back from the coach.

 

Basketball Coaching Toughness Culture

By Brian Williams on June 19, 2013

By Greg White,

When Jay Bilas wrote his article on toughness it brought to light what is in my opinion the greatest trait of a player. More so than that it changed the way I coach and what I want a program built on.

To me the three most important traits for a team are toughness, unselfishness, and relentlessness. For a team to be truly unselfish and relentless they have to be tough. Toughness allows players to achieve great things. Coach Tom Izzo said it best. “Players play, Tough Players win.”

I don’t think toughness can be taught but I do think it is learned. Let me explain that. We can all think of  “Toughness” drills that we’ve done or do to make our kids tough. Loose ball drills, charge drills, wall sits. Anything to force you to be tough. My question is this: Why isn’t every thing we do instilling toughness? If we have to do drills to teach toughness we aren’t really tough. Toughness isn’t a sometime thing, it’s an all the time thing. Toughness has to be evident in everything thing you do as a program.

You can’t fake toughness. Let’s face it. If a player can’t play you can’t hide that, just like you can’t hide a lack of toughness. Basketball players don’t have the luxury of a helmet to add to their “character” as a player.

Basketball is raw. Every expression is visible to everyone. Toughness isn’t a look, it is an ability. You are either tough or not. There are plays where the presence and absence of toughness are evident but if you are creating a culture of toughness you don’t wait for 50/50 ball or someone taking a charge. You look for and instill toughness in every drill, every day and in every player. Here are the 3 points I believe lead to a Culture of Toughness.

#1 Without Fear and With Urgency
Toughness only knows the boundaries set by oneself. A tough player has a willingness to compete without fear of failure and sometimes without fear of of injury. Tough players do the dirty work. Loose balls, take charges, block out every time. They play with an urgency that this play is the most important of the game. These are all coachable but more importantly adaptable to any player. If this type of play is the norm you stop looking for signs of toughness and see the players not producing. More importantly , it becomes evident to their teammates who isn’t willing to sacrifice.

#2 Everyday Guys
Guys that do their jobs everyday are extremely tough. These are the guys succeeding in class, in practice and in the classroom.

They don’t take days off. They don’t take plays off. Sadly, this is a dying breed. I appreciate all the things our athletic trainers and medical team does for us but sometimes “I wonder if getting smarter made us softer?” Our athletic trainers in our program are extremely good and are as vital a part of our staff as our coaches. Trust has been developed where they can make decisions about the players without any second guessing.

Today’s player is more knowledgeable about their bodies than we were in the past. If you rolled an ankle in most cases your Coach shoved your leg in a 5 gallon bucket of ice water. I’ve seen guys play on an ankle the size of a grapefruit rather than endure the ice to hot routine. The rule is simple. If you’re hurt get up. This includes your pride. If you’re injured we will help you.

Everyday guys make a Coach’s life easier. They are the players you don’t ever have to worry about. In the NBA, I look at Duke Alumni as everyday guys. That toughness as instilled at Duke by Coach K. You can’t win without everyday guys.

#3 Away from the Ball
This is the “sign” for me if a Player is truly tough or not. Away from the ball, whether on offense or defense is where toughness is displayed. Whether you have the ball or are guarding the ball you are forced to be engaged. Everyone is watching you. It’s showtime. I’d say even the guys one pass away are working hard. What about the guys “out of the play”? Are they in a stance? Talking? Cutting and screening with purpose. This is where toughness must be evident. The Block/Charge is determined here, not by the official. The play is determined in the mind of the defender. Are they engaged? Same goes for the offside offensive rebound. Away from the ball is where games are loss more often than won.

This goes for your best player especially. This player is use to having the ball and being in the spotlight. There are times when we will make sure that our opponents best on the ball defender is put in a position of help defense because it’s out of his comfort zone. “No one is watching me so I can rest.” Hopefully all of us are coaching off the ball defense and teaching on the ball defense.

When Toughness is the norm, Players are forced to be tough. You can’t survive without being tough. It’s a culture, not a drill. It becomes an adaptation. A must for survival.You can’t teach a player to be tough. The player has to learn it, but most importantly need toughness to succeed in your program.

Basketball Drills Shell Drill

By Brian Williams on June 18, 2013

Here is a video of a few ways to use the shell drill to teach just more than defensive positioning. In my opinion, you can use the shell to drill many of the defensive principles that we teach in man to man defense.

In this video, Indiana State’s Greg Lansing teaches jumping to the ball to guard a basket cut and helping and recovering on dribble penetration. I hope the video gets you thinking about some ways to incorporate your defensive principles and actions you guard into the shell drill,

Make sure your sound is on as you watch.

If you are interested in finding out more about the DVD that this video clip came from, you can click here:

Building Your Defense with the Shell Drill

The video is a You Tube video.  Press play to see it!

Basketball Plays Zipper Pindown

By Brian Williams on June 17, 2013

Coach Vonn Read has submitted several plays from his playbook series The Basketball Encyclopedia of Plays to the Coaching Toolbox. Vonn is currently serving as an assistant coach in the Women’s program at Houston.

He has also served as an assistant coach in the WNBA with the Phoenix Mercury, Orlando Miracle, and San Antonio Silver Stars. He was an advanced scout for the Orlando Magic as well as The Charlotte Sting.

This set is run to get the ball into the post.

 

 

 

 

 

1 player dribbles to the wing to initiate the play.

The 4 player will set the Zipper cut for 3 popping to the top.

The 2 player will put their head under the basket.

 

 

The 3 player will dribble to the wing to enter the ball.

The 5 player will screen for the 2 player right under the basket.

The 2 player will curl on the screen, which will force X5 to temporarily help.

 

After the curl by the 2 player, the 5 player will aggressively attack X5 and seal at the rim for an easy layup.

X5 will help on the curl and at the same time get sealed at the basket!!

 

 

Coach Read has also put together The Basketball Encyclopedia of plays. You can check them out here: The Basketball Encyclopedia of Plays or read more about the books:

Any coach looking for the latest and innovative plays from the Professional, College, or High School levels can stop looking. With a compilation of over 7,700 different plays, you will never need to purchase another basketball playbook again. These playbooks can be used as a great reference tool for years to come. This 2 Volume Book includes plays from 19 different play categories, and they are the most extensive playbooks on the market.

The Basketball Encyclopedia of Plays (Platinum Series) contains over 7,700 Plays (Both Volumes combined) from the NBA, WNBA, USBL, and College levels from someone who has worked as an Advanced Scout or Coach on each level!!! This book has been intensely compiled over the last 21 years, with plays taken from a lot of NBA Coaches (past and present), WNBA coaches, and College coaches (Men’s and Women’s) from around the country.

Any coach that is serious about improving their knowledge of the game from an X and O standpoint will benefit tremendously from these books. These Books can be used to discover New Quick hitters, add a New Package to your playbook, or develop an entire Offensive System. There are a lot of new ideas and concepts in these books to study, and the Basketball Encyclopedia of Plays can be a great resource for coaches on all levels!!! This book is definitely for those X and O junkies who are always looking to improve as a Coach.

“THE GAME IS ALWAYS CHANGING? ARE YOU?” Vonn Read

Here is the link: The Basketball Encyclopedia of Plays

Basketball Drills Competitive Ballhandling

By Brian Williams on June 14, 2013

I hope this video gets you thinking about ways to make your ballhandling drills more competitive.

I think it is important to find ways t0 make your ballhandling drills competitive by using some type of scoring system.

I like to have a standard for players to compete against as opposed to competing against each other.

I have posted some links to some other skill development drills below the video. Some of the drills are team drills and others are individual workout drills.

Make sure your speakers are on to see and hear the youtube videos

 

This is a youtube video, so please make sure that you are on a server that allows youtube access.

Press the play arrow to see the video.

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