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Shoot when you're open. Pass when someone else is open. Drive when nobody's open. This mantra simplifies decision-making. It teaches players to read the game, not just run plays. No overthinking—just clear, actionable choices.

152,622 просмотров • 10 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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The Best Offense Drill?! One of the most effective motion drills I have run is the "Designated Shooter." It is a live, competitive drill that can be run as a 4-man drill or a 5-man drill. This motion offense drill teaches your shooter... - How to attack & come off screens. - How to cut & move to get open. - When to prepare and expect a shot and how to exercise judgment in shot selection. And the shooter learns that they can pass up a shot and still get the ball back for another one. Thus learning how to make good decisions and take good shots. Shooters can also learn that setting screens is a great way to get open. The other players off the ball learn... - How to create shots for others. - How and when to set screens on and off the ball. - How to create space, when to clear out, etc. - To recognize "Gretzky" opportunities where an extra pass is needed. Drill Instructions For Designated Shooter The drill is just as it sounds. The coach designates a shooter. And the rules are simple. The shooter is the only one who can shoot the ball. The operative word here is "can" not "must." It might sound a little bit drastic, but it is very effective. The shooter cuts, comes off screens, passes, backdoors, and does what they need to do in order to get open. Everyone else is designated to get the shooter open. They can screen, pass or do whatever is necessary to get the shooter open. The defense should not know who the shooter is until they shoot it. Traps To Avoid During Drill There are traps to avoid. The shooter "can" shoot, not "must" shoot. Don't let him fire indiscriminately. Teach shot selection and patience. It will lower frustration levels during the game. The shooter might be the only one who can shoot it but he is not the only player they can pass to. Early players might fixate on getting the ball to the shooter as opposed to creating flow and getting him open. Players might only screen for the shooter. This might create some stagnant play. They should screen for all players. Other players should just play as normal as they can, they just can't shoot.

Joe Haefner | Breakthrough Basketball

28,986 просмотров • 1 год назад