Last One Holding The Chalk...Usually Wins! (February
2007)Assortment of plays,
drills and ideas to help your program improve.
Don't neglect your practice warm-up drills While
many coaches spend adequate time creating the ultimate pregame warm-up drills,
I also love spending time working on developing good warm-up drills for practice.
I use these religiously, especially Warm-up #1. In fact, we will start practice
with this series and then go right into stretching (as I have always been told
to only stretch a warm muscle). Each year I seem to add another series to Warm-up
#1, but the concept remains the same - get loose while reinforcing the fundamentals
by working on cuts, moves and shots used in our offense. Rather
than jog a few laps or begin practice with stretching...we will use one of these
warm-up drills, stretch and then meet briefly to talk about what we want to accomplish
in practice...and then start "getting after it!"
Warm-up #1 Warm-up
#2 Warm-up
#3 Warm-up
#4 Observations
on Shooting
The
Three Point Disaster By Mike Dunlap, Denver Nuggets Assistant Coach The
three point shot has changed the game of basketball. In short, coaches have purchased
a bad bill of goods. First, if you do not have a plethora of good shooters, why
are so many bad shooters letting it rip from the three-point line? The coach determines
"shot selection" until the players figure out their best shot from their
best spot. Pete Carril defined a good shot by stating that it should be a shot
that you can make every single time. That makes sense to me. However, there are
too many three-point shots being taken per game, and by the wrong people. Yes
I understand the math when considering the value of three versus two. However,
could you please explain to me the value of having the wrong person shoot a three
point shot? Now we are into "lucky" basketball and the last time I checked
we are not called the "Lucky Roadrunners." I
watch hundreds of games each year. There are not that many pure shooters out there.
Yet head coaches allow their players to fire away. Once this happens, the horses
will not return to the barn. Hence, the coach takes the easy road and the team
wonders why it fails when playing at the championship level. Dumb is for a lifetime
until we wake up. Coach
Wooden always talks about balance as the key to success. I believe that in a seventy
possession game that fourteen or fifteen shots from the three point line by the
right players makes sense. Why? I look at the offensive game of basketball in
terms of balance between the long game, the middle game, the post up game, along
with the easy game: transition baskets (e.g. layups), free throws, uncontested
shots, and second shots. We like to study our players and figure out who shoots
best from what area and dip from each category. Thus, we have a balanced attack. The
three point shot has hurt many coaches and teams. Somewhere along the way coaches
heard someone pose the mathematical advantage to the three point shot. What they
did not consider was the fact that they do no have the who to perform the what.
Nevermind. We will go ahead and buy the house even though we do not have the money.
The hurt goes into the area of no post development, no middle game, higher turnover,
lower team field goal percentages, no regard for passing the ball multiple times
so you can get their better players in foul trouble, and many other obvious points! The
evidence is overwhelming for me. I watch Duke play and I wonder what happened
to their fantastic motion offense. Now all I see is a 1-1-3 set, pick on the ball,
and let it go as soon as possible from the three-point line. I know there has
been a decline in Duke's offensive attack, and others follow along. I
use Duke as an example because I have so much respect for Coach K and the way
they played. Yet, please do not ask me to endorse what they are doing over the
last three or four years. Others may buy into the three-point shot as the latest
and greatest way to play, but I think being drunk on that shot without some restrictions
gives me a hangover.
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