1. Ball Reversals
- Make the Defense Move
- The more times the ball goes from side to side, the more the defense must rotate and closeout.
- Be down ready on the back side as the ball is swung to you.
- Attack closeouts that are too close, and shoot the ball when the defense closes out short with hands down.
- Don't Catch and Hold the Ball
- Be thinking one play ahead and be decisive with your moves.
- Don't waste your dribbles. Either drive the closeout, shoot, or move the ball.
2. Player Movement
- Don't Stand
- Players that stand are easy to guard and force one on one offense.
- Sometimes you may need to space, but most of the time you should always be moving.
- Hard Cuts
- Read your defender and make the appropriate cut.
- Back cut
- Face cut
- Make decisive cuts.
- Set up your defender before cutting.
- Slow to fast.
- Look to score on every cut.
- Your cut may open up a scoring chance for a teammate.
- Read your defender and make the appropriate cut.
- Set GREAT Legal Screens
- Use screens to help get other teammates open.
- Must head hunt on screens.
- Never screen and stand.
- Read the defense and offensive player using the screen to determine whether you should roll or space after you set the screen.
- Slip the screen if you are being overplayed.
- Use Screens to Get Open
- Set up your defender before using a screen. EVERY TIME.
- Read your defender when using the screen and then make the appropriate cut.
- Curl cut
- Straight cut
- Fade cut
- Pro cut
- On the Same Page
- The player using the screen and the player(s) setting the screen must work together.
- Must have great timing and spacing when executing a screen.
- Hand Offs
- Use hand offs similar to ball screens to help teammates get open.
- If your defender is cheating the hand off, fake it and then make a move.
- Drive and Kick
- Great penetration forces the defense to suck in and help, which opens up the kick out pass.
- Get your shoulders to the basket before making the kick out pass.
- This sells that you are attacking the basket and makes the defense sink in.
- Receiver needs to be down ready to either shoot, drive, or swing the ball. Don't catch and hold!
- If you catch and hold, the defense can recover and the ball movement is dead.
- Stay Under Control
- Don't leave your feet and open yourself up to charges and wild passes.
- Don't over penetrate into trouble.
- If you get too deep into the defense, there are too many hands to deflect your pass.
- Receiver Needs to Create Passing Lanes
- Don't stand and watch on penetration.
- Either slide up or down to create a great passing lane.
- A great time to move is once your defender turns their head to watch the ball.
- Find the passers eyes, especially when the ball goes into the post.
- Down Ready
- Don't catch the ball standing straight up and down.
- Anticipate what you are going to do with the ball by how the defender is guarding you; shoot, drive, or swing pass.
- Post Play
- Get the ball into the post and then look for kick outs when the defense helps.
- Find the post players eyes and create passing lanes by moving up or down.
- Hard cuts on the weak side will be open with a great post passer.
- Pass Fakes
- Being unselfish opens up opportunities for pass fakes and keeps.
- Works great for hand offs in the high post area.
- Must sell the pass.
- Use your body to shield the ball from the view of the defender.
- Executing Offense
- Use set plays to help establish ball movement and player movement.
- It can be a set play or a motion offense.
- Read the Defense
- Don't be a robot to the play.
- If the defense is cheating the play than make them pay.
8. Unselfish Plays
- Extra Pass
- Turn down an okay shot for a great shot.
- This type of play will be contagious and lead to better shots for everyone.
- Set Up Teammates
- Make a move with the specific desire to set up another teammate for an easy shot.
- Not just the point guards responsibility.
- Celebrate Winning Plays
- Get excited when a teammate makes an unselfish play.
- It must be all about the team.