Questions From Subscribers...

Topic:  Basic Youth Basketball Drills for 7, 8, 9 Year Old Boys

Question:
I like a lot of the drills but my team is a group of 7,8,9 year old little boys.I have used a couple of the drills but most of them are to hard. If you ever make a youth book please let me know.

Answer:
First of all, you can check out these drills for very young players. The drills are now organized so you can easily find them by skill topic.

Next, we released a video called Jim Huber's The Youth Coaching System. You should definitely check that out. It has a lot of great youth drills and coaching tips.

In addition, here are a few drills that are very important for young basketball players...

  • Form Shooting - Good shooting habits are the most important thing for young players to learn because so many kids have bad shooting form and it's the most difficult thing to fix when they get older.

  • Jump Stops - This is a critical drill for all youth players. It improves balance, footwork, reduces travels, and improves confidence.

  • Basic lay up drill (with left and right hand) - For the standard lay up drill, simply form two lines on each side of the basket about 20 feet back. One line rebounds, the other drives in with the ball and shoots. The rebounder passes to the next person in the shooting line and goes to the end of the shooting line. The shooter goes to the end of the rebounding line. After a few minutes, stop the drill and put the ball on the other side for left hand lay ups. Left hand lay ups will be nearly impossible for youngsters who have not tried them. But this is a critical skill to learn. It will take time and is a must by middle school. Be sure to show your players the correct form -- they should jump off the left leg when shooting a right hand lay up. And shoot off their right leg when shooting a left hand lay up. It will be difficult but work on it. They should also dribble with their left hand when shooting left hand lay ups.

  • Cone or Chair Dribbling - Simply set up some cones or chairs about 10 feet apart. Instruct your players to weave in and out of the cones, changing directions each time they reach a cone. They can start with a basic cross over, switching hands when they reach each cone. Then you can progress to spin moves and behind the back. This is a really simple yet fun drill that helps young players improve their dribbling skills.

  • Basic partner passing - Have your players partner up, each group should have a ball. Have them pass back and forth, starting with chest passes, progressing to bounce and over head passes. Make sure they are making accurate passes and using proper form. As a variation, you can have them run up and down the court passing back and forth.

  • Triple threat drills - Simply form two lines around the 3 point arc. One line is for passing line and the other is for catching, pivoting, and driving to the basket. Once the receiver catches the pass, they should pivot with their knees bent facing the basket. Require them to pause in a triple threat position. They should be ready to pass, shoot, or drive. Knees should be bent and feet square to the basket. Once you say go, they should drive to the basket.

  • Basic defensive slides - This is the first defensive concept youngsters should learn. They are a variety of sliding drills you can use. You can try the zig zag drill or some of the sliding drills listed below. Just be sure to focus on proper form (wide base, butt down, knees bent, arms extended to he side, etc).

You can also take a look at some of these youth drills from the Winning Drills ebook that you already have.

Very basic drills you can probably use now:
  • Partner Shooting - Page 18
  • King of the Court (dribbling) - Page 72
  • Four Corners Passing - Page 83
  • Machine Gun Passing - Page 88
  • Musical Slide (defense) - Page 95
  • Defensive Slide - Page 96
  • Lane Slides - page 98
More challenging youth drills you can work towards:
  • Half Moon Shooting - Page 6
  • Knock out (fun drill) - Page 16
  • Above ground - Page 26
  • 1-on-1 Rebounding - Page 33
  • The Rebound Game - Page 37
  • Post Moves - Page 50
  • Drop Step - Page 60
  • Jump Hook - Page 61
  • Round the Block - Page 62
  • Pass and Zigzag - Page 68
  • Dribble Relays - Page 70
  • Dribble Mania - Page 77
  • Partner Passing with 1 Defender - Page 86
  • Close Out - Page 105
Most of the drills above should help you with the important skills. But there are many other good drills out there. Just keep in mind, that if you can teach your young players the following skills, then you should feel good that about what you accomplished and know that you're teaching your player the right things (that they need to be successful)! Your young players should be able to:

- Dribble with their left and right hands equally well.
- Make lay ups with their left and right hands equally well -- and jump off the proper foot (left foot when shooting with right hand, and vice-versa)
- Perform a jump stop without traveling.
- Pivot on their left and right foot without traveling.
- Perform accurate chest, bounce, and overhead passes.
- Perform a defensive slide (feet wide, good balance, staying between the offensive player and the basket).

These simple skills should be your number priority and your goal should be to help your players master these skills.

Also, here are a couple resource we think are good.

Coaching Basketball Successfully by Morgan Wooten - One of the best basketball coaching books ever written. We highly recommend it for all coaching levels.

Coaching Youth Basketball: A Baffled Parent's Guide - A great book for youth basketball coaches.

We don't have any affiliation with these products, we just think they are good.

Hope this helps.

If you have any comments, questions, or suggestions then please leave your comments below.

Joe Haefner




Answers and Comments

Most Likes First   Oldest First   Newest First

Nicko says:
6/2/2007 at 10:21:41 PM

This is a great source for basketball drills. My Under 9 boys have now won 5 in a row and scored more than 25 points every games.

Like
   

victor says:
6/29/2007 at 8:29:17 AM

coach
and
player
basketball
in
liga

Like
   

efraim zak says:
10/6/2007 at 7:49:44 AM

hi already purchase winning basketball but can not find this book

Like
   

Kelvin says:
12/1/2007 at 4:12:08 PM

Whatpassing drill helps a youth team's offense from bunching together?

Like
   

mervin says:
2/3/2008 at 8:40:05 PM

i would like to no how to start drill with 7-12yr old and make it fun to lean

Like
   

Len Piazza says:
3/26/2009 at 11:43:34 AM

Question: I found your narrative on basic youth basketball drills very helpful. I am coaching a 7 and 8 year old team and liked the drills. My question is at this age what can be done to improve the player's focus? My first practice was chaos and I ended it 10 minutes early. The players were consistently paying me no attention when I was explaining basic fundamentals. Any advice is appreciated.

Thanks,

Len Piazza

Like
   

Joe Haefner says:
3/26/2009 at 2:39:05 PM

Hi Len,

You are experiencing a common thing among kids that age. Kids have short attention spans so keep things short and sweet. That goes for lectures and drills.

Here is an article we recently wrote that should help: http://www.breakthroughbasketball.com/blog/index.php/four-great-ways-to-keep-your-teams-attention/

Like
   

peter marinp says:
3/3/2010 at 10:02:30 PM

i need to start a basketball book how?

Like
   

Jorge says:
3/6/2010 at 1:52:16 PM

For my drill I have players dribble and catch cheeze curls at the same time.

One time a cheeze curl got enloged in someones throgt so I had to rush them to the ER on my tricicle

Like
   

Ben Louis says:
2/17/2011 at 10:31:40 AM

Our boys basketball coach runs a full-court layup drill in which players are expected to make a left-handed layup from the left side, using only their left hand to shoot. If the boys miss their shot, they are ordered to do pushups. If the coach thinks they used their right hand on the shot to any degree, the pushups are doubled.

There was no instruction given on how to make the left-handed layup. Our boys are eight years old, and nobody can make this shot. So the drill compels them to fail, with the consequence being pushups.

Would you please comment on this drill? Thanks.

Like
   

Show More









Leave a Comment
Name
:
Email (not published)
:
Three times five is equal to?  (Prevents Spam)
Answer
:
 Load New Question
Comments
:
Leave this Blank
: