The Breakthrough Basketball Newsletter for Coaches -- Issue #18: December 4, 2008

NEW Youth Coaching Articles

Could 3 on 3 Basketball Be the Best for Youth Players?

Shooting: 3 Things Youth Coaches & Players Need to Adjust


NEW Motion Offense Articles

Motion Offense - Questions & Answers

Motion Offense - Getting Post Players the Ball


NEW Videos & Drills

Shooting Drill Video - Reverse Shots

Two Ball Shooting Drill

End of Game Drill - Great way to end practice & improve your players' confidence in the clutch!


NEW Foul Shot Plays

Two Fast Break Offenses off of the Foul Shot

Foul Shot - Tip-In Plays


Breakthrough Basketball Product Reviews

Customers have the ability to add reviews to our website so everyone can making informed decisions before they buy. If you have purchased any of our products, please add your reviews...

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60 Fun Basketball Drills

Motion Offense - How To Build High-Scoring Offense

Developing Man to Man Defense

Basketball Shooting Guide and Drills



Let us know if you have any comments or questions...



Comments

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Rick Filion says:
12/4/2008 at 6:29:53 AM

I am coaching a group of 7 to 9 year olds and am looking for suggestions on how to teach them to spread out on offence (a set offence is too complicated) and on how to get free of the defence to receive a pass.

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Truc Remlaw says:
12/4/2008 at 8:01:55 AM

I am coaching a group of 8 to 9 year olds and am looking for suggestions on how to teach them to spread out on offence (a set offence is too complicated) and on how to get free of the defence to receive a pass.

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Loreta Eggers says:
12/4/2008 at 8:04:22 AM

Use cones to teach spacing. I do an offense called train where I place a cone near the elbow , the corner near the baseline and one near the 3 point line on the wing, same side as the one in the corner. Two players stand by two of the cones and then when the point gaurd yells train they run in a clockwise motion around the outside of the cones with their hands ready to catch a pass. I instruct the point gaurd to pass to one of the players as they are on their way toward the basket. They must stay spaced. Once they understand, you could then go to tape on the floor. We practice this on both sides. There are two players on each side and a point gaurd. Sometimes I will instruct them to do a certain number of passes before someone can shoot. This drill works very well and when we scrimmage they run it also.

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Kenny R says:
12/4/2008 at 11:19:20 AM

Quick question guys and gals. I am coaching a group of 13-14 year old kids. I have 1 hour a week to coach my basketball team. Two of the players(my least talent players...Man, I hate saying that) are upset because I don''t include them in the offense and when I include them in the offense, they have no clue as to what we are doing because they are not paying attention or they sit their on the court or bench and mope, so I have to explain everything all over again..burning practice time. What more can I do?

I walk through the play, one play a week (1-2-2 offense) and then I build on that one play the following week. I walk through at a slow pace and then I slowly build up to game speed, but nothing. I even let my two least talented players start off practice..and nothing.

They cry because they don''t get the ball. They cry because they don''t get minutes. I am starting to hate the coaching field and I have been doing this for 8 years now. I need some advice. Is Dr. Phil opening today?...LOL.

Some input would help out greatly. Thanks guys and gals.

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brian says:
12/4/2008 at 5:12:42 PM

what is the elbow on a basketball court

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brian says:
12/4/2008 at 5:32:24 PM

I am coaching 8-9 yr olds. I usually coach by myself. I had shoulder surgery not to long ago. How do I teach them proper shooting form being unable to properly use both of my arms. I want them to have good form and not create bad habits

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Kidd says:
12/4/2008 at 5:57:39 PM

Brian, I think it is time to lean on some of those great friends you've made over the years or an older youth player that you know. Ask someone to donate 10-15 minutes of time at your practice for demonstration until you are rehabbed.

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Kidd says:
12/4/2008 at 6:11:22 PM

Kenny ask yourself these following questions:

Will these kids benefit from your extra efforts off the court for their issues of focus?
Do they have parents or guardians that can intervene with off court activities?
Are these two kids getting any benefit from your on court efforts?
Are the others kids getting full benefit of your coaching effort?
Is the TEAM better off without these two kids?

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Joe Haefner says:
12/4/2008 at 7:07:12 PM

Hi Brian,

The elbow is where the free throw line meets the lane line.

For the shooting issue, I would advise to either use a player who uses really good form or take Kidd's advice on bringing an older player or friend in to help.

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Joe Haefner says:
12/4/2008 at 7:15:04 PM

Hi Kenny,

I would avoid trying to teach too many plays, especially in-depth plays. When I coached, I used to run plays and patterned offenses. I noticed after 3 or 4 passes, the kids would freeze up, because they couldn't remember what to do. As a result, we wasted hours in practice when we could have been working on fundamentals. Even the smartest kids had this problem. Instead, I would teach them how to play. Teach them how to cut, teach them how read a screen, teach them proper spacing, teach them skills, etc., so it doesn't matter what coach or offense they have when they are older.

As for the two kids, do your best. you have to also understand that they may have issues outside of basketball, and you should try to make the experience as fun as possible. Be patient and try to help them. Who cares if they never play at the high school level. Coaching is more than x's & o's and wins & losses. It's about making the kids better people.

A little tip with youth players, don't do anything for too long. They lose focus. I try not to do half-court drills any longer than 5 minutes and I try to keep full court drills under 10 minutes. Teach a skill, do a drill, and move on.

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