Youth Coaches: Destroy Your Playbook and Do This Instead

This could be one of the biggest mistakes in youth basketball.

In fact, if you're making this same mistake, you could be crippling the development of your team.

Unfortunately, I learned the hard way and made this same mistake.

It's running set plays and patterned offenses instead of teaching universal skills that apply to all offenses.

Now, so we get on the same page, let's explain exactly what I mean by each term.



What is a set play?

A set play is a strategically planned and choreographed sequence of movements to get open shots and score points. Generally speaking, the sequence is ran through just one time.

Here is an example:


Instructions:



Step 1:

Four players start on the perimeter with player 1 in possession of the ball.

Player 5, who the play is run for, is positioned on the strong side low-block.

Player 1 passes the ball to player 2 and cuts to opposite corner.



Step 2:

After player 1 cuts to opposite corner, player 5 goes to set a back screen for player 4, who cuts to the ball-side block.

Player 5 then goes to set a ball-screen for player 2.



Step 3:

Player 5 sets a ball screen for player 2 and then rolls to the basket.

As player 5 is setting a ball-screen for player 2, player 4 cuts out to the near corner.

Player 2 dribbles towards the top of the key.



Step 4:

Player 2 passes the ball to player 4 in the corner.

In the meanwhile, player 5 is working to keep his defender under control (i.e. behind him).



Step 5:
Player 4 passes to player 5, who looks to score.



What is a patterned offense?

A patterned offense runs a sequence that turns over and over and over without the need to stop or reset.

An example would be the flex offense.


Basic Flex Motion - Guard to Guard Passes

When a guard to guard pass is made, the player on the low block sets a flex screen for the player in the corner which is followed by a down screen by the passer for the player setting the flex screen.

Any time this guard to guard pass is made, this action occurs. You could run the flex offense simply by passing guard to guard continuously. You will see this in this action over the next few diagrams.



1 passes to 2.

5 sets a flex screen for 4. 4 cuts across the lane looking for the pass from 2. This is the first option off of the flex. If 4 does not receive the pass, 4 finishes the cut at the low block.

After the screen is set, 5 opens up to the ball. This is the second flex offense option.



1 sets a down screen for 5.



1 clears to the corner.

2 passes to 5.

4 sets a flex screen for 3.



2 sets a down screen for 4.



2 clears to the corner.

And the flex pattern continues.



What are universal offensive concepts?

Universal offensive concepts are offensive skills that apply to any offense or set play.

It doesn't matter what the coach teaches, you have developed skills that will make you a better player in their system.

This includes things like...

  • Getting open using cuts - V-cut, L-cut, basket cut, backdoor cut, post cut, flare cut, and more.

  • Utilizing screens - Down screens, ball screens, back screens, flare screens, and more.

  • Spacing

  • Counter movements to dribble penetration - Curl up, space out, cut backdoor, and so on.

As a high school coach, I would be extremely happy if you brought me a group of kids that simply knew how to keep proper spacing, basket cut (give and go), cut backdoor when overplayed, and v-cut to get open.

Then you spend the rest of practice developing 1v1 offensive skills and some man to man defense.

As all great coaches have said, it's better to teach kids how to play rather than how to run a play.

And that's a big problem I see at the youth level. Well-intentioned coaches will teach plays and patterned offenses, but they spend little time teaching universal offensive skills; the same skills that help them progress to the next level of basketball.



Teaching Offensive Concepts Within Plays and Patterned Offenses?

I've often heard the response... "But Joe, I teach my team plays (or patterned offenses) and I teach them universal offensive concepts."

Is this okay?

Yes and no.

First, here is an example. This is a piece of the flex offense.

In the flex offense, when a player sets a screen and the player fills the guard spot.

In the diagram to the right, 1 sets a screen for 5.

However, let's pretend that the defender guarding 5 is denying the pass.

This could cause the offense to stop and give the defense an advantage.

If you've ever taught plays and patterned offenses at the youth level, you know this can happen quite often.

So a coach who teaches universal concepts would simply have 5 cut backdoor or screen again for 1.

This is better than what most youth coaches do.

However, there is a big reason I'm still not a proponent of this.



Running set plays and patterned offenses wastes tons of practice time

At the youth level, I've ran set plays. I've ran patterned offenses.

I know how much practice time it takes to effectively run them during games.

I once saw a coach who ran 30 set plays with his middle school team. Each week, they had a practice day dedicated only to running plays.

90 minutes every week wasted.

Do that over a 16-week season. That's 1,440 minutes!

Do that over 5 seasons... that's 7,200 minutes!

Imagine if you take that time and you practiced 1v1 offensive skills and universal offensive concepts.

You would make a ton of progress. And the players would be much better.

And they would have a way better chance of making their high school teams. And the few fortunate ones might even play at the college level.

I was fortunate to coach a 7th grade team that had 4 future college players on it. And it wasn't even an elite or all star team.



With a professional career, would you rather make less money or more money in the future?

Imagine that you are currently working and you had two choices in your profession.

Option 1 - Each week, you work 20 hours on tasks that develop your professional skills. These skills directly increase your future salary.

Then you spend another 20 hours each week on tasks that don't increase your skills and won't increase your future salary.

Option 2 - Each week, you work 40 hours on tasks that develop professional skills. These skills directly increase your future salary.

The answer is so evident that you already know the answer!

Now think back to what we just talked about with set plays.

You're asking players to choose Option 1. You're asking them to waste their time working on things that won't make them better basketball players for the future!



Also since I know there are some people that are going to agree to disagree...

Now, I wholeheartedly believe you should teach universal offensive concepts in a progressive manner within a motion offense structure.

However, if you still disagree with me. Make sure you do this...

If you're running a patterned offense with youth teams, use the flex offense and teach universal concepts. It puts players in all positions on the floor. It also teaches them how to utilize multiple cuts and screens.

Don Kelbick's Dynamic Flex Offense shows you how to do that.

Absolutely do not run an offense that puts big players underneath the basket and guards outside. You want them to learn all positions and skills.

I've seen too many situations where a 6'1 twelve year old is a 6'1 eighteen year old. And because they were put under the basket, they never developed any guard skills.

I've seen other situations where a 5'5 twelve year old only practiced guard skills but grew to be a 6'8 player. Imagine a 6'8 player with guard and post skills!


Resource For Motion Offense and Universal Offensive Concepts:

Don Kelbick's Motion Offense -- DVD 2-Pack & Supplemental eBook

Tim Schuring's Complete Offensive System -- Transition, Secondary Break, Motion, Press Breaker

The Youth Coaching System with Jim Huber - 64 Practice Plans, Offense, Defense, Skill Development, and More



What do you think? Let us know by leaving your comments, suggestions, and questions...




Comments

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Jack says:
10/5/2017 at 10:45:27 AM

Great article. We run motion very similar to Breakthrough Kelbick Motion to teach universal concepts. We looked at Read and React but it's missing some concepts I thought were important... setting off ball screens, reading screens, and reacting to defenders on the court instead of mostly reacting to what ball does. And didn't want to spend time memorizing what to do based on what ball does. So we went with Kelbick type of motion that has worked really well for us. Totally agree with teaching kids "how to play" instead of memorizing patterns. Thanks... great stuff!

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Andy Stadnik says:
10/5/2017 at 6:26:38 AM

Spot on. Totally agree - whateve ryou call it - Flex, five out, or any other initial set just starts the process and then let the kids be creative and see the flow of motion and movement - cuts, screens, passes and cuts etc with dribble drives - offense is like painting art - be creative

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Coach W says:
10/5/2017 at 7:46:11 AM

I couldn't agree with you more. I was lucky enough to realize this and read a similar article 5 years ago when I started with my 3/4 grade firls and man has it paid off.

My question is this. What is considered youth? And can the word youth be substituted for inexperience? I'm going to run our middle school girls program this year and the girls that I have coached (mainly 8th graders and two 7th) for the last 5 years is ready for more however, the other group (all but the two 7th graders who have played with me) lack any sort of organized experience. Is 7th grade too late to apply this concept? I can believe that it is and I feel if I dont approach that group that way, than it would be the equivalent of teaching multiplication before addition. Thank you for the article and the insight.

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Larry Griff says:
10/5/2017 at 7:54:02 AM

I agree as well, I'd carry it even farther from Youth to the High School level. Many high school coaches around here call a play out from the sidelines every trip down the court. That's not teaching kids how to play, that's teaching kids how to follow orders as a result, very few players from this area go on to play at a higher level.

Another plus of teaching principles over set plays or patterns is that basic offensive principles, spacing, cutting, backdoors, learning how to get open, etc easily transfer into out of bounds plays, press breaks, half court trap offense etc. I teach Rick Torbett's Read & React for half court offense and those same principles are the backbone of everything else we do.

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Gregory Seifert says:
10/5/2017 at 8:14:34 AM

Great article. I coach varsity girls basketball and I have a offense I call trimotion. It’s a combination of the triangle and motion. I created this because we play a lot of teams who run 2-3 or the 1-3-1 zone defense the full 32. Flex is difficult to run against a zone defense. However, this is great article that makes all players develop in very position. I am victim to the 6’1 12 year who only played the 5 or 4 and never grew again.

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Guinness Rider says:
10/5/2017 at 8:26:32 AM

Absolutely agree. Teach it through high school. So many kids can dribble, shoot, pass. So few kids can actually play by reading and reacting, setting people up, exploiting or creating space.

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Melissa says:
10/5/2017 at 9:08:01 AM

After USA Basketball training, I implemented principles over plays or patterns last season with rec girls’ 5th/6th, boys’ 5th, and girls’ 7th/8th. Players really struggled on all teams. Plays and patterns are the norm. Many parents pressed hard for plays as early as initial team meetings. I maintained strong emphasis on fundamentals with all teams, but was sadly surprised by resistance to fundamentals + creativity + communication. Definitely a paradigm shift that takes time and hard work to implement.

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Just brewer says:
10/5/2017 at 10:06:06 PM

How can I get this article sent to my son's high school coach? They really need to see this... It opens up so many options for every player on the floor, not just guards.

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  3 replies  

ME says:
12/1/2021 at 11:20:43 AM

5 out and 4 out are great offenses to get them thinking. They can evolve as they see what works. I’m just implementing them with 7th graders this year. I’ve coached these kids 3-5th grades. Not 6th bc of covid. I used set plays before but now they’re ready to learn and grow. We just had our second practice and they all picked it up. Duma defense? Well that’s another thing. We start she’ll drill tonight.

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ME says:
12/1/2021 at 11:20:45 AM

5 out and 4 out are great offenses to get them thinking. They can evolve as they see what works. I’m just implementing them with 7th graders this year. I’ve coached these kids 3-5th grades. Not 6th bc of covid. I used set plays before but now they’re ready to learn and grow. We just had our second practice and they all picked it up. Duma defense? Well that’s another thing. We start she’ll drill tonight.

Like
   

ME says:
12/1/2021 at 11:20:47 AM

5 out and 4 out are great offenses to get them thinking. They can evolve as they see what works. I’m just implementing them with 7th graders this year. I’ve coached these kids 3-5th grades. Not 6th bc of covid. I used set plays before but now they’re ready to learn and grow. We just had our second practice and they all picked it up. Duma defense? Well that’s another thing. We start she’ll drill tonight.

Like
   


Graham says:
10/11/2017 at 10:24:37 PM

I coach kids ranging from 13-18 at a very small school. I noticed, however, that kids today have a tendency to NOT think... I completely understand not having "plays", but what happens that's all they are used to doing? This year I'd love to see them running a simple motion offense (with options of course). - But I can't fure out a "starting point"... any ideas?

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Troy says:
11/16/2018 at 8:21:41 AM

I disagree with the Read & React comments as this is a typical case of not running something correctly. I run Grade 7 & 8 Boys and we screen out off corner cuts and the kids can screen out to any position so it may be off ball and they need to learn how to screen properly and read screens. You also have to read the defense as there are cuts that need to be made when the defensive player is over the read line as you can puppy dog (front) cut if your defender is slow to fill up plus you can back door cut when your defensive player is over playing you. Kids don''''t memorize on read & react they create habits and most of the habits are based on very good basketball concepts. I find read & react teaches everything this article is about IF it is taught correctly.

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