In addition, aside from how many players you want on the perimeter (5 out, 4 out,etc) by definition, there is really only 1 motion offense. It is a read, pass move offense that takes on different forms based upon what best takes advantage of the defense.
What ever cuts you make against a man, you can make against a zone. Make sure you don't cut to spots but to openings.
You can set the same kind of screens against a zone as you do against a man with 2 adjustment.
The first adjustment is timing. Because a zone moves with the ball, setting a screen too early will be ineffective because the defense will not be in the same place when the ball arrives. The screen should be made at the time the ball can be delivered, maybe even when the ball is in the air. It is not as hard as it sounds, it just takes an awareness of when to pass the ball.
The second adjustment is to screen an area instead of the player. Since coverages change with ball movement, the defensive player who is defending a player when the ball is in one place, won't be defending with the ball in another area. For example, if you have a player on the block who you are going to bring to the wing, screening the player defending on the block will not be effective. You need to screen in the area on the wing where your player is going to cut to.
To be an effective screening team against a zone, you need to think as a zone coach, understand how the zone moves and what the coverages are and then screen, at the proper time, the areas where you want your offensive players to be effective.
Don Kelbick Contributing Editor, Breakthrough Basketball www.DonKelbickBasketball.com
Subscribe to our free monthly newsletter to receive new drills, plays, scoring tips and coaching strategies,
plus three free eBooks with over 270 pages of our favorite basketball drills and plays!
Subscribe to our free monthly newsletter to receive three free eBooks with over 270 pages of content!