Charlotte Hornets - Wing PNR Back Screen
01/18/2022Former Hornets Head Coach Paul Silas drew up some very nice Wing Pick N Roll Actions like this during his tenure. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawFormer Hornets Head Coach Paul Silas drew up some very nice Wing Pick N Roll Actions like this during his tenure. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawIn this diagram and embedded video we look at a set play out of the Circle Motion Offense. This set play comes from Central Arkansas, and has a post up option. The set stays true the circle motion action, except looks for a post up when the offensive player would normally be filling out to the corner. The ball stays on the same side while the Circle action is taking place instead of being reversed. Visit my Sellfy store for detailed coaching materials written by me - https://sellfy.com/coachhack.go/ Follow me on Twitter - @CoachHackGO See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawIn this diagram and video clip we see a series of plays from the push zip Iverson movement series. The featured action in the video is the blind pig backdoor. This is a clever action, and with good timing it can be very tough to defend. Browse more coaching content available on the Sellfy store: https://sellfy.com/coachhack.go/ Follow me on Twitter - @CoachHackGO See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawIn this diagram and video clip we see a set to attack a zone. The concept of overloading the zone places more offensive players in an area than there are defenders. The cuter overloads the zone, shifting with the pass, and then an interior screen frees up the post player to catch the ball inside on the tight curl. Browse more coaching content available on the Sellfy store: https://sellfy.com/coachhack.go/ Follow me on Twitter - @CoachHackGO See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawIn this diagram and video clip we see a longer form SLOB to create a three-pointer off of hammer action. Sometimes I love this set, and other times, I wish it would just get to the point. I really do like flowing pattern of the set, and hammer action is one of my favorites. All of the action is set up up well using screens to make sure players are open when they need to be. Browse more coaching content available on the Sellfy store: https://sellfy.com/coachhack.go/ Follow me on Twitter - @CoachHackGO See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawIn this diagram and embedded video we look at a series of plays that all play off of each other. The series uses the same movement pattern to make it difficult for the defense to understand what is going to happen through scouting. Some of the these actions are pretty clever! Visit my Sellfy store for detailed coaching materials written by me - https://sellfy.com/coachhack.go/ Follow me on Twitter - @CoachHackGO See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawGetting space for penetration can lead to wonderful things, as we explore in this simple diagram and embedded video. Today we look at a simple movement pattern to create space for a driver to finish at the rim, or kick to a shooter. Sometimes us coaches overcomplicate things. Getting your best driver in some space to attack can be enough at times. Visit my Sellfy store for detailed coaching materials written by me - https://sellfy.com/coachhack.go/ Follow me on Twitter - @CoachHackGO See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawIn today’s diagram and embedded video we look at a zone offense scheme we called “Gaps.” We simply aligned in a 1-3-1 and used concepts to attack zone defense. We used this as our base zone offense, meaning when we saw zone, we automatically went to this concept unless I overrode it with another call. The concpet is very simple, and the details of execution are what's going to make or break the success of this concept. I liked to use this, and pair it with a set package of 4-5 plays as our zone offense playbook. Visit my Sellfy store for detailed coaching materials written by me - https://sellfy.com/coachhack.go/ Follow me on Twitter - @CoachHackGO See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawThis is a zone set using a 1-2-2 alignment. I love the play because if nothing materializes, you are left with a 1-3-1 alignment that plays well against most zones. The ball is entered to the wing, and the wing uses a drag dribble down the sideline to shift the defense. The ball is returned to 1 who dribbles to the other side of the court while reading the defense. The action is a stagger screen with a slip into the middle of the defense. Our primary look is the slip to the middle, but we would take the stagger if the defense didn't cover it. Getting the slip in the middle opens up many options for the offense - shot, kick down, kick out. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawThis is a series of plays that all originate out of the same basic movement pattern. The movement pattern masks the outcome of the play to help against teams that are well prepared through scouting. The series of plays is designed to feature a dynamic soring point guard. The push zip iverson action helps create safe movement against teams that like to pressure. I like the series of plays because it allows for creativity from a dynamic player (the side ball screen), looks for cheap points (blind pig and backdoor), and gets a shooter a a good look for three in a crafty way. Follow me on Twitter where I post often - @CoachHackGO Visit my Sellfy store for detailed basketball coaching content - https://sellfy.com/coachhack.go/ See More
Favorite Send to FastDraw5 dribbles up the floor 5 hits 4 on the wing 3 sets a back screen for 3 4 swings to 3 popping 1 sets a cross screen for 5 3 swings to 2, 2 looks inside to 5 See More
Favorite Send to FastDraw2 pin downs for 5 3 hits 5, 2 pops to wing 4 sets a shuffle for 3 5 swings to 2, 5 splits with 3 See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawCounter to a horns set to get high low action running through elbow entry. If no high low pass, multiple options for 5. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawThis is a patterned drill that works on your screen-the-screener defense. No matter how you defend off-ball screens, you can practice that defense in this drill. See More
Favorite Send to FastDraw1 swings to 4 who swings to 2. 5 follows to strong side block or dunker spot 4 screens away for 1 and slips to the rim 2 hits 1 and spaces away. 5 lifts up to the elbow 5 changes the screen angle at the last moment before rolling (great against hedge teams) See More
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