RonSenBasketball
Basketball education, fundamentals, opinion, video and more
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Thursday, March 6, 2025
Wednesday, March 5, 2025
Basketball “Moat-Widening”
"The only duty of a corporate executive is to widen the moat. We must make it wider. Every day is to widen the moat. We gave you a competitive advantages, and you must leave us the moat. There are times when it's too tough. But duty should be to widen the moat." - Charlie Munger, Wesco Annual Meeting, 2008
Have a moat, make it wide, and fill it with alligators.
Successful programs are different. The coach’s job is to widen the moat, to better their already sustainable competitive advantage.
How?
- Internal recruiting… seek the best athletes available for your program. If we lose a player to other programs, thank the player and their family and wish them every success. We win some and we lose some.
- “Every day is player development day.” Player development includes skill, game understanding, physical training and psychological growth.
- Be transparent… this is what we do and how we do it.
- Be holistic… “ Excellence is our only agenda.” Grow great student-athletes…show them what success takes in the classroom, on the court, in a job.
- Get allies. Remember Mr. Rogers' "look for the helpers."
- Be realistic. Progress is uneven.
- Say “yes.” Win the PR battle. Write recommendations enthusiastically. Network.
- Build brand awareness. If you’re not a writer, ally with someone who “buys ink by the barrel.”
QOTD: pic.twitter.com/0LqJFfjC9T
— Allistair McCaw (@AllistairMcCaw) March 4, 2025
Derek Jeter said, "It slows down when you're prepared and speeds up when you're unprepared."
— Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness (@coachajkings) March 5, 2025
"Every time you're in a situation, I've already gone through it in my head."
It means be intentional and consistent about how you prepare.
Prepare mentally and physically. pic.twitter.com/vbXmtmnMFF
Lagniappe 3. Ask players to explain your core philosophy. Pressure the ball. Deny penetration. Deny the middle. Contest shots without fouling. Block out or 'hit and get'. Good teams summon the will and skill to get stops.
UC San Diego ranks #7 in the country in Defensive PPP. They are 3rd in the country in TO% & 89th in EFG%. At 26-4 they are having an incredible season and it starts with their elite switching defense.
— Film Room Breakdowns (@FilmRoom_XsOs) March 4, 2025
They do a great job guarding 1 on 1 & not giving up angles or letting guys get… pic.twitter.com/4BH7WGn5zJ
Tuesday, March 4, 2025
Basketball - FOMO
“Lord, make me chaste but not yet.” - Saint Augustine
FOMO, fear of missing out, inevitably drives bad decisions. Successful people choose high reward, lower risk actions. The less successful often chase opportunities without reward. The dog that chases cars is an example.
Beware "get rich quick" schemes, the Dr. Feelgood way.
FOMO is not a new phenomenon. In June 1876, General Custer attacked combined Native forces of Lakota Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho tribes. In addition to underestimating Native forces, he underestimated their capability and was in a rush to prevent them from escaping and attacked early. The entire force directly under Custer's command was killed.
Len Bias, the Maryland phenom and Celtics' top draft choice, suffered a fatal overdose celebrating his selection. Celtics fans can only dream about what might have been.
FOMO can result in legions of flawed decisions.
Some pro players join the cult of bad choices...choosing 'The Life' over the work needed for sustainable competitive advantage.
Coaches impatient for a head job may take the wrong job with flawed management, a dearth of talent, or a community too-heated or too-disinterested.
Players choose the wrong school, more concerned about their sports future than about the overall fit with the school. If basketball goes south because of ability, injury, or coaching, the player is left with no alternative but to transfer.
Choose the wrong friends who lack a seriousness of purpose or misguided moral compass and a young person's future can spin out of control.
FOMO implies impatience. Sometimes results take time. The freshman who expects a big return in minutes, role, and recognition may have to wait her turn. The best advice may be, "Don't just do something, stand there."
“Too much competency and no gumption is no good. And if you don’t know your circle of competence, then too much gumption will get you killed.” - Charlie Munger
Wait for your pitch.
Lagniappe. Changing the spacing with player movement may move the help.
A new wrinkle to Spain:
— Thibaut Tagnon (@TagnonThibaut) March 4, 2025
Peel the strong side corner as the action happens.
🔥 pic.twitter.com/ZsfPXXv80x
Lagniappe 2. Watching film may help us and players think about alternatives.
Matt Painter gave a masterclass in his post game presser.
— PGC Basketball (@PGCbasketball) March 3, 2025
We added the clips from the game against UCLA for reference!
• Chin
• Weak
• Spain
• Exit
• Snake
• Cover 2@CoachHackGO pic.twitter.com/wjtsqINl4h
Lagniappe 3. Play with enthusiasm and emotion but under control.
Emotions aren’t the enemy -
— Justin Mecham (@thejustinmecham) March 3, 2025
But letting them take over is:
Mastering your emotions starts with one truth -
You can’t control everything,
But you can control how you respond.
When emotions take over, it can lead to:
❌ Making problems worse
❌ Saying things you don’t mean
❌… pic.twitter.com/YDnUl4qJet
Monday, March 3, 2025
Basketball - Posterior Chain Work
The four legs of the development stool focus on skill, strategy, physicality, and psychology. Physicality development includes strength and conditioning, developing quickness, and injury prevention.
Find athletes and trainers who share proven development techniques or find trainers to help you and your athletes.
Work on your physicality with "simple but not easy" exercises that work legs and posterior chain. This helps reduce injuries with balancing anterior (front) and posterior (back) muscle groups.
This site shares lots of great exercises that will help key muscle groups.
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How To: Avoid Shot Blockers #pgcbasketball #finishing #thinkthegame pic.twitter.com/PPK9ANVwrT
— PGC Basketball (@PGCbasketball) February 5, 2025
Lagniappe 3. Make everything we do relevant. Advice from Pete Carril...
Pete Carril, legendary Princeton University coach, discussing drills translating into games. pic.twitter.com/4V8wj3liU5
— The Courtside Vault (@CourtsideVault) February 6, 2025
Sunday, March 2, 2025
Basketball - Addition and Subtraction
Boston Celtics Director of Player Development Craig Luschenat
— Chris Oliver (@BBallImmersion) February 24, 2025
“We’re constantly trying to find ways to help players impact winning and whether that be adding something or taking something away from their game. It comes down to, for us, ‘How can you best help move the scoreboard… pic.twitter.com/qrpHProMC3
As a coach, emphasize:
- Be good at what we do a lot.
- Do more of what works and less of what doesn't. This addresses the addition and subtraction issue.
- Understand strengths and weaknesses.
- Consolidate strengths (maintain or increase) and lessen weaknesses.
- Know and apply the Four Factors (shooting, turnovers, rebounding, attacking the basket)
- Commitment. Some players aren't 'wired' to play both ends. Rewire.
- Stance. Play lower and on balance. "Low man wins."
- Positioning. Ball pressure, help (cover 1.5).
- Add strength, quickness, toughness.
- Challenge shots without fouling.
- Communication. Talk and energize.
- "Correct flawed team defense." Improve transition, pick-and-roll defense, off-ball screens.
"Bad habits have a cost. Good habits have a price."
— The Winning Difference (@thewinningdiff1) February 19, 2025
Mediocrity takes everything and gives you nothing.
Excellence demands everything—but nothing less will make you great. pic.twitter.com/RpZHUZ2Ydt
Lagniappe 3. Defense impacts pace.
Love the way Kelvin Sampson looks at the game
— Hoop Herald (@TheHoopHerald) February 15, 2025
There is no detail undiagnosed
Says Houston’s number of possessions doesn’t mean they are playing slow, it means they get the ball less bc of how few easy baskets they give up
(Via @ChrisYBaldwin 🎥)
pic.twitter.com/e5xWd3s6uL
Saturday, March 1, 2025
How Can AI Help Coaches?
Artificial intelligence (AI) is here to help or replace us (with a better coach).
The most common type of AI is supervised learning as input predicts outputs such as separating spam from nonspam or to predict house prices.
Recommendation systems are used by companies like Netflix.
The most logical approach is to ask AI systems how it can help us. The two free ones I use are ChatGPT and Claude.ai.
First, Claude.ai answers.
AI can significantly enhance basketball coaching in several ways:
- Advanced performance analytics - AI can track and analyze player movements, shooting mechanics, and defensive positioning to identify patterns and improvement areas that human eyes might miss.
- Personalized training programs - By analyzing individual player data, AI can help create tailored development plans that address specific weaknesses and build on strengths.
- Opponent scouting - AI can process game footage to identify opposing teams' tendencies, plays, and player habits, giving coaches strategic advantages in game preparation.
- Injury prevention - By monitoring biomechanics and fatigue indicators, AI can help identify when players are at higher risk of injury, allowing for preventative interventions.
- Decision support during games - Real-time analysis can provide coaches with tactical suggestions based on current game situations and historical performance data.
- Video breakdown efficiency - AI can automatically tag and categorize game footage, saving coaches countless hours when reviewing film and enabling more focused teaching moments.
- Skill development visualization - Using augmented reality and motion capture, AI can help players visualize optimal techniques and movements.
- Load management optimization - AI can help determine ideal practice intensities and playing time to maximize performance while minimizing injury risk.
Next, ChatGPT:
AI can give basketball coaches an edge by providing deeper insights, automating tasks, and personalizing player development. Here are some ways AI can help:
1. Game Strategy & Analytics
- Opponent Scouting: AI analyzes opponent tendencies, set plays, and defensive schemes using video breakdowns.
- In-Game Adjustments: AI-powered tools suggest strategic shifts based on live data, such as defensive matchups or shot selection.
- Shot Quality Analysis: AI evaluates shot selection, efficiency, and expected points per possession to refine offensive sets.
2. Player Development
- Biomechanics Analysis: AI-powered motion tracking evaluates shooting form, footwork, and defensive positioning.
- Personalized Drills: AI adapts workouts based on player strengths, weaknesses, and progress over time.
- Fatigue & Injury Prediction: AI monitors workload and movement patterns to prevent overuse injuries.
3. Practice Optimization
- Smart Video Breakdown: AI auto-tags key moments, eliminating hours of manual film study.
- Decision-Making Training: AI simulates game scenarios for players to develop faster reads and reactions.
- Automated Stat Tracking: AI records shooting percentages, turnovers, and passing efficiency in real-time.
4. Team & Player Engagement
- Virtual Assistants: AI chatbots provide instant feedback on workouts, schedules, and game plans.
- AI-Enhanced Leadership Development: AI analyzes communication patterns to improve coaching effectiveness.
- Motivation Insights: AI tracks player engagement and suggests motivational strategies.
To improve ball containment and reduce fouling, focus on education, technique training, and game awareness:
Education & Mindset
- Defensive Discipline: Teach players that great defense isn’t about reaching or gambling—it's about positioning and control. (It also depends on athleticism, aggressiveness, and decision making.)
- Understand Foul Types: Show film of unnecessary fouls (e.g., reaching, late help, bad closeouts) and discuss how to avoid them.
- Hand Positioning: Reinforce the principle of “hands up, not out” to contest shots without fouling. (Brad Stevens teaches players to "show your hands," which may help both players and officials 'limit' fouls.)
Training & Drills
1. Ball Containment
- Mirror Drill: Defender mirrors offensive player’s movements without reaching. Focus on staying in front with quick, short slides.
- Cone Lateral Quickness: Place cones in a zigzag; players slide quickly around them while staying balanced. (I prefer "live" drills to cone drills.)
- Cutoff Drill: Defender forces the ball handler to change direction repeatedly without lunging.
2. On-Ball Defense Without Fouling
- No-Hands Drill: Defenders must play with hands behind their backs to emphasize footwork and positioning. (Kevin Eastman's DOG DRILL helped our players.)
- Closeout & Contain: Players practice closing out under control, chopping their feet, and forcing bad shots instead of fouling. (The Celtics have a different approach.)
- Verticality Work: Teach how to contest shots legally by keeping hands straight up and absorbing contact.
- Wall-Up Drill: Post defenders practice going straight up instead of swiping down.
- Help & Recover Drill: Defenders practice proper rotations without overcommitting and fouling late. (Cover 1.5 mindset, yours and half of another, can help.)
- 1-on-1 Drive & Stop: Defender must stop the drive in one or two slides without reaching—only legal chest contact allowed.
Game Awareness Adjustments
- Foul Tracking: Make players aware of team foul counts and personal fouls to increase discipline. (Changes in foul counting, bonus on five, impacts free throws and aggressiveness possibilities. It also suggests need to accumulate fouls if likely to have MUST FOUL LATE situations.)
- Ref Watch Film Session: Analyze past games to show how referees call fouls and what habits lead to whistles.
- Controlled Scrimmages: Run scrimmages with an emphasis on defensive discipline, blowing the whistle frequently on bad habits.
Friday, February 28, 2025
Basketball - Human Misjudgment Exposes Us All
Legendary investor and Warren Buffett partner Charlie Munger enumerated 24 causes of human misjudgment in his 1995 Commencement address at Harvard. They help us do better.
Munger outlined 24 causes of human misjudgment in his famous 1995 speech at Harvard. Here they are (via ChatGPT). I added annotations as examples of where they could apply for basketball. I've highlighted a few that resonated for me.
Of course, they apply in practically any field. If I asked, "are you better off if your doctor orders more tests or fewer because they are compensated differently? You don't want to have problems missed but you may not want to go through uncomfortable or expensive procedures if they are not necessary. You have to trust someone as your advocate.
- Reward and Punishment Superresponse Tendency – Incentives drive behavior, often irrationally. There's a true story about a coach being told they were playing "brown kids" too much. The message was that if you want to keep your job, change your substitutions. "User fees" sometimes get viewed as "pay for minutes" not as "participation fees."
- Liking/Loving Tendency – We distort reality in favor of things or people we admire. The philosopher Bertrand Russell said, "if 50 million people say a stupid thing, it is still a stupid thing." Some will say that coach "X" walks on water when he may be walking on the bodies he left behind. I read an obituary of a famous surgeon. It read as though he were nominated for sainthood. "Wasn't that the guy universally viewed as an Ahole?" "You're not wrong."
- Disliking/Hating Tendency – We irrationally distort reality against things or people we dislike. If standing in judgment of someone we have strong negative opinions about, an option is to recuse ourself instead of casting a negative vote. Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds may have both used performance-enhancing drugs. My speculation is that PEDs work better in star players than Mendoza Line guys. Does anybody rationally think LeBron James hasn't been a great player? Yet, he gets castigated as LeBum by some.
- Doubt-Avoidance Tendency – The brain tries to resolve uncertainty quickly, often prematurely. Rather than have a nuanced view of an issue, it's easier to dismiss. There is no "on the other hand," as a one-armed economist. You hate three-point shots? "They ruined the game." There are multiple ways to win...and lose.
- Inconsistency-Avoidance Tendency – We resist change and stick to old beliefs and habits. When we have made public commitments about players, coaches, or teams, we are usually reluctant to change. "Not always right but never in doubt." We prefer to stick to our public opinion than to change because the situation changed. That's the equivalent of missing our exit on the highway and driving forever. It's an effect of polarizing players like James Harden.
- Curiosity Tendency – Humans have an innate drive to learn and explore. Munger believed that curiosity was highly positive as he sought knowledge through reading and experience. Knowledge enforces humility as it reminds us what we don't know. ChatGPT informed me, "As a coach, doctor, and investor, your curiosity likely drives you to seek better training methods, medical treatments, and investment strategies." Curiosity is almost always positive, although mentor Dr. Tom Walsh cautioned, "don't be curious in following a lit fuse."
- Kantian Fairness Tendency – We want fairness, even if it comes at a personal cost. Is less money better for me, if it helps someone else (e.g. teammates) achieve collective success? That applies to usage, minutes, and shots. Of course, some people only function in a transactional way. I heard of a doctor who wanted two referrals (consultations) for each one he gave.
- Envy/Jealousy Tendency – Comparison drives behavior, sometimes destructively. Buffett told Munger that it wasn't greed that made the world go around, but envy. When applied to the Unholy Triad (minute, role, recognition), envy exists for players, friends, and families.
- Reciprocation Tendency – We feel compelled to return favors, even if they are unwise. Network and develop relationships. Even when returning a favor seems hard, say "yes."
- Influence-from-Mere-Association Tendency – We make connections between things that aren’t logically linked. Graduation from a certain college or program sometimes implies a certain level of expertise or competence. Similarly, people make judgments about "coaching trees." The apple may not fall as close to the tree as desired. For example, the Belichick coaching tree produced a lot of duds.
- Simple, Pain-Avoiding Psychological Denial – We ignore uncomfortable truths. When evaluating ourselves and others, it's hard to see strengths and weaknesses accurately. Bill Parcells said it simply, "You are what your record says you are."
- Excessive Self-Regard Tendency – People overestimate their abilities and importance. A doctor retraining in primary care in the military instructed subordinates to call them "Commander." The 'outranking' officer literally pulled rank with everyone despite a lack of competence and experience. I've seen coaches put on the same act.
- Overoptimism Tendency – Optimism can lead to poor risk assessment. For much of Olympic history, American basketball was unbeatable. With time, better coaching and players, the world caught up. Gold medals still come but they're not assured.
- Deprival-Superreaction Tendency – Loss aversion makes people act irrationally. Experimentally, losing makes people feel twice as bad as winning makes them feel good. Who hasn't dwelled on bad losses versus great wins? Success demands that teams and players play to win instead of not to lose. As Jon Bon Jovi sings in "Just Older," "you can't win until you're not afraid to lose."
- Social-Proof Tendency – We follow the crowd, even when it’s wrong. Book sales and podcasts can depend on the reviews of others. Similarly, fans can read the 'takes' of reviewers and have unrealistic expectations of excellence. Popularity and value aren't the same.
- Contrast-Misreaction Tendency – We misjudge changes in intensity, value, or significance. There's an experiment with three buckets of water - iced, hot, and room temperature. After a subject has one hand each in the iced and hot water and places both in the room temperature, she feels the "normal" temperature as hot or cold. A player who does well at one level may not perform well at another. They get labeled as "busts."
- Stress-Influence Tendency – Stress distorts perception and decision-making. There's the "hot hand" belief that if someone has made their last few shots, that is likely to continue. The "hot hand" is a fallacy for some and a reality for other players.
- Availability-Misweighing Tendency – We overvalue easily recalled information. Sometimes what everyone knows is wrong or what we think we know is obsolete. Applying statistics from one area (e.g. NBA three-point percentage) has no guaranteed application to lower levels.
- Use-It-or-Lose-It Tendency – Skills and knowledge degrade if not used. Most athletic skills are perishable. Without regular practice, performance degrades.
- Drug-Misinfluence Tendency – Substance use impairs judgment. People underestimate the tendency for performance to drop when on medication or alcohol. Mickey Mantle homered despite a bad hangover. When he reached the dugout he told teammates that fans had no idea how difficult that was.
- Senescence-Misinfluence Tendency – Aging affects cognition and decision-making. It's not easy to know when our time has passed. That could apply for coaches, players and unrelated domains. Do we know as physicians when we're past our prime?
- Authority-Misinfluence Tendency – We defer to authority, sometimes blindly. In the airline industry, copilots are taught not to defer to pilots, regardless of seniority. In some cultures with strong hierarchies that resulted in fatal crashes. People need to know their role and their limitations.
- Twaddle Tendency – People waste time on nonsense and irrelevant details. In some communities, debates rage over the team nickname which is unimportant in the big picture.
- Reason-Respecting Tendency – People like explanations, even weak or false ones. If we promote a player to another coach, providing a 'comp' to another successful player may get a more favorable view. That won't be easy for someone pushed as the next Wembanyama or Jokic.
Munger emphasized that these tendencies often work in combination, compounding human misjudgment.
Lagniappe. Teach players that if they want to be viewed as elite, they need to make others better and impact winning.
Saban GOLD🥇
The best players make their teammates better. Do you?
"To be a good player on your team, you have to affect someone else on the team. You have to cause them to play better by the way you play."
- Nick Saban pic.twitter.com/1a9DF3JvMC
Lagniappe 2. "High-low" action can create mismatches and favorable angles to attack the basket.
Post up a player out of a 5 out alignment with this easy to install forced curl action for a high low.
— Chris Oliver (@BBallImmersion) February 17, 2025
Unlock easy points with these high low plays https://t.co/tSUkqObSkD pic.twitter.com/U2ejsBEWdA
— Greg Berge (@gb1121) February 18, 2025
Lagniappe 3. JVG on the role of the point guard in the pick-and-roll.
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Thursday, February 27, 2025
Basketball - Underrated Skills
Education changes behavior. Coaches are teachers. Coaches change lives every day.
A coach posted that he yelled at the girls, trying to get their attention, and a parent complained. He was disgusted.
How do we reach, not reach out, to players? Change lives forever not for a day.
I got too old for yelling. "Talk smarter not louder."
The girls had been pushed around physically and mentally. After a discouraging loss, the head coach said, "I can't talk to them. Say something to them." I didn't say a lot. "That was unacceptable. You cannot allow the other team to push you around. How you play reflects how you live."
About six months later, a player said, "that 'how you play reflects how you live', really got to me." Share lessons that players can carry through life.
Seek simplicity and clarity. The great Pete Newell reminded us to explain what we want and why, "they're not cattle."
To get more focus give more tools. Mindfulness is a proven skill to increase focus and improve behavior with students as young as first grade. Have we taken even one MINDFUL breath today? Dot b. Stop and take a breath. Use mindfulness as tactical training.
Speak greatness. Sandwich coaching between praise. "You're working smart. Your defense can improve by playing lower and by staying vertical, not swiping down to block. Keep playing hard, it's great." Dad used to say, "you catch more flies with honey than you do with vinegar."
Inspire. Inspire arises from the latin inspirare "to breathe." Give players something to incorporate into their ethos. Help players to believe. There is nothing more powerful than, "I believe in you."
Summary:
- Coaches change lives every day.
- Share lessons that players can carry through life.
- "How you play reflects how you live."
- "They're not cattle." - Pete Newell
- Stop and take a breath. Dot b.
- "Always do your best."
- Be their advocate.
- "Speak greatness." - Rod Olson
- Help players to believe."
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This inbound play is so unbelievable that it works this easily that we had to call it "I Can't Believe It Works."
— Chris Oliver (@BBallImmersion) February 19, 2025
See more examples to prove it works out of different alignments https://t.co/x0JUHXwYAL pic.twitter.com/WyZ1Kdyemt
Lagniappe 3. Everyone is replaceable.
SUPPLY AND DEMAND OF COLLEGE BASKETBALL PLAYERS
— Steve Dagostino (@DagsBasketball) February 17, 2025
I think every player thinks they are irreplaceable. That if they transfer, graduate, leave the team that everything would crumble. Truth is that everyone is replaceable, and players sometimes have this delusion that they’ll… pic.twitter.com/8dWg5mmwjo
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
Basketball - Combine Checklists and Mental Models
Mental models are frameworks for thinking. Individually they are powerful. Collectively, they offer a chance at special.
Let's use the video to assist us in thinking better.
1) First principles. "This above all" stuff or "the main thing is the main thing."
Application: What's our brand? When people hear "brand x" what will they see? And from our vantage point, what is our identity - who are we and how do we play? Teams need clear philosophy, identity, and understanding of "Commander's Intent."
2) Inversion. "Invert, always invert." Consider the opposite. The classic is the Seinfeld episode, "Opposite George," where Jerry's loser friend does everything opposite and ends up connecting with a stranger in their restaurant.
Application: That could mean changing tempo, changing defenses, changing personnel.
3) Thought experiments. "What ifs." What if we substituted more defense in for more offense? Would that favorably impact winning?
Application: Coaches seek edges via recruiting, trades, player development changes, and so forth. Many Power 5 coaches have made it clear that they're doing transfers not freshmen in the NIL era.
4) Multidisciplinary thinking (come at a problem from different directions)
Application: For example, habit formation and loyalty to team. Habits make us who we are. Group workouts bond players, improve competitiveness.
5)** Psychology of Human Misjudgment (e.g. sunk costs, self-serving actions, denial)
Application: Selfishness hurts offensive cohesion. High draft choices get more run, even if they've proven limited.
6) Lollapalooza - exponential results require multiple inputs. Home runs may take risk, patience, and luck.
Application: Usually this takes multiple player acquisition and often a philosophy change... smaller number of shots means "everyone eats."
Use your spreadsheet program (e.g. Google Drive)... I've lightly colored in some entries but you should use what you believe.
Lagniappe. The video to study...
Lagniappe 3. Long rebounds off threes can create opportunity."I wake up worrying about what they think when they're 28 not when they are 18.
— The Winning Difference (@thewinningdiff1) February 26, 2025
Are they going to say that I cared about them - enough to be hard on them and try to teach them right from wrong."
Holding someone accountable is something done for them NOT to them. pic.twitter.com/0gzFKrlDGu
Lagniappe 4. Rear foot elevation exercises can strengthen quads and posterior chain. They're easy to work at home, too.COACHING TIP: Taking early 3s and not crashing the boards is the equivalent of going 3-and-Out in football.
— Mark Cascio | SAVI Coaching (@coachcascio) February 25, 2025
When you do grab the offensive board, hunt "dagger 3s." Kick it out, make the one more pass, knock down the 3. pic.twitter.com/u1Z0jVHT3q
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Tuesday, February 25, 2025
Basketball - Kiss the Sky
18 exercises to turn your legs to springs
— Gerry DeFilippo (@Challenger_ST) February 23, 2025
1. Forward bilateral pogo jump
2. Forward SL pogo jump
3. Pogo to frog jump
4. Repeat frog jump
5. Double hurdle to lateral jump
6. Repeat high hurdle jump
7. Quadruple pogo to box jump
8. Repeat maximal pogo jump
9. SL drop jump
10.… pic.twitter.com/8a4Nl2A7Cv
- Make sure you're healthy and do baseline testing.
- Don't work out through pain.
- Allocate at least 20 minutes a few times a week.
- Have a warmup as suggested in Coach Hall's video.
- Do three sets of at least 8-10 reps.
- Do followup testing.
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Coach McDermott on how to avoid making excuses 🗣 🗣 🗣
— Players Era (@Players_Era) February 21, 2025
"If you rely on your efforts, your enthusiasm, and your fortitude, you will never have to rely on your excuses.”
(Via @thewinningdiff1 🎥)
pic.twitter.com/RBV2p2Ttzm
Lagniappe 3. Straightforward ball-handling routine.
Stationary ball handling warm up
— Anthony Pugh (@Anthony_Pugh2) February 21, 2025
•Skips
•Double cross
•Double between
•Double behind
•Pound/between cross - change height/pace
•Pound/between behind - change height/pace
•30 sec burnout pic.twitter.com/BQUeSpN3Jx
Lagniappe 4. "The Bubble Drill."
“Just like anything else in coaching or teaching... you achieve what you emphasize." - Kelvin Sampson
— Hoop Herald (@TheHoopHerald) February 23, 2025
(Via @CoachDanCasey 🎥)
pic.twitter.com/Ywdo620sEq