Sport is not warfare, but coaches can generate edges using its principles. Asymmetrical warfare is fundamentally about refusing to fight the opponent's battle on their terms.
The strong side wants symmetry. The weaker side wants asymmetry. The American Revolution was an example of an insurgency with asymmetrical warfare tactics.
One military example cited is the Millennium Challenge 2002 war game, where retired Marine Lt. Gen. Paul Van Riper used motorcycles, couriers, deception, and unconventional tactics against a technologically superior force. Instead of playing the game as designed, he changed the game.
Basketball coaches have exerted the same pressure for decades.
1. Stall Ball
The classic example. Wooden said, "Basketball is a game meant to be played fast." That made sense for his superior talent. If the opponent is bigger, deeper, and more athletic, reducing possessions shrinks the talent advantage.
A 70-possession game becomes a 45-possession game.
Gene Hackman's fictional Coach Norman Dale (Hoosiers) understood this in Hoosiers. So did countless small-school coaches before the shot clock era.
Variance of performance (with fewer possessions) becomes your friend.
2. The Full-Court Press
Think of Nolan Richardson and "40 Minutes of Hell."
A less talented team often cannot survive a half-court talent contest. So they create chaos. The press transforms a game from execution, skill, and size into fatigue, decisions, and turnovers.
Change the battlefield.
3. Junk Defenses
Teams cannot prepare for everything. In the early 1970s, we used multiple defenses, variably extended (e.g. full court, half-court) including run-and-jump, box-and-one, and others.
If the opponent has one dominant player and four role players, why play conventional defense? The famous example is the box-and-one used by the Toronto Raptors against Stephen Curry in the 2019 Finals.
The defense says: "This may look ugly but it works."
4. Extreme Pace
Most coaches play slower when teams are undermanned. Sometimes the opposite works. Loyola Marymount Lions under Paul Westhead turned every game into a track meet. Grinnell played "System basketball."
When both teams normally score 70, talent wins. If both teams score 110, strange things happen. Pace weaponizes chaos.
5. Fouling Poor Free Throw Shooters
"Hack-a-Shaq." Purists hate it, yet strategists understand it. The weaker side identifies a weakness and repeatedly attacks it.
Military planners target a vulnerability and basketball coaches call it intentional fouling.
6. Positionless Personnel
If you have lemons, make lemonade. Instead of matching the opponent's 6'8" post player, spread the floor with shooters.
Force their strength to become a weakness. An opponent's center may become unplayable. ansymmetry doesn't attack strength, it adapts.
7. Zone Against Superior Athletes
Man-to-man often exposes athletic gaps. Zones camouflage weaknesses such as problems containing the dribbler. The zone asks, "Can you consistently make perimeter shots?"
Many superior teams don't have strong shooting. The underdog switches individual matchups for collective positioning.
8. The Princeton Offense
When you cannot recruit (or buy) elite athletes, recruit intelligence. Princeton's Pete Carril elevated this to an art form.
The offense advantaged:
- Back cuts
- Reads
- Timing
- Patience
Stronger teams became frustrated because it meant defending unfamiliar principles.
9. Selective Double Teams
A conventional defense guards conventionally. Asymmetrical defense focuses on the biggest threats, "Who can beat us?" Then it overloads those players.
The strategy concedes some outcomes seeking to contain others. Military commanders call this concentrating force at decisive points.
10. Three-Point Revolution
For years, underdogs recognized something before the basketball establishment did - three is worth more than two. UMBC took down Virginia in a 1-16 NCAA tournament matchup by leveraging the perimeter. UMBC shot 12-24 from three versus 4-22 for UVA.
The underdog could lose most possessions but still win the scoreboard. What looked reckless was mathematics.
11. Deliberate Matchup Hunting
Modern offenses relentlessly seek one defender - the weakest defender. "Switch everything" defenses allow offenses to create the matchups against players like James Harden.
This is asymmetrical warfare distilled to its essence - find the weak point and repeat it again and again.
12. Psychological Warfare
Some teams are physically superior but can be frustrated by different paces or tactics. These include:
- Constant defensive pressure
- Unusual defenses (Dale Brown's "Freak" or Tarkanian's "Amoeba")
- Delayed substitutions
- Unexpected tempo changes
- Physical rebounding battles
The objective is not merely tactical but leverages cognitive overload.
Military strategist John Boyd would call this getting inside the opponent's OODA loop - observe, orient, decide, and act.
Summary
The biggest lesson from asymmetrical warfare may be this: The weaker side loses when it confronts the stronger side on a 'level playing field'.
The underdog's first question should not be,"How do we stop them?" Instead, "How do we make this a different game?"
Van Riper accomplished this in Millennium Challenge. Drone and autonomous weaponry achieves this today. That is what every successful underdog has done since David wielded a sling instead of a sword.
Fight 'unfairly'. Create the game they didn't prepare for.
Lagniappe. Teach adaptability.
Pete Carroll on Coaching 🎥
— Greg Berge (@GregBerge) June 7, 2026
Great coaches don’t just demand compliance. They teach athletes to think, adapt, and figure it out.
Coaching = Belief in someone’s potential + Commitment to their journey. pic.twitter.com/xtV12OeNME