Figure 1. General principles.
Concept 1. (left) Overload the baseline if x1 and x2 don't drop. Defensively, I teach "bigs away come back to play." The chickens come home to roost.
Concept 2. (right, below) Make x3 decide coverage and screen the middle x5. A third option is to extend the zone against more aggressive zones (below).
Figure 2. Overload
Low shooters pop to corners and 4, 5 cut to the blocks...4 offensive players versus 3 low defenders. 4, 5 can stack or start at the elbows. Inbounder needs to read low defenders and be patient. Plays ALWAYS start with the official handing 1 the ball.
Figure 3. Inside PnR
The primary action here is entry to 5 with a handoff to the inbounder into an inside pick-and-roll. There are options at the top and opposite block.
Figure 4. Screen the middle.
Pressure the ball side low defender and screen the middle defender.
Figure 5. Open the middle.
Offense decides whom and where to pressure. The action begins like the entry to 5 shown earlier, with a delayed attack from a driver into the middle which is drive and/or kick to the opposite corner.
Lagniappe: via @BBallImmersion (Chris Oliver)
Beautiful actions with "2 second rule", drive the gaps, zone distortion, and ball reversal.Guy Molloy's @NZTallFerns team shows great spacing & ball movement in their zone offense. This is a great demonstration of his A-B-C/1-2-3 Concept: A-Always B-Build C-Culture & 1-2-3 (priorities, can’t do everything)— Chris Oliver (@Chris__Oliver) July 25, 2018
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