Red Auerbach took a team of NBA stars to Yugoslavia over sixty years ago. He offered their hosts a clinic. They said that it wasn't necessary or wanted.
The NBA stars proceeded to take apart Yugoslavia winning by over fifty. Their coach asked about the clinic. Auerbach said, "you just got it."
In practice, coaches face the same reality. A local team invited our sixth graders to play at their gym. Their hospitality included showing us an offensive clinic as their '5 Out' offense destroyed us with:
1) Pass and cut
2) Back door cuts (including dribble at backdoor)
3) Pass and screen away
4) DHO (dribble handoffs)
We had only a couple of practices together before the game. No matter. We got the clinic and lost by about 40.
Post script. We got invited again the next year and won on a three-pointer at the buzzer. What a difference a year makes.
Starting young players with '5 Out' has merit for teaching both offense and defense. It exemplifies the value of teaching "basketball symmetry."
- Starts with elite spacing
- Teaches player and ball movement
- Teaches setting up your cut
- Teaches urgent cutting
- Teaches sprint to screen
- Has options for initiating wing or high ball screens
- Teaches the need for on-time, on-target passing
- Demands on and off-ball defense
- Teaches 'jump to the ball'
- Teaches load to the ball help defense
- Offers chance to teach PnR defense both high and wing
- Demands defending back cuts
- Offers options to defend off-ball screens re: jam, through, and under options
Lagniappe 2. "You cannot cheat the grind.""Equal playing time ain't fair.
— The Winning Difference (@thewinningdiff1) August 4, 2024
Earning your playing time is.
If you're not where you want to be, sacrifice more."
-Alex Hale @Chipsperform pic.twitter.com/bHmz6hIXNI
“If you want to reach the peak in your success, you cannot cheat the grind for the grind knows what you put in,” @PatrickWillis52
— The Winning Difference (@thewinningdiff1) August 4, 2024
The grind molds your character and teaches you discipline, perseverance and the value of hard work. pic.twitter.com/7VU4aHx0da
Lagniappe 3. Maybe post defense will become obsolete. I doubt it.
Subjectively, Brad Stevens is the most COMPLETE basketball mind on the planet. Culture, tactical/technical, innovation, relationships, etc .
— Chris Steed (@steeder10) August 3, 2024
Stevens teaching POST DEFENSE:
- straddle the hip
- high hand denial
- get low/leverage on the ball reversal
- on the catch get… pic.twitter.com/TxeVOGcaOY
Lagniappe 4. I coached kids techniques that I thought were the best. I told them the "right way" is whatever your next coach wants.
Chauncey Billups on Donovan Clingan's three point shooting:
— Brenna Greene (@BrennaGreene_) June 29, 2024
"We seen it when we worked it him out and it really surprised me because I hadn't seen it either, but he gave me one of the best answers that a kid gave me. I asked him that when I was interviewing him and I just said,… pic.twitter.com/ByEVO78zzf