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Basketball Play - Post Up: DeForest - Celtic 3

Post Up: DeForest - Celtic 3

Lee DeForest 03/03/2012

This Post Up, from Coach Lee DeForest at Basketball Coaches Club, and is a quick hitter out of the Princeton Offense. For more on the complete Princeton Offense, get Coach DeForest's e-book, 'Winning with the Princeton Offense Basketball Guide,' (created with FastDraw). Follow @coachdeforest on Twitter. See More

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Basketball Play - Play of the Day 01-23-2012: Corner Up

Play of the Day 01-23-2012: Corner Up

FastModel Sports 01/24/2012

1 passes to 5 on the shape up as 4 cuts to opposite block 5 dribbles at 1's defender, hands off to 1, then goes down to set up a staggered double with 4. 2 waits for the handoff and flex cuts off of 4's screen. 2 looks for a pass from 1 at the rim then immediately reverses direction and sets up a staggered double with 4 to screen 5 into the post. 1 can enter directly to 5 or swing to 3 for the post feed. See More

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Basketball Play - Wheel Stagger SLOB

Wheel Stagger SLOB

Matt Hackenberg 12/17/2021

In this diagram and video clip we see a SLOB to get into the flex offense. The flex offense has stood the test of time. Every year I've been a head coach we've had a BLOB, SLOB or set play option for the flex offense. Browse more coaching content available on the Sellfy store: https://sellfy.com/coachhack.go/ Follow me on Twitter - @CoachHackGO See More

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Basketball Play - 5 Out Motion Offense

5 Out Motion Offense

Joel Hueser 09/26/2021

We take great pride in being the best motion team we can be. Learning to play this way is not easy. I often compare motion to reading. It takes time, but once you know how it's really worth it. In order for our offense to be successful—we must play harder, smarter, and more together than our opponent. Our motion offense helps to coordinate all of our individual skills into a cohesive team unit. No longer will skills be thought of as individual, but rather a contributing asset to our team play. Each player will maintain his own creativity and initiative because our offense is flexible enough to expose such assets. Most often we function with four perimeter players around one inside player. There are also times when we are most efficient with our five best players on the floor. This five out, positionless concept is also the set we encourage all of our youth programs to implement. The advantages far outweigh the disadvantages. Too often a player is marked as a “big” early in his adolescence, only to stop growing by his freshman year. By this time his skill level is lagging behind the others and the transition back to the perimeter is insurmountable. If you are a youth coach, the greatest service you can do for your players is to teach them the fundamentals of the game and allow everybody to play inside and out. Our best teams have always been made up of highly skilled players who could do it all. See More

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