Baylor Bears - Inside Ball Screen
03/20/2019Baylor Bears Inside Ball Screen vs. 2-3 Zone. Diagrams and video below! Support the work Radius Athletics does for coaches and receive exclusive benefits... See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawBaylor Bears Inside Ball Screen vs. 2-3 Zone. Diagrams and video below! Support the work Radius Athletics does for coaches and receive exclusive benefits... See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawBaylor Bears lob set vs. 2-3 Zone. Diagrams + video below. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawSpread Ball Screen vs. 2-3 Zone when heading into the "Single Side" #ZoneOffenseTips + #SBSoffense For more on spread ball screen offense: Spread Ball Screen Basics (blog) Spread Ball Screen Offense (Playbook) Spread Ball Screen Entries (Playbook) For notes on Spread Ball Screen vs. 2-3 Zone when heading into the Double Side... See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawSpread Ball Screen vs. 2-3 Zone #ZoneOffenseTips + #SBSoffense For more on spread ball screen offense: Spread Ball Screen Basics (blog) Spread Ball Screen Offense (Playbook) Spread Ball Screen Entries (Playbook) See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawClick here for the full Loop series from KJ Smith! On the FMS blog: The Top 25 Plays of 2018 See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawThis is a great set to overload the defense. We teach our guys daily to create triangles against the zone. This set puts the defense in a bind of who to guard. Video included after the diagrams. FMS Blog: Maui Invitational - Top 10 Plays See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawThe most downloaded plays of the year, conveniently put together in one playbook, just for you. Download to FastDraw using the button above, or grab the PDF here. Check out this blog post for more details on the individual plays! Shout out to #TeamFastModel for its contributions in making this playbook and the PlayBank an amazing resource for basketball coaches! Thanks for your support in 2018! See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawHere is a way to incorporate a dribble drive attack into your zone offense. Using a wing dribble entry, we shift the defense to the ball side, then set a backside ball screen to create a 2/1 on the backside. More from Coach Michael Lynch: Skill Building for Dribble Drive Motion Offenses Keys to Designing a DDM Practice Plan See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawOverloading against a zone can be overwhelming for the defense. Indiana coach Archie Miller uses these two overload actions to create a 1 on 1 matchup with his bigs vs the middle of the zone. 1: In the first video clip, the wing defender is confused on who to cover and leaves the corner wide open. 2: In the last clip, the wing tries to split the wing and corner offensive player, leaving a 1 on 1 in the post, which is exactly what the Hoosiers are looking for. On the FMS Blog: Gap Creating Cuts to Enhance Your Offense See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawSeton Hall opened the season against Wagner's 2-3 zone with this lob play. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawA potentially electifying play against a 2-3 zone from the Seton Hall Pirates. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawLooking for a zone BLOB? Get a corner 3 out of this box formation. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawI am not convinced this is a set play but I do love this action that led to the outcome. Marquette does a great job of creating triangles with defenders and gaps in their zone offense which puts the defense in decision situations where they will be wrong regardless of how they cover it. More on the FMS blog: NCAA Preseason Top 25 XsOs Click to view all plays by Coach Dave Nedbalek! See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawThis BLOB has become our go to call against any team that likes to play zone in baseline out of bounds situations. In the video clip below we ran this play against a 2-3 zone, we were down two with 0:05 seconds left and were able to convert a "And 1" on the play to win the game. Although this play only has one scoring option, in the 2017-18 season we scored 12 out of 15 times when running this set! See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawThe following reads are made in both the primary and secondary break. They can be the building blocks of an entire offensive system while developing the IQ and skill sets of your players. Circle: Corner player cuts to the rim as the wing player fades towards the corner for a shot. Drop: Wing player dives to the rim as the corner player lifts up to the wing for a shot. Down: Wing down screen towrads the corner where that player may fill up to the rim for a shot as well as curl or backdoor cut to the rim. The screener will either slip to the rim or pop out to the perimeter. Up: Corner lifts up to flare screen for the wing before slipping to the basket. The cutter may also curl to the rim. If the flare screener does not slip to the basket, they may sprint to the ball for a dribble handoff. See More
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