Extreme 212 Defensive Coaching Guide

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Extreme 212 Defensive Coaching Guide Extreme 212 Defensive Coaching Guide Extreme 212 has created this document for your personal use, to further the knowledge of the fundamentals of the game. You may print and use this information’s materials for your team and your personal use. Since most of this basketball information contains knowledge that Extreme 212 Director Antoine Holmes has learned from others, he does not claim the knowledge as his own. However, in recognition of the work done in organizing, writing and designing this information, the author would appreciate an acknowledgement of all the creators of this information to go to them and not him. You are not permitted to reproduce any of these materials if you plan to use them in a profitable way. Disclaimer, Limitation of Liability and Warranty Extreme 212 does not claim to be an expert, as there are many other more successful, knowledgeable and experienced coaches and programs, and many other points of view. You are advised to visit the other excellent coaching sites and programs you deem qualified to your personal or professional needs or wants. Extreme 212 has compiled this material for you, but it should not be construed as any absolute truths, as there are many ways to coach and play the game. The author gives this information freely, and assumes no liability for others who use this material. By using this material, you agree to the following. Please note that you will be referred to as the "user" in this document. The user agrees that use of this document is completely at the user's own risk. The information presented in this version of many types of playbooks… is provided, "as is", and without warranty of any kind, expressed or implied, including without limitation any warranty for information, uninterrupted access, services or products provided or connected with this service. 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This information is provided for your convenience, and are not to be considered an endorsement, unless so stated. 22 Defensive Principles Here are 22 great, fundamental tips to playing defense. Go over this thoroughly with your players from time to time so they stay fresh on the tenets of good defense. Defense is the most consistent phase of basketball. A team can have a bad shooting night, but they should never have a bad night on the defensive end of the court. 1) Take pride in your defensive ability. Make up your mind to stop your man. Keep saying, “I must stop my man from scoring!” — do not depend on your teammates to bail you out. Remember defense is a state of mind, an attitude, a choice. It is about taking it to the next Degree!!! ! 2) Play with rock solid fundamentals. Keep your nose on the ball as you maintain a low center of gravity. Be lower than your opponent. Force the player to his weak side. Keep your hands active and play the angles. 3) Hustle. Constantly moving eyes, feet and hands… It pays off. SMART AGGRESSIVE basketball is winning basketball. Keep your head on a swivel. If you lose sight of your man, go to the basket and you will find him. 4) The defender closest to the rim is the defensive quarterback. That defender calls the switches and alerts teammates to ever-changing situations. Every player must be a good communicator. 5) It takes guts, determination, plus physical and mental toughness to stop a scorer. Be determined to continually improve your individual defense now…tomorrow may be too late. 6) Failure to pressure the ball loses games. If you turn your back, the other team is going to score. Be determined to stop the quick cuts to the rim. Get a piece of the cutter. Bump that player and be physical. 7) When the opposing team shoots, block out your assignment. Go up strong and rebound with both hands. Secure the rebound and come down strong with the ball. Chin the ball, and get the elbows out. Do not tap a defensive rebound unless that is the only way you can get a hand on it. 8) Awareness and Hustle. Combined is an intangible factor that makes a superior player out of one with average ability. 9) Maintain your poise and stay cool. Foolish fouls are made by Frustration and foolishness or even out-of-position players that react off pure emotion. 10) See both the ball and your man. Play the opposition as hard and as tough as possible. If your opponent is weak, be ready to sag and help. 11) Speed is important, but you can substitute brains for speed. Anticipate. Think and always be ready to help a teammate and Lock your man up. If your defensive assignment is two or more passes away from the ball, get into the lane and plug it up. 12) Keep the ball out of your “house.” Do not let the opponent get the ball into the middle of your defense. Sag, float, plug it up…do anything to keep the ball out of the middle! 13) Make you man shoot over you — never let him go around you. When playing a good shooter, make that player put the ball on the court and drive. When playing a good driver, give that player another half step. If the player is not a shooter, sag and be ready to help out your teammates. 14) Ignore pass fakes and shot fakes. Stay lower than the opponent and leave you feet when the opponent leaves his or her feet, not before. Keep your eyes on the ball and numbers on the chest. If the numbers don’t go anywhere, the player isn’t going anywhere. 15) Force low. When guarding a post player in the post, force that player lower. When he or she is playing high, force that player higher away from the rim… Be the dominator in the middle. 16) Force to the lines. When guarding the dribbler, force to the sideline or baseline, where a trap or double-team might occur. Keep your nose on the ball and stay lower than the ball handler. 17) If you are the only player back defensively, protect the rim. Give up a jump shot, but not the layup. Fake at the ball and try to make the dribbler pick up the dribble. Try to force at least two passes because by then defensive help should arrive. 18) When the player you are guarding shoots, do no turn immediately and follow the flight of the ball. Watch the shooter and if the player goes to rebound, then pivot and block out, staying between the player and the rim. 19) Jump to the ball and the rim when the ball is passed. Move every time the ball moves. Never let a player pass and then cut between you and the ball. 20) Never relax on defense. Never play flat-footed while playing defense. Stay low, stay in a stance and be lower than your opponent. 21) Anticipation & aggression. Hustle, fight, talk, be alert, anticipate and be the aggressor. Intimidate your opponent. 22) Be in the best shape of your life. Be a tireless worker on the defensive end. Adopt a positive attitude, have confidence in your ability to stop anyone. Those who play defense will play! Man-to-man defense enables us to get pressure on the ball at all times ("on-ball defense"), while still protecting the basket ("helpside defense"). I love watching a well-coached team that plays great man-to-man pressure defense. Good man-to-man defense is a team defense, not just five individuals guarding their own man, but five players working together. Here is a good quote: "The best man defense looks like a zone and the best zone defense looks like a man." Here's the way we teach it. 11 Methods we use: • Force to the sideline and baseline. • Deny the Wing Pass? • Keeping pressure on the ball, on-ball defense. • Defensive positioning off the ball - Deny, Helpside, Help and Recover. • Help and Recover... stop the seams. • Point-guard dribble-penetration. • Baseline dribble-penetration. • Defending post players. • Defending cutters. • Defending screens. • Defending Baseline Out-of-Bounds Plays with Man-to-Man Defense. Man-to-Man Defense - Force to the sideline and baseline. We teach our on-ball defenders to force the ball toward the sideline and then down to the baseline. Once at the baseline, we do not allow penetration along the baseline, but try to trap there. Forcing the ball to one side immediately allows you to establish your helpside defense. When the ball is at the top of the key or in the middle, the low defenders must play fairly "straight up" and you must defend the entire court. But once the ball goes to the side, our weakside defenders can move into a helpside position (see below) and deny the pass into the post, and help prevent dribble-penetration.
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