Developing Small Forwards by Mike Procopio

Developing Small Forwards by Mike Procopio

Developing Small Forwards By Mike Procopio The Small Forward is very similar to a shooting guard as far as the skills that need to be developed. Usually the small forward is bigger than the shooting guard, which will open up more opportunities on both ends of the floor. Small forwards tend to handle the ball more in the offense than shooting guards do unless their team starts a combo guard or multiple point guards in the rotation. Most of your routine that you develop for a small forward workout should be similar than the drills used form the shooting guard workout. Where the workouts differ is the amount of screen and roll and offense off of the dribble should be increased in the small forward workout. Also, if the small forward that you are working with is bigger say 6'5 or taller at the high school/ college level or 6'6 or taller at the pro level a lot of post work should be incorporated in the routine. Opening Developing a small forward is like developing a point guard, shooting guard, and post player all in one. A small forward needs to know how to clear their defender so when you start working on off the dribble offense emphasize going somewhere with the dribble. Repetitions just like any position is very important with their mid and deep ranged jumpers. A player's physical traits (size,athletic ability, and skill) has a big impact on the workout that you put them through. Don't cookie cut your small forward workout for all small forwards. If they are smaller then don't add much on the post up front or if they don't handle the ball very well then do less with off the dribble offense in isolations. Ball Handling The ability to handle the ball is one of the major skill sets that separates the shooting guard and small forward. While shooting guards usually get their shots int he offense spotting up or coming off screens, the small forward tends to isolate, handle the ball in transition, and has the ball in pick and roll situations. Just like every other position develop their ball handling skills in a lot of stationary drill work, as well as full court work. This will enhance their ability to be efficient creating opportunities off of the dribble. It's important to build their hand, wrist, and forearm strength. This will build a great base in becoming a good ball handler. If you watch some of the better small forwards like Paul Pierce, Luol Deng, and LeBron James they can all use their dribble to put their teams in position to win. Being able to handle the ball adds another level to a wing's game in becoming a scoring threat for their team. It is important to spend a good amount of time at least 10-12 minutes spread out in an hour to hour and fifteen minute workout. Content collated by Rob Beveridge – Bevo International Coaching Shooting In your workouts with your small forward get them plenty of repetitions shooting jump shots from 15-17 feet from both corners, elbows, and free throw line area. Don't worry about the three point line at first. Work on the foundation of their shooting and spend time with shooting close to the basket at first. Form shooting is always good to start your workout with. Communicate the importance of a good follow through and keeping their elbow as high as possible on their release. As far as game shots work on their spot ups from 15-17 , shooting off pin downs, and 1-2 dribble pull-ups starting from the three point line going in both directions. Not every successful small forward can consistently make shots, but developing them to be serviceable from 15-17 feet will put them ahead of the curve for their position. Repetitions are the key to developing your player's offensive game. Make sure in these repetitions you are correcting them on their shooting form, elbow height, and balance. Put a lot of time into developing their mid range shooting and when they begin being consistent then you can spend more time with the mid range + and three point line. Passing In some instances the small forward is a team's secondary ball handler to the point guard. Since they will find themselves with the ball an awful lot being able to pass the ball is very important. Weak handed passing is one of the most important passing skills that you can teach them. Spend a great deal of time teaching them to drive hard and force defenders to rotate to them and make the pass out of the rotations. Set up situations where they have to think and make plays for others on their drives. Make help defenders rotate up not only from the wing, but also the post as well. Have them make chest, bounce, and over the head passes. In your pick and roll work make sure you add pocket passes to the screener rolling and popping. Accuracy is very important when working on passing. Stationary passing is great to develop form, but also making passes in game situations is such an important skill to teach. Passing is a very under taught skill that needs to be worked on especially at the young levels. Creating Space There are three types of scorers. There are the types of players that can score when their defender is behind them (transition), the player that can score when their defender is on their side(driving and getting them on their hip), and the player that can score when their defender is in front of them (1/2 court defender in stance and in Content collated by Rob Beveridge – Bevo International Coaching position.). The first two are easy if you are bigger, faster, and stronger than your defender. The third type is the toughest as when a defender is in good position and on balance then it becomes a chess game. Teaching a wing player to create is a slow process for a coach. There are no short cuts or "super unstoppable move" that you can teach a wing player over night. Repetitions are the key to teaching your player to get their own shot. Start with the most important thing and that is patience. Young players at every position want to play the game too fast. Teach them patience and to see not only where their defender is playing, but also where the other 4 defenders are positioned. The Jab step is the most popular way to create space. The key to a good jab step is not to catch and jab right away. Catch the ball and size your defender up first. You do this because when you catch the ball and your defender is playing off 5 feet there is no reason to jab. When your player catches have them be in good triple threat position have them seize their defender up for a second or two and then make their jab. Work on having them catch, jab, and shoot with no dribble from 15 feet. Once they are consistent move them out past the three point line from the wings and top of the key and now jab, fake, and take a dribble right/left for a jumper. Biggest point of emphasis is to make them stay low on everything (jab, fake, and dribble) the only time they should be coming up is when they shoot. Being able to catch the ball on the wing and move their defender to create space for their drives or jumper is so important for a wing. These skill sets are a great start for any wing player. Post Up Game Bigger wing players should all have some type of a post game. The flex offense is increasing in popularity at all levels. It is important to have all young players learn a couple of post moves to at least be comfortable on both blocks. Be basic when teaching post moves to younger wing players. Have them post up from the mid post area so they have room to face up and shoot as well as drive to the basket. Every young player should be able to shoot a jump shot over both shoulders. Coaches aren't a big fan of fade aways, well unless they go in. I don't care if they are straight up or fading away on their jump shot. As long as they put the work in with their repetitions practicing the fade away, I am not against them shooting the shot. A counter to the turn over shoulder jumper is to turn/fake and put the ball on the floor for a jumper/hook. You can even add a step-back to that move as well. Besides turning over their shoulder for a jumper with no dribble they can also shoot the hook over both shoulders with no dribble. Content collated by Rob Beveridge – Bevo International Coaching The last two moves that are effective for a wing player is to catch take a dribble middle and shoot a jump hook. Add an up and under to that move and they will have a pretty good arsenal of post moves to go to. Keep their post game simple and effective. Don't get caught up in teaching moves with 4 pivots and multiple spins. Remember there are 8 other players, a shot clock, and 3 second calls to consider. Defense You should develop all of your wing players to be defensive stoppers.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    6 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us