Coaches Page
BALL HANDLING
To be a top-flight ballhandler (which is key to being a great point guard) a player must be able to survey the floor while handling the ball. Everyone on the team relies on the ball-handler to get the ball down the floor and be the catalyst toward making something happen for the team. Here's a few drills to help you work on this aspect of your game - juniors and seniors!
#1 AROUND THE WORLD
Circle the ball around your head, than your waist, and finally put your legs together and take the ball around both legs at the knees. Then, bend at the waist, spread your legs, and circle the ball around one leg, then the other. This exercise will give you a great feel for the ball in addition to hand coordination and speed.
#2 THE SCISSORS
To start this exercise, place your left foot ahead of your right and bounce the ball between your legs from your right to your left hand. As the ball gets to your left hand shift your feet so that your right leg goes ahead of your left and bounce the ball back between your legs. Shift your feet with every bounce.
#3 CATCH-CATCH-CATCH
Hold the ball between your legs, with both hands on the ball, right hand in front and left hand in back. Quickly switch your hands,(now left hand in front and right hand in the back), without letting the ball touch the ground. Do as quickly as possible...this drill is one of the hardest to master... but it just takes lots of practice.
#4 CRAB WALK
This drill can go from baseline to half court. Step forward with your left leg and pass the ball from your right hand to your left under your left leg. As you take your next step with your right leg, pass the ball from your left hand to your right under your right leg. Continue this pattern all the way down the floor.
#5 FIGURE 8
Spread your legs, bend at the waist, put the ball through your legs, around one leg, back through your legs, and around your other leg, making a figure eight. This will help you get a feel for the basketball as you move it around. Keep your head up not looking at the ball and increase your speed.
#6 FIGURE 8 DRIBBLING
Dribble the ball as quickly as possible in a figure 8 through and around the legs. Use the fingers when you dribble, and dribble very low and quickly. Switch from the right to the left and back to the right.
#7 ONE ON TWO
A good drill to use to better your dribbling under pressure is to try to advance the ball against two defenders. This will force you to use a variety of moves while being alert to the defense. Always protect the ball using your non-dribbling arm and keep your head up.
#8 PASS AND CATCH
With 2 hands, make a bounce pass between your legs from front to back and catch the ball with 2 hands behind you. Then bounce the ball through your legs from the back to the front, and catch the ball in front of your body. This is a good drill for body awareness.
#9 SQUEEZE THE BALL
This a drill that helps increase the strength in your fingers. Hold the ball in front of you at eye level with two hands. By squeezing your fingers and thumb together with one hand at a time, you move the ball from one hand to the other as quickly as you can. More finger and arm strength will imrove your ball control.
#10 TOUCH-TOUCH-TOUCH
This is another ball-handling drill that seems very difficult at first, but with daily practice, will improve your handles. This drill is called touch-touch-touch because that is what you do... while keeping the ball between your legs, you touch the ball once with your right hand(fingers) in front, then with your left hand(fingers) in front, then with your right behind you, and then with your left behind you. Continue in this manner as fast as possible. Before long, you will master this skill.
SHOOTING
#1 LAY UPS
A layup is a short range high percentage shot that usually hits gently off the backboard. Most of the time layups are preformed while running towards the basket. To shoot a proper layup you must have your hands in the correct position. If you are shooting on the left side of the basket, you would shoot with your left hand, jumping off your right foot and vice versa. As you are dribbling towards the basket start to pick up your dribble about 3 feet from the basket. You then take one more step planting your take off foot and bringing the opposite knee up to gain momentum towards the basket. Lay-ups can be soft, strong, or flashy. For extra strength and to protect the ball from shot blockers keep your non shooting hand on the ball as long as possible. Gently bounce the ball against the square on the backboard and back into the net.
More to follow on shooting, footwork, passing, rebounding. Check back soon.