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How to make most of your shots in basketball


3 Basketball Drills to Improve your Shooting Accuracy

Basketball Tip

Working on ways to increase the buckets you make will always be valuable to you and your team. Coaches want players who take meaningful shots and that they can depend on in the final minutes of a game. At Nike Basketball Camps, our coaches work with our athletes to make sure they are in the best spot to take and make shots when it comes down to it. Here are three tips for beginner to advanced players that will help improve your shooting accuracy and make you a dependable player when it matters.

1. Practice "Nothing but the Net" Shots

The whole point of all net shots is to make your target smaller and to learn where you need to focus your eye line to make you a more successful shooter. Do you need to focus on the backboard, the back of the rim, the front of the rim, etc, all athletes are different. By taking these shots, you are increasing the amount you need to focus to be a successful shooter. You will soon learn that all net shots are harder to make than regular shots, making game day shots easier for you.

Every shot you take, the ball can only touch the net. Touching the rim or backboard does not count. Start off by taking stationary shots at four different spots and making five net shots in each. Track your progress each time to see how much you improve.

2. Focus on Reps Close to the Basket

While at practice, start out with easier shots closer to the basket. Don't start practice taking 3-pointers, instead work up to this over the course of practice. Start out focusing on your shot technique so you can eventually build out your range and become a more consistent shooter as you grow. Practice is the time to focus on what you are doing right and what you may be doing wrong. After every missed shot, focus on what went wrong and what you can do to fix this for the future. By immediately recognizing your mistakes, you will be able to not only avoid them in the future but build strong habits that will help improve your shooting accuracy.

If your shots are too long or too short, it may just be something you need to work out by taking more reps and getting a better feel for the ball. Often times if you overshot to the left or right it has to do with your core mechanics. Try to make it your goal that over the course of practice you are making 100 perfect shots.

3. One-Armed Shots

A third way to help you improve your accuracy is to take one-armed shots. This will force you to focus on your follow-through and make sure you are flexing your wrist every time.

Start just under the basket and make five shots. To make it more challenging, take a step back and make five more shots and so on. As you take these shots the power should be coming from your legs and you should be following through on every shot, making sure not to drop your arm after the shot.

Finding ways to locate your target faster will give you a leg up when it comes to shooting accuracy. By staying focused in practice and using that time to develop tricks, you will become more confident on the court and in your shooting abilities. Practice these three drills a few times a week and you will see results over time. Check out more basketball shooting tips and learn even more this summer at a Nike Basketball Camp near you.

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3 Basketball Drills to Become Better at Shooting

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Although it may often be considered a recreational activity, shooting buckets and practicing your basketball shot is a skill that often makes the difference in any game, from school leagues to the pros. It takes practice, repetition, and consistency to ensure you're comfortable with hitting your shots when all eyes are on you.

During the shooting motion, the placement of your hands and feet are crucial. With IMG Academy’s How-To Become a Better Shooter drills video, hear directly from the team’s coach, and learn how to set yourself up to shoot nothing but net! 

In this video, you will be introduced to three basketball shooting drills to become a better shooter. Watch how student-athletes perform each drill with instruction on stance, follow through, and balance to control the ball and make the shot. Each of these drills will allow you to enhance your skills: 

  • Form Shooting
  • Quick Feet
  • Transition Shooting 

The keys to Form Shooting are good balance and follow through, keeping your elbows in, and properly judging your power - don’t miss short. To master Quick Feet and set yourself up to score, take three steps to get behind the three-point line, pivot to catch, and get the shot off before it’s contested. Transition Shooting is all about maintaining good balance and your follow through being stuck to ensure your shot finishes strong.    

Ready to impress the crowd when you step on the court? Press play below to get started!
 


IMG Academy basketball has created a library of basketball training drills that you can refer back to any time! Check out our other News stories as well as our YouTube channel (@imgacademy) for all of our How-To content.

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    Basketball coaching hacks: how to score goals for beginners

    Even if you are a novice basketball player, we will not give you a training plan, but we will tell you why the ball flies anywhere but into the ring and into your hands. It's all about technique: even with regular training and perseverance, novice adults and children often make simple mistakes. It's a shame, let's fix it. Below are 11 life hacks on how to hone your technique to increase the likelihood of a goal for your team.

    Basketball Shot Rules for Beginners

    1. Hands up

    In pursuit of the attacker, raise your hands, even if you are standing with your back to the pass, and even more so if the ring is in front of you. Your raised hands will increase the chance of intercepting the ball from the opponent by 2 times. Don't overlook this little thing!

    2.

    Make shield rolls

    Even Tim Duncan did not neglect them! A square is drawn on the basketball backboard. If you are standing opposite the ring, then aim at the middle of the upper part of the square, if you are standing on the side, then at the corner. If you hit this square, then the ball is at 90% of cases will fall into the ring. The law of physics and no cheating!

    3. Look at the ring, not at the ball

    Practice driving the ball with your hand, not your eyes, develop tactile control. Your eyes should be on the hoop while dribbling and be aware of the position of your body in relation to the hoop. Then you will be able to take the correct posture, and the throw will be effective.

    4. Dribble with the balls of your fingers only

    The palm should not touch the ball, only the pads of the fingers. Dribbling should become familiar to you, like an extension of your hand. Then you can change its trajectory at any time and you will have more chances to score goals. Practice with the ball constantly.

    5. Throw with one hand

    If you throw the ball with two hands, you reduce the chance of hitting the basket. All the efforts of the throw are in one hand (in the right for right-handers, in the left for left-handers). The other hand only holds the ball, the leading one holds it with the fingers, not the palm.

    6. Do not jump when protecting the ring

    Jumping is the main mistake of rookie defenders. To intercept the ball and block the shot, simply stick out your hands. When you are in a jump, the attacker will easily bypass you.

    7. Don't look back

    When you dribble, don't look back, but dribble and aim for the ring, focus on shooting (or passing to another player on your team).

    8. Bring the throw to automatism

    Incorporate the most basic basketball techniques into your training plan and bring the shot to automatism. Throw first from a distance of half a meter from the ring, gradually increasing it. Learn to throw the ball so that it hits the hoop without touching the edge.

    Throw the ball with all fives and jump

    Throwing Rules:

    • Head in the center of the body - if tilted, accuracy is lost.
    • Look at the ring: mentally build a trajectory. If you are far away, the ball flies in a curved curve with a maximum height of 2 meters above the hoop.
    • A strong hand is in front and throws, a weak hand is on the side and directs, only holding the ball. The elbow of the throwing hand must be in line with the ring.
    • The ball must rest on the fingers without touching the palm. The fingers are as far apart as possible and grab the ball.
    • Throwing arm bent 90 degrees, forearm perpendicular to the floor. If you bend less, then you get not a throw, but a throwing of the ball horizontally.

    The main thing in the throw is the position of the body and its balance. Place your feet apart and parallel to each other: it is important to orient them in the middle of the basket. Then the direction of the body during the jump will coincide with the direction of the throw, and the ball will fly straight into the ring. When the feet are uneven, the ball flies in the wrong direction or does not reach (although the throw was normal).

    Take a deep breath and release as you exhale.

    How to hold the ball and shoot in basketball

    How to throw correctly: straighten your arm, point your wrist up, and with your hand set the ball to rotate in the opposite direction from the flight. The ball should seem to "roll" off your fingers.

    9. Copy masters and play as a team

    Watch professional basketball games and try to copy the movements of your favorite players in training. And be sure to conduct game sparring - this will allow you to develop more techniques.

    10. Do not throw in a straight line

    The higher the arc of the ball, the greater the chance of a goal and the less chance of blocking by the opponent.

    11. Do not throw the ball from a full height stand

    This is the biggest newbie mistake!

    Before the throw, bend your knees slightly and at the moment of the throw, straighten your body, making a jump. You need to straighten up and push off the ground at the same time. When squatting, keep the elbow of the throwing arm close to the body and towards the ring.

    The jump will give momentum to the ball and will allow you not to make sudden movements with the brush.

    ***

    And to be a long-term player, do not forget about your health: take care of your joints and muscles, use tapes, do a warm-up. And be sure to strengthen your arms, legs and shoulder girdle, develop coordination. Regular exercises on uneven bars and horizontal bars will help you with this.

    3 tips for increasing throwing distance

    Nikita Yamshchikov, founder of Ball In

    @nikyamschikov

    How to shoot 3s or even how to make 3s? How to throw from a logo like Curry or Yang? Asked such questions?

    Keep 3 tips to help you!

    Tip 1

    Work on the quality of the movement: how you lift the ball from the bottom and how you release it. Try to move the ball close to the body and not back behind the head, this will give more energy to the ball.

    "Use your feet to hit a 3-pointer" is often a misnomer because it's more important to transfer energy to the ball effectively rather than pushing stupidly up when the ball is dead center.

    To improve this, try throwing without legs. For example, sitting on a chair or with a wide setting of the legs.

    Tip 2

    Don't rush to chase long distances at once. Learn to make a precise movement close to the ring and gradually move away. When your hand makes a different movement every time you throw, stability is out of the question. Moreover, the further you throw, the stronger each extra movement and deviation affects the result.

    First consistency, then increasing distance. Try a simple exercise: you start at the ring and make 5 hits, if it took you no more than 7 throws, take a step back. So you move away until you make 3 misses from some point. Made 3 misses - start over.

    Watch the video for another exercise.
    It also fits the first tip.

    Tip 3

    Be patient. One workout and 100 throws won't be enough to get big changes and learn something. A throw, and even more so a good and stable one, requires a large amount of high-quality repetitions and fixing the movement.

    Make your shooting training not just voluminous, where you make 400 hits, but as high quality as possible. 200 hits in 250 throws is better than 400 hits in 1600 throws.

    Do you want to improve your shooting,
    and improve your dribbling and finishing?
    Try LVL UP course

    Learn more

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