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How to teach basketball iq


How to Develop a High Basketball IQ (and 14 Examples)

A high basketball IQ is the most important trait a player can possess.

Like a Grandmaster in chess, it’s the players who are able to think 3 or 4 moves ahead of the other players on the floor who excel and separate themselves from the competition.

Which is why improving basketball intelligence is a requirement for any player who has intentions of stepping on the floor to compete in the best leagues around the world.

But knowing how to improve it isn’t obvious...

When players are asked how to improve their basketball IQ (or when coaches are asked how to improve the overall basketball intelligence of their team) most struggle to come up with even a semi-decent answer.

In this article I’ll do my best to clear up the confusion.

I’ll show you 5 ways to start improving your basketball IQ today, and I’ll also give you 14 examples of high IQ basketball plays that you can learn from.

But first. ..

What Exactly is Basketball IQ?

Here’s my definition...

Basketball IQ is the ability to pick up on small cues during play that will allow players to anticipate what’s going to happen next with a higher probability.

This requires deep knowledge of the game and a sharp eye for detail.

For example:

The player who is consistently able to slide across the key just in time to plant their feet and draw or charge, or the player who is consistently in position to grab offensive rebounds.

Both of these players are reading the game, picking up on small cues (arc of the shot, reading opponent’s eyes, etc) and then reacting instinctively and immediately to what they’re seeing.

That’s why high IQ players always seem to be in the right place at the right time.

Here’s another definition I read from an expert on the topic:

Ben Alamar, who is the former director of sports analytics at ESPN, said the following about basketball IQ when he was on the Counterpoints podcast:

“The general concept is that the very best players in the world can understand what’s going to happen on the court before everybody else does. So they’re not reacting to what’s happening right now. They’re reacting to what’s going to happen in two or three, four, five seconds. It’s like a chess master who is thinking four, five, six moves ahead. Or as Wayne Gretzky once said, you don’t skate to where the puck is. You skate to where the puck is going to be. And that’s what I try to talk about and try and measure what I’m talking about - the basketball intelligence.”

How to Improve Basketball IQ:

Without any further ado...

Let’s go over 5 ways you can start improving your basketball IQ immediately...

1. Watch Basketball Games to “Learn”

There are two ways to watch a game of basketball:

  1. To enjoy
  2. To learn

I’m not going to tell you that one is better than the other because there is a time and place for both, but you must understand that they’re very different.

When you’re with a group of friends and watching a game for enjoyment, you’re usually not focusing on anything in particular or actively trying to learn from the game.

It’s just entertainment.

Whereas when you’re watching a game to learn, you’re focusing on specific parts of the game with the goal of improving your basketball IQ.

What you’re looking at specifically depends on what you want to learn.

A few things you could focus on:

Defensively:

  • What defense are they running?
  • How are they guarding pick-and-rolls?
  • How are they guarding the opponent’s best player?
  • Which shots are they allowing?
  • How are they defending the three-point shot?
  • Are help defenders in the right position?

Offensively:

  • What offense are they running?
  • Are they keeping good spacing on each possession?
  • Which matchups / defenders are they targeting?
  • What do their set plays look like?
  • How is their best player scoring most of his / her points?
  • Are they playing fast or slow?

Depending on the level of basketball you’re playing and the amount of time your team spends together, this “film study” is sometimes done as a team.

The coach will pull specific clips from games to show the team what they are doing correctly and what they need to improve, or the team will watch the full game together while the coach highlights specific things to look at.

But players should watch games by themselves, too…

Along with the team concepts written above, players should watch individual players they want to learn from and emulate.

For example:

If you’re a point guard wanting to improve your basketball IQ, watch Chris Paul or Sue Bird.

  • What do they look for in the Pick and Roll?
  • How do they space the floor?
  • What are their go-to moves?
  • How do they create space using the dribble?
  • How do they score most of their points?

Looking at games in this much detail can be time-consuming, but it’s well worth it.

2. Spend More Time Playing

As I said at the beginning of the article…

Basketball IQ is being able to pick up on small cues that allow players to read the play and anticipate what’s going to happen next.

Well, there’s no better way to start noticing those small “cues” than by playing!

This doesn’t exclusively mean live games of 5-on-5 with coaches on the sidelines and parents in the stands either…

  • Random pick-up games with friends at school
  • 3-on-3 during team practices
  • 1-on-1 games against your best friend
  • etc

Any of these competitive games with offense and defense counts as playing games.

And the more you play, the more “cues” you’ll pick up on that will improve your basketball IQ.

But here’s the thing…

Players aren’t going to consciously realize it as they gradually pick up these cues and get an understanding for them. Most of this process will happen subconsciously.

For example:

Let’s think about a player executing a backdoor pass.

If you were to ask a player how they knew the backdoor pass was open, most would say:

“I don’t know. I just knew I could make it.”

But what actually happened is they subconsciously picked up on many small cues within a split second that told them (subconsciously) there was a good chance the pass could be made without committing a turnover.

Cues such as:

  • Defender’s back to the hoop
  • Defender not on balance
  • Defender not watching the ball
  • Teammate in explosive stance
  • Eye contact with teammate
  • Noticing there’s no help defense
  • On-ball defender relaxed
  • etc

These “cues” that allow players to learn the games are skipped over when players spend too much time training individually or 1-on-1 with a skills trainer.

3. Know the Scouting Report

The next thing that will give you a higher basketball IQ is knowing the scouting report.

To put it simply:

You need to know the strengths and weaknesses of your opponents and teammates.

Knowledge of the 9 other players on the floor is absolutely crucial if you want to make the best decision possible in each situation.

A defensive example:

If a player is put in a position where they need to closeout on an opponent…

It’s important to immediately recognize whether the offensive player is a great outside shooter, a great driver / attacker, or if they can do both well.

Their strengths will determine how a defender closes out on them.

  • If they’re an elite shooter - run them off the three-point line.
  • If they’re an elite driver - closeout short and don’t let them attack.
  • If they’re elite at both - attempt to prevent both options (not easy).

The same is true on the offensive end of the floor…

In a 3-on-1 fast-break situation, the player with the basketball must take into account the finishing ability of both players when deciding who to pass the ball to.

4. Sign Up to YouTube Channels

Listening to some of the best basketball coaches on the internet break down games and specific players is guaranteed to improve your basketball IQ.

Here are a few of my favorites (in no particular order):

(a) Evin Gualberto

Evin does a fantastic job highlighting specific areas of a player’s game.

This is fantastic for players (and coaches) because it allows you to focus on how great players read the game and perform specific skills in a number of different situations.

For example, Steph Curry passing and relocating:

(b) BballBreakdown

Listen to Coach Nick go in depth analysing NBA games.

He points out specific plays / actions teams are using, high IQ plays and smart decisions that occur throughout the game, and shows us how teams could improve.

For example, Game 5 of the 2019 NBA Finals:

(c) Scout With Bryan

Bryan spent 7 years working in the NBA (Wizards, Raptors, and Hawks).

He know shares his basketball knowledge online which gives people the chance to learn X’s and O’s, analytics, playcalls, tendencies, etc, from someone who has been in the locker room with the best teams / players in the world.

For example, the 4th quarter play the Warriors used to score 8 times:

5. Understand Your Team’s System

Another thing that will assist you to make smart decisions as quickly as possible is knowing your team’s system (offensively and defensively) like the back of your hand.

There’s nothing worse than being “lost” on the court.

Players should spend time learning the roles and responsibilities for all positions in case they find themselves required to fill another position on a specific play.

Knowing the team’s system can include:

  • Main Offense
  • Main Defense
  • Defensive Rotations
  • Set Plays
  • Full-Court Press
  • Zone

Everything your team runs throughout a season on both ends of the floor.

And if you’re not sure about something, ASK!

Any basketball coach worth their salt will be more than happy to answer your questions, and this often helps them realize there’s something they need to explain better to the team.

If you’re not sure, there are probably other players who aren’t sure either.

6. Game Awareness (100% Focus)

Another key to executing high IQ basketball plays is game awareness.

Many plays that are considered ‘high IQ’ will depend on making smart decisions based on factors such as time, score, foul count, timeouts, etc.

This requires intense focus and discipline.

Examples:

a. How long is left on the clock?

It’s important for all players to know how much time is left on the game clock (and shot clock), especially towards the end of a close game.

This knowledge can assist you to make smart decision based on time left in the game, such as:

(a) Fouling to send the opposition to the line and get possession

(b) Executing a 2-for-1

(c) Holding the basketball for a last-second shot.

And knowing exactly how much time is left will prevent players from doing silly things like running out the clock during Game 1 of the NBA Finals (2018) when scores are tied instead of passing to a teammate to shoot.

A second example just for fun...

Leading by 2 points with 14.6 seconds left in the game and the shot clock off, Andrea Bargnani took a three-point shot (which he missed) instead of holding up the ball.

Had he done that instead, the Bucks would have been forced to foul and the Knicks likely would have won the game fairly comfortably.

Know the clock, people.

b. How many timeouts does each team have?

For players who are competing in a league that allows players to call timeouts while on the court, it’s important to be aware of how many timeouts your team has left.

If you accidentally call a timeout when your team has zero left, it’s an automatic technical foul.

And if you make this mistake at the wrong time, it can cost your team the game.

Or an NCAA Championship (sorry, Chris Webber).

c. Which players are in foul trouble?

Knowledge of which players are in foul trouble can play a big factor late in games.

For example:

If an opponent’s best player is in foul trouble, you might choose to run a play that makes them the primary defender on a player attacking the basket or in a post up situation.

To avoid fouling out, they’ll often play mediocre defense and won’t challenge the shot.

14 Examples of High Basketball IQ Plays:

A high IQ basketball play doesn’t need to be fancy…

It can be as simple as making an extra pass on offense to a wide open shooter, or holding a box out against a bigger player to allow your teammate to grab an easy rebound.

With that said, below we’ll look at several “interesting and fun” high IQ moments.

These aren’t all thing I’d recommend players copy as there are some controversial plays that may not go with the “spirit” of the game…

But they are all definitely high IQ plays.

Let’s kick things off with...

1. Finding and Exploiting a Mismatch

Coaches and players should be constantly scanning the floor looking for mismatches to exploit.

In the following video, Brad Stevens notices that Horford is being guarded by Aminu as he dribbles the basketball up the court.

Knowing he has the isolation / post advantage, Stevens tells Theis to clear out to the other side of the floor which will create space for Horford to back down his opponent.

This high IQ play leads to two points:

2. Knowing the Weaknesses of Your Opponents

Here’s another thing intelligent basketball players do:

Instead of focusing on which offensive player they want setting the screen in a pick-and-roll, they think about which defender they want to put in a pick-and-roll situation.

In this video, Jokic instructs his teammate to be the screener which forces Boban (who is a poor pick-and-roll defender) to be the screener’s defender.

This leads to an isolation which Chandler was able to take advantage of.

3. Anticipating How the Defense Will Rotate

Most teams have similar rotation rules on defense.

For example:

On a drive to the basket, nearly all teams help from the opposite side of the floor (split line) and then everyone rotates down to “help the helper”.

Smart offensive players can take advantage of this by anticipating where the help will come from, and then passing to the player who will be left unguarded.

Lebron is a player who does this all the time:

4. Faking a Timeout Call

Players need to be sure they’re playing hard and concentrating on the play until they hear the referee’s whistle or the sound of the buzzer.

Because if they don’t, high basketball IQ players can take advantage.

Example:

Assuming that Andre Miller was going to call a timeout, the Hornets players stopped paying attention to the ball and started walking towards their bench.

That’s when Miller exploded towards the basket and finished with a relatively easy layup.

5. Holding the Ball for a Last-Second Shot

Smart clock management is a clear sign of a player with a high basketball IQ.

The most obvious example of this is when a player keeps possession of the basketball while the clock winds down, and then takes a shot with only a few seconds left.

Doing so ensures your opponent won’t get another shot attempt.

Damian Lillard’s incredible 37-foot last-second shot, for example.

(he probably could have got a better shot than this)

6. Get an Extra Shot Using the “2-for-1” Strategy

This strategy only works for teams who play in a competition with a shot clock.

(that should be every high school team)

Here’s an example:

The Lakers are down by 4 points with 31. 7 seconds remaining on the clock.

To ensure they’ll get two more shots before the end of the game, the Lakers run a play for Kobe Bryant that results in an immediate three-pointer.

So even if the Raptors use the entire 24-second clock on their next possession, the Lakers will get the basketball back with a chance to tie or take the lead with 5 seconds remaining.

7. Making the Extra Pass For a Better Shot

Coaches love players who will turn down their ‘good’ shot for a ‘great’ shot by a teammate.

This requires players to know:

(a) The strengths of their teammates (who can shoot)

(b) Read how the defense is closing out

(c) Be aware of where their teammates are

The San Antonio Spurs have made the ‘extra pass’ part of their championship DNA.

Check this out:

8. Dribbling Into the Opposition Coach

This isn’t something I’d recommend you do, but it’s definitely a high IQ play.

Knowing that if a coach makes contact with an opposition player it’s an automatic technical foul, Jason Kidd dribbled into Mike Woodson who was coaching the Hawks.

Coach Woodson, who was a step on the court directing his players on defense, attempted to get out of the way; but Jason Kidd stuck out his forearm and made contact.

The result?

A technical foul on the Atlanta Hawks.

According to this article, Jason Terry called it the smartest play he’d ever seen.

9. Intentionally Spill a Drink for a Free Timeout

Another veteran Jason Kidd stunt.

Down by 2 points with 8 seconds left on the clock and no timeouts remaining, Jason Kidd told one of his players to “hit me” as he was holding a drink.

When contact was made, Kidd intentionally spilled his drink on the court.

This basically gave the Brooklyn Nets a “free timeout” as Kidd was able to draw up a play for the team to run while the liquid was being cleaned up.

10. Hiding Behind a Coach for an Easy Steal

Back in the 2016 NBA season, Marcelo Huertas (Lakers player) hid behind Erik Spolestra (Heat’s coach) after a stoppage for free throws.

Then, as the opposition point guard advanced the ball up the court, Huertas appeared from his hiding spot to tap the basketball from behind straight to a teammate.

Crafty steal.

11. Allowing the Clock Run Out

With a decent lead towards the end of the 4th quarter, Ty Lawson found an intelligent way to wipe some time off the scoreboard and prevent any chance of a comeback.

Here’s how:

Knowing that the 24-second clock doesn’t start until a player inside the court take possession, Ty Lawson allows the basketball to slowly roll up the court.

This winds down the game’s main clock, but doesn’t take any time from the shot clock.

He waits until an opposition player steps up to challenge before taking possession.

12. Inbounding the Ball Off the Opponent’s Back

This is one of the more common “trick” plays.

Every player has attempted this once or twice during a pick-up game, and some players even have the confidence to do it during real games when the coach and crowd are watching on.

It’s simple…

When the opponent turns their back on the player inbounding the ball, gently pass the ball off their back, step onto the court, grab the ball, and look to score.

This is most commonly done when the basketball is on the baseline, but can be done anywhere on the court if the defender presents you with the opportunity.

For example, Ben Simmons:

13. Not Allowing the Opponent to Take a Game-Tying 3-Pointer

You’ve probably heard coaches talk about whether to “foul or defend” in a close game.

Meaning:

When your team is leading by 3 points with only a few seconds on the clock, is it better to:

a. Foul the opponent and send them to the line for two free throws.

b. Defend and hope they don’t make the three-point shot.

(I believe the answer to this question depends on the level you’re coaching)

In the best competitions featuring the world’s best three-point shooters, it’s a high basketball IQ play to recognize this during a game and be willing to take the foul.

For example, Rajon Rondo:

14. Only Guarding the Three-Point Shot

Let’s look at Rondo’s insanely high basketball IQ again…

The Hawks had possession on the sideline trailing the Kings (who Rondo played for) by 3 points with only 1.9 seconds remaining on the clock.

Knowing their only chance to win was to make a three-pointer, Rondo directed his teammates to only guard the three-point line on the final possession.

If the Hawks wanted to pass inside and make an open layup, go for it.

That would ensure a Kings victory.

Conclusion:

There’s no shortage of dedicated players who are willing to dedicate 1,000’s of hours in the gym by themselves working on their shooting and ball-handling.

And while that will definitely help them improve…

There aren’t enough players who are dedicating time to improving their basketball IQ, which is equally important (if not more important) in determining a player’s long-term success.

But there’s still hope...

In my opinion, the lack of time spent improving basketball IQ by players has more to do with not knowing where to get started than a lack of interest or desire.

Share this blog post with your players to help them get started.

- Coach Mac

5 Ways To Improve Basketball IQ and Become a Smarter (and Better) Player

The most athletic and talented players aren’t always the ones playing big minutes. 

A lot of good basketball teams have players who don’t look the part. Perhaps they are undersized or even a little bit slow for the level they are playing at. Despite this, they are productive on the court!!

Why is that? What’s special about these players?

These players are almost always great teammates, hard working, and physically tough. Another tool they have is their intelligence on the court!!

Today I’m going to show you how improve your basketball IQ and reach your potential as a player. 

What is Basketball IQ?

Basketball IQ refers to a player’s intelligence on the court. While athleticism and skill are important, a strong basketball IQ is necessary for a player to reach their potential. 

Some examples of basketball IQ include: 

  • Are the right decisions being made at the right time? 
  • Is each shot being taken a good shot? 
  • Can the player identify another team’s offensive or defensive scheme, and then counter that scheme? 
  • Do you as a player understand what your coaches are asking for and can you execute it? 

5 Ways To Improve Your Basketball IQ

1) Watch your own game film

Often done at the high school and college levels, watching yourself play can have a lot of positive effects: 

  • Seeing yourself play a game and looking for ways to improve can be bizarre, but is also a great way to improve basketball IQ. 
  • A lot of gametime decisions that should have been made differently can be identified during this time, especially if you are watching with a trusted source of basketball knowledge such as your coach.
  • Details are important in sports, and watching yourself is a great way to give attention to details and improve your game by understanding your skillset, perfect your decision-making, and learning how to eliminate your turnovers in basketball.

Just be careful and don’t become too critical of yourself. 

We all want to improve and self-reflection is important, but there is a right way to do it. 

No player ever played a perfect game and made every single decision correctly!!

When watching game film the goal should be to improve as a player, not to seek out criticism and self-doubt. 

2) Watch other basketball games

Every team I have coached has been told throughout the year to watch basketball games in their free time. A lot can be gained from this, including knowledge of schematics on both sides of the ball as well as a better understanding of skills necessary to succeed. 

When doing this it is also a good idea to pay close attention to specific aspects of the game.  

  • Identify the defensive scheme of both teams: 
    • Are they playing zone? 
    • Are they forcing players baseline or to the middle? 
    • Are they in the gaps or packed into the lane off the ball?
    • How do they defend screens? 
    • How do they defend the post? 
  • On offense you should do the same thing: 
    • Are they running a motion or a patterned offense? 
    • Do they set screens, if so where? 
    • Do they have a tendency to play on one side of the court? 
    • Where do post entry passes come from? 
    • What do players do after passing the ball into the post? 

In our present-day technological world, a number of games can be watched after the fact on YouTube as well. You can even take advantage of watching specific teams to pay attention to specific parts of the game. I personally like to watch Villanova for motion offense tips and the likes of Virginia, Northern Iowa, and Texas (Because Chris Beard is now there) for defensive tips.  

Ultimately, watching basketball can always have some benefit, but pay attention to the right things when you do it. 

3) Talk about the game with others

Any successful person will tell you they learn a lot about what they do by talking about it with other people in that field. This is why coaches attend coaching clinics and businesses hire consultants. Talking to others and asking questions is not an admission of lack of knowledge or a weakness. Rather, it is a strength to make the effort to improve. 

  • Talk to your coaches about basketball. Ask them what you personally can be working on or doing better. Pick their brains on the schematics they use and fundamentals that are drilled in practice.
  • Talk with other players and coaches of other teams if you have the opportunity to. Find out their perspectives on the game, strategy, training, and how they do things differently or similarly. 

A lot can be learned in a short amount of time by asking the right questions and entering each conversation with an open mind.  

4) Read about the game

It’s not surprising to find out that many successful people in all walks of life are avid readers. 

Some of the names in basketball who have been known to be devoted readers include Lebron James, Kareem Abdul-Jabaar, and Bobby Knight. 

Here are a few recommended reading sources:

  • Read books written by coaches and players. These can either be specifically about basketball or about their life in general. There is something to always learn from voraciously consuming knowledge.
  • Read articles like this about the sport. Successful coaches and players have used the internet to publish a lot of their knowledge. On this website alone there is plenty of material that can help players include their basketball IQ. Take advantage of it.
  • Even reading articles about NBA and college games can be beneficial. These can be found in newspapers, sports related websites, and various social media handles. Breakdowns of specific plays and strategies are available as well from some resources.
  • Read anything and everything. We can all learn a few lessons from books like Fahrenheit 451 and To Kill a Mockingbird. 

5) Play basketball

The best players hone their skills outside of the gym by studying and learning. At the end of the day, however, there is no substitute for the skills learned on the court. 

  • Take advantage of your reps in practice and in games. None of the information here is valuable without the effort. This is why so many repetitions are taken by college and professional players everyday.
  • Play with your friends and at the local park and rec center when you get a chance. This is a different type of opportunity to hone skills and develop IQ and will allow a different perspective from a typical practice or game. 
  • Have fun, but view everything as a learning opportunity as well. This game is a part of our lives because we enjoy it. Like others, I have found I enjoy activities more when I am fully dedicated. Enjoy the hard work and the process associated with playing basketball and improvement will certainly follow.

How to improve understanding of the game using the basketball simulator? - AP-Tempo - Blogs

I constantly say that we live in an era of fantastic technologies that we do not know how to use. This applies to both European clubs and ordinary fans. Very often I am asked about methodological literature that can suddenly improve your, by its own admission, rudimentary understanding of the game. This is a road to nowhere if you objectively evaluate your capabilities. Cause? Such books require visualization more than anywhere else, and it is impossible without an understanding of the basics of basketball, which are not laid down in those who are about to join our community or simply want to move to the next level from the rank of “everyman on duty”. In order to benefit from such things, you need to lay the foundation and the foundation for it is much easier to take than you think. And it's a basketball sim, but not quite in the way you're used to. The key word is simulator. If a simulator is used to learn how to operate a rover, why can't it be used to learn how to understand basketball?

I started exploiting the hidden power of basketball sims in the much-loved NBA Live 2005, which, despite its block-shot stupidity, was objectively EA's best orange-ball product. It was in it that I drew attention to the competent “playbook”, “tablet”, call it whatever you want. It was crooked, it was not quite possible to apply it correctly in the mochilov itself, but it was not so important. He gave a theory. In the game menu, a moving model with chips was used, according to which it was possible to study the movement of the players and the ball during each specific draw. Since then, I've just soaked up most of what was laid down in those moments. For example, when the same Live began to be released only on consoles and the series was already dying, there were still key changes: digital, statistical analytics, which was called Dynamic DNA, applicable to absolutely every basketball player who was in the database.

The server automatically updated you with data about what this or that player is inclined to in each specific position: where he throws, where he passes, where he passes. It was crooked, it worked through one place, but it was still fundamental things in an accessible presentation. You could not play it, you could just study. It was hoopdata before it appeared, information that you could immediately feel with your hands. These ideas have evolved since then, they are embedded in every player and in 2K (go to "edit player" and scroll down to trends) and it really helps. But, there is one recipe for improving the vision of basketball, which is applicable precisely because of 2K.

This is the full use of the playbook. Most of the basic combinations for each specific NBA team are initially laid out in it, in order to use the strengths of each specific player: an excellent player in deep posting fourth, a good pick-and-roll center, or running through the fences of the second. A whole set of "draws" is applicable to each specific clip of all 30, and any club has its own elements that have been proven over the years. Due to such functions, developers are trying to achieve realism in the first place. On top of that, there are plenty of ancient combinations, Seattle, Utah, Lakers, Magic, focused on the strengths of your dominant player: tall point guard, elite assistant, powerful front line player, and whoever you want. There are moments from the triangle, from everywhere. I spat on 2K13 because it went for simplification and the computer chooses for you the combinations “the best combination” or “play the player there” directly in the game. It's not that, it's a general tendency to fool around. It's arcade.

Take the twelfth, take any team and run all these combinations yourself. You don't need to look at the score, you don't need to look at the showiness, play them point-to-point until you learn them. Be sure to leave markers that show who and where should run, this is necessary. You can train them if you don't fully understand. In the menu you will see all the same moving chips from eight years ago, which are theory, what the coach draws on the tablet to NBA stars, and then in the game, in half a minute you will directly get the practice, just like them. Learning a combination in this way is a trifling matter, like a few, like a dozen, fifty, etc. But, there is no need to rush.

When you have mastered it perfectly, break it. Broken play sometimes benefits the layman. Turn on this play, but watch how the computer-simulated defense reacts to it. Where there is space for a passage, where you can throw an open ball, where you can give a pass for easy points and use the "Direct Pass". This will teach you how to open the defense and help you realize how cool the real team worked on the defensive when they did not create such bald spots and the defenders quickly returned to their players. When you learn to take advantage of the main “development path” of the combination and the alternative one that you yourself just came up with, reacting to the actions of the defense, you will immediately add to your understanding of the game. It works even with one combination, and now imagine the same fifty, one hundred. There are a lot of them in the base of the game and this is the information that you can easily extract from it.

Practice even for a few weeks, then download an NBA game you haven't seen, play it on the big screen and watch it. You will learn a huge number of moments that you yourself have just worked out and understand where and how well the defense, attack, point guards, high played. Who failed and how it was necessary to work out this episode. It's much easier than it looks.

Of course, basketballsims don't give you ATOs (after time-out plays), which are generally hidden from the eyes of the uninitiated, these moments are incomparable to the computer simulation of game situations that Westbrook went through when drafting at OKC (where they created a special video game for reaction speed and quality decisions taken), but this is already a storehouse of a huge information and tactical base that everyone has. This is your NBA, and it is accessible and understandable.

It will give you much more than methodological literature, because you will see how it should work in theory and immediately put it into practice with your own hands. The most complex visualization will be carried out for you by the simulator engine. And who said that you will not be able to apply this knowledge directly on the court with a real ball? It will be much easier for you to analyze the actions of your favorite team, your favorite players or kill unwanted ones when you find out from the player movement model what was planned and what eventually gave birth to this scarecrow :)

There are still a lot of models of self-development, the main thing is just not to be lazy and try to notice them.

Why Play Combinations - Kid Basketball Killing

Decision making skills (or basketball IQ) is one of the most important skills for developing a young basketball player if you want to be successful in the long run. Many coaches know this, but many of them, when coaching their team, completely ignore the importance of this skill. One of the biggest things that slows down the development of playing skills in players is the decision making when executing offensive play combinations in children's basketball. During my visit to tournaments, I watched a team struggling with building a set of game schemes when moving to the opponent's half. In fact, I have been part of many teams that have done this throughout my youth basketball career. This isn't necessarily a bad thing as players get older, but for younger players who are just starting to learn the game, you shouldn't be running a combo set all the time. Let me explain a few reasons why...

1. Players do not make decisions. This is a big minus. When combinations were played, players were told when to pass, where to pass, when to dribble, who to screen, where to dash to the basket, etc. They make zero decisions on their own. They don't learn to read and attack the defense. They don't think about where and when they have to rush to the basket. They don't decide who they should pass the ball to. They are not looking for holes in the defense to get the ball to the basket or different places on the court that they can use to get the ball. No. They already know what they are going to do. All decisions had already been made for them during practice while the coach was explaining the game. They are robbed in the ability and experience to read the game and make their own decisions. They just do certain things they've been told to do. Sure, this can sometimes put them in better shooting positions in a 10-year-old basketball game and maybe lead to more points, but do you think it will help them in their future long-term development? Children still do not know how to drive the ball without visual control, make accurate passes, perform throws on the move with good technique, stop after dribbling and not lose balance, and they are shouted * First *, * Head *, etc.

2. Learning combinations steals valuable training time. It doesn't require much explanation. It's simple... There are far more important things players can do in practice than learning how to run established game patterns. It will be more important to work on the fundamental skills of individual offensive and defensive playing techniques and play free offense with game rules. So you can still use the schema set? Yes. I don't want you to think that I'm completely against the use of offensive play patterns. I use them and will continue to do so. But my teams certainly don't just use them throughout the game, and my time teaching game combinations will be extremely limited. How much time should you set aside to practice offensive play patterns? It's hard to say... In my blog about creating a kids basketball practice plan, I recommend spending about 10 minutes in each practice, focusing on offense or defense (if you work in 90 minute workout). I use these 10 minutes to teach 1 or 2 basic combinations in the game and throw-in on the baseline or touchline, which we can use several times per game.


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