Horseshoe 5
10/17/2012Today's FastDraw Play of the Day is part 3 of 5 of our 'Horseshoe' baseline out of bounds series. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawToday's FastDraw Play of the Day is part 3 of 5 of our 'Horseshoe' baseline out of bounds series. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawToday's FastDraw Play of the Day is part 4 of 5 of our 'Horseshoe' baseline out of bounds series. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawToday's FastDraw Play of the Day is part 5 of 5 of our 'Horseshoe' baseline out of bounds series. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawToday's FastDraw Play of the Day is a baseline out of bounds box set that counters yesterday's play if the defense jump switches the intial screen. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawToday's FastDraw Play of the Day is a simple quick hitter from a Horns set that allows your point guard create a play with good spacing. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawToday's FastDraw Play of the Day is part 1 of 5 in our High T quick hitter series. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawToday's FastDraw Play of the Day is part 2 of 5 in our High T quick hitter series. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawToday's FastDraw Play of the Day is part 3 of 5 in our High T quick hitter series. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawToday's FastDraw Play of the Day is part 4 of 5 in our High T quick hitter series. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawToday's FastDraw Play of the Day is part 5 of 5 in our High T quick hitter series. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawToday's FastDraw Play of the Day is a Horns Set run by Duke in their November 2012 win over Ohio State. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawThe purpose of this drill is to practice squaring up hard on the wing; in other words, getting your shoulders turned all the way towards the basket and forcing your defender to move backwards in order to avoid committing a foul. Players pass the ball to a coach at the top of the 3-point line, take a step towards the basket, and then square-up to the basket as they receive the ball back from the coach. Once receiving the ball, they swing the ball aggressively over the tops of their shoes (low to the ground) and attack the basket along the baseline. Lines alternate driving along the baseline until the team makes 30 lay-ups, and then both lines switch to attacking middle for 30 made lay-ups. Players can switch up the type of lay-up they do to add variety to the drill. This is a drill for the whole team, not just your wing players. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawThis drill is all about getting shots up. Split your team into two groups at separate baskets, each side with four balls. Start with one line at the top of the key and another on the baseline. Each line has two balls. The player on the baseline starts by curling to the wing 10-15 feet from the basket. They receive a pass from the first player in the other line and proceed to take a jump shot and get their own rebound. Once a player makes the pass they curl to the wing for their own shot, receiving a pass from the next player in the opposite line. Each player gets their own rebound and returns to the opposite line from where they started. Each player gets two shots at each shooting position (left wing, top of the key, right wing) before the lines move to the next position. The drill is completed when the players shoot from each position (left wing, top of the key, right wing) two times. The teams at each basket are competing for the most makes…losing team runs. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawStart by splitting your team into two lines at half court, about 30-40 feet apart. Every player in one of the lines should have a ball. Players are going to be shooting lay-ups at both baskets continuously for 2 minutes. The drill begins at the same time on both baskets. Player 1 passes a cross to Player 7, who passes right back to Player 1 for a lay-up. The player shooing the lay-up is not allowed to dribble, so the pass must be in the correct spot to lead them into their shot. Simultaneously, Player 4 passes a cross to Player 10, who passes right back to Player 4 for a lay-up. Both passers (Players 7 and 10) rebound the lay-ups and dribble to the line on the opposite side of the court (the shooting line). Both lay-up shooters (Player 1 and Player 4) sprint to the line opposite them (the passing line). The drill continues with the next pair of players performing the same give and go motion (Player 2 with Player 8 and Player 5 with Player 11) for lay-up attempts. As the drill progresses, the lines disappear as everyone is forced to be moving to keep the drill alive. See More
Favorite Send to FastDrawPracticing transition offense and defense by nature creates a conditioning drill, but combining that with a 20 second shot clock (which can be lowered as your team gets in better shape and more comfortable with this drill) produces major back and forth action and gets your team running while also working on fundamental skills…and it’s fun too! See More
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