The best motion offenses, in my opinion, generally are positionless, simply just have rules and give the players freedom to make reads similar to this offense. Unfortunately, it also requires that you have all 5 guys on the court buy-in and that they have a decent basketball IQ. A "smart" team with good chemistry makes life so much easier for a coach and is not to be underappreciated!
Coach can I have the details to all this? Breakdown drills? Any practice film of this? I wanna run with this with my AAU teams but just need some more guidance.
The amount of old heads who took 4 threes as a team when they played questioning how this works don’t understand how hard it is to read, and keep up with for a whole game. Trust me its easier to cut with five out then trying to cut into a handoff or cut with a pf and center near the paint.
Absolutely. Spacing kills defense, and a 5 out offense is also the perfect way of getting kids to learn how to play the game. It’s all read and react. Yes, there’s a system and there are rules to that system, but within that system it is completely up to the players to make the right pass and take the right shot. Works at every level too
There is no programmed movement with this offense. Notice even when they got bunched up (3 in one area) they simply set a double screen for the other to curl back up top or cut through to opposite side. Multiple options in this offense, and I liked that it didn't take away from a dribble drive or on ball screen action.
I agree it's high school. High school teams really dont defend well in the half court with continuity sets. That's why in high school teams press alot or trap in the half court to speed the other team up and bait them into making mistakes such as wrong reads, bad passes, and ect.
@@stem28-nacionalessimonephi44 it looks easy to defend. but if taught properly, there's counter's for literally everything the defense does. you always take what the defense gives you and use it against it. this is basic fundamental basketball, fun to play, good to watch, looks easy to defend but offensive players are more deceptive than you'd think if they buy into it and learn it properly.
No. When players constantly move at ANY level, there will be breakdowns. Plus, there are multiple situations where players react, it's not programmed. Harder to scout
@@EyesUpSports people don't understand basketball think this is easy to defend. if the team is taught properly it is UNGUARDABLE as long as it's executed with good technique and timing, combined with efficiency shooting wise. this is pure basic fundamental basketball
Early on, we will call "52" (5-out pass & screen away) or “53” (5-out pass & slip screen). Goal is to get to the point where kids have all options available to them and are making their own reads and decisions.
@@alexbaker1701 Thank you! Been trying this offense with a middle school team with the majority of them being 5th & 6th graders. Hasn't been going very good. I think they're just too young to "get it".
@@dougconley Easy first step after pass & cut is to assign a PNR guy. “51, but every time we pass to Johnny we follow with a ball screen.” Makes it slightly less predictable. Add the backdoor cut to that and you’ve got a solid start.
@@alexbaker1701 Not to sound obtuse but what is a PNR guy? I've been trying just pass and cut but they get out of whack with the rotation. I like the pass and ball screen concept better. Thanks for all your help!
@@dougconley For that level, just keep it at pass and cut. Good things will happen. Just practice reversing the ball so it doesn't get stagnant on one side.
1 of your BIGS (Center or PF) needs to be an excellent 3-point shooter.😂😂😂 Set Pindown Screens for cutters, then Pop outside the 3-point line for a Catch and Shoot.
These kids run this to perfection
After the guard initiates the first pass, start counting the number of dribbles in each possession. I was impressed.
The best motion offenses, in my opinion, generally are positionless, simply just have rules and give the players freedom to make reads similar to this offense. Unfortunately, it also requires that you have all 5 guys on the court buy-in and that they have a decent basketball IQ. A "smart" team with good chemistry makes life so much easier for a coach and is not to be underappreciated!
Piece of Art❤❤❤
Coach can I have the details to all this? Breakdown drills? Any practice film of this? I wanna run with this with my AAU teams but just need some more guidance.
Great looking squad. What's the name of the music track?
The amount of old heads who took 4 threes as a team when they played questioning how this works don’t understand how hard it is to read, and keep up with for a whole game. Trust me its easier to cut with five out then trying to cut into a handoff or cut with a pf and center near the paint.
Absolutely. Spacing kills defense, and a 5 out offense is also the perfect way of getting kids to learn how to play the game. It’s all read and react. Yes, there’s a system and there are rules to that system, but within that system it is completely up to the players to make the right pass and take the right shot. Works at every level too
There is no programmed movement with this offense. Notice even when they got bunched up (3 in one area) they simply set a double screen for the other to curl back up top or cut through to opposite side. Multiple options in this offense, and I liked that it didn't take away from a dribble drive or on ball screen action.
00:28 No 3 in a row meaning
Man the way they move the rock is poetic
where are the fans in the stands?
Pass & Screen Away (slip) was the best. 😅😅😅
How to attack against zone defense?
I run the same stuff with my AAU team the only difference is I run those same actions out of multiple alignments
This is amesome , teaching my 6th graders
GOOD JOB!!
Muy interesante, felicitaciones !!!
consulta; por favor, que edad tienen los chicos del video ??
In English: please add the names of the players :)
Love it
I agree it makes it tough to defend if you have 5 guys that buy into it, but this is just some poor defense that's allowing these shots
I agree it's high school. High school teams really dont defend well in the half court with continuity sets. That's why in high school teams press alot or trap in the half court to speed the other team up and bait them into making mistakes such as wrong reads, bad passes, and ect.
Exactly what I was thinking too. How are the opponents falling for this technique
@@stem28-nacionalessimonephi44 it looks easy to defend. but if taught properly, there's counter's for literally everything the defense does. you always take what the defense gives you and use it against it. this is basic fundamental basketball, fun to play, good to watch, looks easy to defend but offensive players are more deceptive than you'd think if they buy into it and learn it properly.
I run this a lot for Spartans
How are the opponent falling for this technique?
It’s high school. Bad defense is to be expected.
No. When players constantly move at ANY level, there will be breakdowns. Plus, there are multiple situations where players react, it's not programmed. Harder to scout
@@EyesUpSports people don't understand basketball think this is easy to defend. if the team is taught properly it is UNGUARDABLE as long as it's executed with good technique and timing, combined with efficiency shooting wise. this is pure basic fundamental basketball
Nobody plays defense anymore?
How do you call the different layers during a game or are the players just reading and reacting?
Early on, we will call "52" (5-out pass & screen away) or “53” (5-out pass & slip screen). Goal is to get to the point where kids have all options available to them and are making their own reads and decisions.
@@alexbaker1701 Thank you! Been trying this offense with a middle school team with the majority of them being 5th & 6th graders. Hasn't been going very good. I think they're just too young to "get it".
@@dougconley Easy first step after pass & cut is to assign a PNR guy. “51, but every time we pass to Johnny we follow with a ball screen.” Makes it slightly less predictable. Add the backdoor cut to that and you’ve got a solid start.
@@alexbaker1701 Not to sound obtuse but what is a PNR guy? I've been trying just pass and cut but they get out of whack with the rotation. I like the pass and ball screen concept better. Thanks for all your help!
@@dougconley For that level, just keep it at pass and cut. Good things will happen. Just practice reversing the ball so it doesn't get stagnant on one side.
look at the space and how the defenders sagging the pg if they were tight and right infront of the defender it wouldnt work
If the defense played tighter, the spacing would be better, opening up more drives and spaces for cuts. This has worked at multiple levels lol
1 of your BIGS (Center or PF) needs to be an excellent 3-point shooter.😂😂😂
Set Pindown Screens for cutters, then Pop outside the 3-point line for a Catch and Shoot.
I have seen middle schoolers ran better defense than these guys