CHASE DEFENSE: Prevent Most 3 Pointers And All Pick And Rolls!

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  • Опубліковано 14 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 513

  • @kaya2357
    @kaya2357 Рік тому +510

    Coach Nick is gonna get players to start shooting that running one-legged three to counter this.

    • @adora2423
      @adora2423 Рік тому +74

      Lol imagine he creates a new radical defense then creates a new radical offense to counter his own defense

    • @talentkid234
      @talentkid234 Рік тому +17

      I remember everyone freaking out seeing Harden practicing those shots and he never even implemented them in his offense

    • @DickiMoltisanti
      @DickiMoltisanti Рік тому +3

      Luka hit one vs the clippers in the playoffs

    • @reubengermain9771
      @reubengermain9771 Рік тому

      @@adora2423 It's an arms race!

    • @miggyalejandro
      @miggyalejandro Рік тому +1

      If that's what it takes to beat the defense, then why not? Innovation is important.

  • @princemjbp695
    @princemjbp695 Рік тому +169

    This is somewhat similar to Mattise Thybulle's defense. He goes to the side of his man rather than in front of him.

    • @Navvye
      @Navvye Рік тому +6

      thats exactly what I was thinking!

    • @enterpassword3313
      @enterpassword3313 Рік тому +4

      Lol coach did a vid on him, now hes trying to pretend he invented it smh

    • @captainobvious90
      @captainobvious90 Рік тому +22

      @@enterpassword3313 dude literally started by saying he is taking from multiple sources, of course he is not serious on that statement

    • @enterpassword3313
      @enterpassword3313 Рік тому +3

      @@captainobvious90 i invented this new drink, i call it lemonade

    • @LuDux
      @LuDux Рік тому

      @@enterpassword3313 Lemonade was popular drink and it still is (I got more props and stunts than Kariniauskas)

  • @deiondre0
    @deiondre0 Рік тому +358

    This is actually interesting but I feel like it would be easily exploited by point guards with a short-to-mid range floater (Shai, Trae, Ja, Fox, etc)
    Edit: Then again, Trae is the only one among them who is an elite shooter so you probably wouldnt run this defense against the others

    • @bballbreakdown
      @bballbreakdown  Рік тому +288

      THat is the whole point! Let the team take as many midrange jumpers and floaters as they like with a hand up in their face

    • @reubengermain9771
      @reubengermain9771 Рік тому +60

      It's on the side of analytics . Give up higher shot expected value for lower. Like from 1.1-1.3 down to 0.6 -0.8 Not to be used against the KDs or DeRozans however.

    • @sheed321
      @sheed321 Рік тому +21

      The point is the eliminate PnR and 3s

    • @iri101
      @iri101 Рік тому +41

      trae young played against the heat zone in 22'. He got massacred because he couldn't do anything.

    • @d3olinsky
      @d3olinsky Рік тому +6

      poor shooting PGs also have picks set for them. this scheme eliminates that option regardless on shooting skills.

  • @reubengermain9771
    @reubengermain9771 Рік тому +122

    Respect Coach Nick, this is wild, I have to digest this. The visibility up top, what can I say, I love this!

    • @bballbreakdown
      @bballbreakdown  Рік тому +17

      I know right! the top guard gets to see everything

    • @Time_Lapse_Master.
      @Time_Lapse_Master. Рік тому

      ​@@bballbreakdownJust wondering, what's stopping a big to set a screen near the FT line for a cutter and an easy Alley-Oop pass for the PG who has every delivery angle possible?

    • @Time_Lapse_Master.
      @Time_Lapse_Master. Рік тому +1

      ​@@bballbreakdownIn the frame 1:18, couldn't player 2 pass it to player 1 who just drives in while player 5 sets a screen for player 2 towards the corner for an open 3, and basically do this every time there's a 1v2 near a corner where one sets a screen for a shooter resulting in a 40% short corner 3?

    • @thecanmanification
      @thecanmanification Рік тому

      If you’re a young player you should learn to read games from the sideline, so when you get subbed in you know what’s going on lol

  • @pipohemm8726
    @pipohemm8726 Рік тому +86

    Yeah, the first thing I immediately thought about was the Jazz 2019 vs Harden. This actually kind of worked back then. Took away the step back and good luck taking a floater with 7'2 Gobert right in front of you and your defender breathing down your neck. You obviously cant run this all game but similar to how the heat implement a zone from time to time so could this tactic be used to throw teams off

    • @TheNamesDitto
      @TheNamesDitto Рік тому +9

      And honestly, floaters are more inefficient than actual middies so you win the possession if they shoot floaters

    • @Fidel_cashflo
      @Fidel_cashflo Рік тому

      And then they did it against the Clippers and had the greatest choke job of all time

    • @pipohemm8726
      @pipohemm8726 Рік тому

      @@Fidel_cashflo when did the Jazz do this against the Clippers? You dont need to guard the clippers this way, they arent heavy on pnr, they dont have a Harden or Luka. George and Leonard should rather be guarded as the Heat did to Brown and Tatum

    • @Fidel_cashflo
      @Fidel_cashflo Рік тому +5

      @@pipohemm8726 I’m talking about the 2021 series where they blew a 30 pt lead in game 6. Jazz were way over reliant on funneling things to Rudy and offering zero resistance at point of attack. Putting 5 shooters/dribblers on the court made the whole thing collapse

    • @thesonofwill22
      @thesonofwill22 11 місяців тому +1

      Yeah credit to the rockets who mostly beat it by tossing lobs to a waiting Clint capela on the weak side as gobert helped onto harden, not by harden scoring 50 night. So unless the team you are playing has an elite passer and dunker you’d be pretty much stuck taking tough shots.

  • @michaelgill6076
    @michaelgill6076 Рік тому +1

    Fantastic. Been experimenting with concepts like this for 25 years now. Evolution to be behind, with wings backs to sideline is a cheat code.

  • @kashkabandian6254
    @kashkabandian6254 Рік тому +151

    I'd love to see the whole video of the game where they tried this defense. Looks interesting

    • @bballbreakdown
      @bballbreakdown  Рік тому +66

      He ran it on 5 possessions - no points. I'm doing my best to get him to integrate it further for the upcoming season...

    • @talentkid234
      @talentkid234 Рік тому +7

      @@bballbreakdownYou should be coaching! What the heck?!?!

    • @harryli5979
      @harryli5979 Рік тому +4

      I could see the raptors running this if nick nurse was still the coach

    • @kashkabandian6254
      @kashkabandian6254 Рік тому +2

      @@bballbreakdown why did they stop after 5 possessions?! it would be so cool to see the other team look so confident at first thinking they had one man beat only to end up confused as to why they always "beat" the on ball defender but can't score lol

    • @dfjr1990
      @dfjr1990 Рік тому

      The problem is these players are not NBA level at all

  • @joshurl5651
    @joshurl5651 Рік тому +2

    I really appreciate the creative problem solving approach here. I look forward to seeing more tape on this defense and how it holds up.

  • @gerarda8926
    @gerarda8926 Рік тому +15

    Reminds me of the Raptors’ defensive scheme the past few years. Nurse had them chasing guys off the line and playing defense from behind. However, it did lead to a lot of overhelping - ironically leading to a lot of wide open threes. Cardio was also a big issue, I can see that also being an issue with this scheme you showed. The innovation is great though!

    • @QGfk1
      @QGfk1 Рік тому +2

      yeah, the vast majority of good 3s are not off the dribble so you're just inviting paint penetration to collapse the defense and lead to a wide open shot or a dunk. apart from the pull up 3, which very few guys are actually efficient at shooting off a ball screen, you're just giving them the advantage of getting a step ahead of your man that the pnr is designed to do. a few people brought up thybulle and even with his 1 in a billion freak hands and athleticism his poking from behind style causes a lot of breakdowns

  • @acepiston5552
    @acepiston5552 Рік тому +14

    This is pretty brilliant and innovative. I love how unorthodox it is. Players get so used to seeing patterns that they know how to exploit them, especially with how skilled they are these days. I’ve never even seen a defense this extreme (other than Grinnel College). Unfortunately, lots of coaches are so set in their ways that they might be a bit closed minded to it.

  • @bruh8285
    @bruh8285 Рік тому +3

    coach, the legendary obradovic has 'the next man' defensive strategy that might be similar to this, it's also based on constant switches on the perimeter, forcing players to go one way on closeouts, would rhighly recommend checking it out. He did it with Fenerbahce in 2018 very well.

    • @fathersdayclub
      @fathersdayclub 10 місяців тому

      I use the next scheme because it doesn't give up the straight line drive option and send ball to the side of the floor where we can scramble and contain it better.

  • @ryantristani5091
    @ryantristani5091 Рік тому +2

    A couple offensive counter ideas.
    1. You just set up a give and go play for whoever started the play as the PNR ball-handler, it’ll be easier to cut since their defender is already behind them.
    2. A mid-range shot drifting left or right, like towards the wings (like the shots you see from Chris Paul a lot). This would put the defender at your side, giving you an open look.
    3. Might be hard to pull off, but find a way to quickly get back behind the defender. A side-step into a step-back or something similar may work. If you could manage to do this, it would be an open look every time as there is no way a defender would be able to turn their hips a full 180 degrees in time to get a good hand up.
    4. A backwards PNR. Have a screen set on the defender and instead of the ball-handler working their way forward around the screen, have them go backwards. This one would be difficult to coordinate and it would also be difficult to set-up the screen in a way where the defender wouldn’t notice it.

    • @bballbreakdown
      @bballbreakdown  Рік тому +1

      Number 4 is hilarious and I’m not sure what the strategic value is. Number 2 is the exact goal of this defense

    • @aaronwin33
      @aaronwin33 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@@bballbreakdownor even easier, instead of shooting a side step mid range jumper just shoot a side step 3 pointer away from the defender. Like the ones harden/luka/curry always take, except instead of stepping back just gather step then hop to the side

  • @banbiossa
    @banbiossa Рік тому +4

    I love the closeout with the chase defense. It looks much more natural and disruptive.

  • @rafaawa
    @rafaawa Рік тому +7

    I instantly thought about Manu’s block to Harden from behind! Great idea to try coach.

    • @crassbusinessman3122
      @crassbusinessman3122 7 місяців тому +1

      I'm always thinking about Manu's block on Harden. It's like one of my favorite moments in sports history XD

  • @TheCaptainBlast
    @TheCaptainBlast Рік тому +3

    I’ve been thinking a point zone defense is the next evolution of defense, but the chasing is a whole new level.

  • @splashgod2509
    @splashgod2509 Рік тому +31

    We saw the Lakers do this to the Warriors when they top locked shooters and funneled Steph/Klay/Poole into Anthony Davis.

    • @YunisRajab
      @YunisRajab Рік тому +5

      Yep most I've seen the splash brothers effectively slowed down

    • @matty7106
      @matty7106 Рік тому +5

      I was thinking the same thing. So Kerr now has film of this and hopefully (as a Dubs fan) is coming up with better counters. But I thought this defense was brilliant at the time and would love to see more teams run it. Basketball is getting a little repetitive nowadays.

    • @travisjohnson6703
      @travisjohnson6703 Рік тому +4

      I'm not really afraid of this, but for other teams they don't have an AD caliber defender to lock the paint the same. Although using that chase defense would remove the methods Kerr used to pull AD out given off ball screens and on ball screens wouldn't do the job anymore.

    • @starkk19
      @starkk19 Рік тому

      @@travisjohnson6703 I thinked it worked really well because it was AD that was in the paint. He can affect any shot inside the paint, but also still agile enough to actually switch on to Curry in the perimeter as a failsafe. Even Gobert, I think would not have done so well.

  • @dacowthebol9325
    @dacowthebol9325 Рік тому +1

    I did this in high school and always knew it was better, but my coach and peers saw it as a lazy defense. They believed taking pride in guarding your man one-on-one, no matter the outcome, was more important than winning with a new strategy like the one you experiment and implement.
    Great job coach! Very innovative!

  • @oxfordbambooshootify
    @oxfordbambooshootify Рік тому +65

    What's stopping an elite shooter from just stopping on a dime and rising up for the shot to bait fouls from the defender that's chasing him?

    • @JohnTonyan
      @JohnTonyan Рік тому +26

      Nothing, you’ve already won as a coach if you’ve prompted the other team to start hunting fouls by taking wildly unhinged long 2s

    • @oxfordbambooshootify
      @oxfordbambooshootify Рік тому +6

      @@JohnTonyan 3s not 2s. Imagine Trae young or steph curry playing against this type of defense. They'd be scoring 20 points a night off of free throws alone

    • @arcticbulktoaster348
      @arcticbulktoaster348 Рік тому +2

      @@oxfordbambooshootify if your x1 keeps getting baited for this he shouldn't be your x1. i'll take a disturbed from behind hunting for a foul 3 from any star any day. their usual shots are already hard to stop.

    • @oxfordbambooshootify
      @oxfordbambooshootify Рік тому +8

      @@arcticbulktoaster348 that makes no sense. On a high school or collegiate level this scheme may be effective but I don't see it being as productive at the NBA level. You're just going to end up with your players in constant foul trouble and putting the opponents in the bonus and giving the opponents best shooters tons of free throws per game

    • @Fidel_cashflo
      @Fidel_cashflo Рік тому +1

      Yeah this idea is pretty dumb and unoriginal. It’s what the Jazz did for years, so many ways to exploit

  • @Duly_bomaye
    @Duly_bomaye Рік тому +1

    Interesting. Definitely a scheme towards a team with that specific strength which is a lot of teams now. I could definitely see this creating big stops/momentum swings if used strategically.

  • @monieschonies3367
    @monieschonies3367 Рік тому +14

    Hi, Coach. Quick question. So if in a traditional pick and roll, some coaches have stated as a ball handler, take the screen and put the defender "in your back pocket" as you run through the motion. From there, you attack the basket with your roll man, the option being yours to pass or keep. With this defense, wouldn't this be even easier to accomplish as you're removing the screen mechanic? I assume regardless if whether the defender is in front or behind the ball, the screener can still approach the ball then roll towards the basket with the handler attacking (since his man is behind him) and execute the same way? Or is this more geared to driving great 3 point shooters off the line because I can definitely see that.

    • @talentkid234
      @talentkid234 Рік тому +3

      That would only work well man to man. That’s why he is also implementing zone defense so every defender has a position they stay at.

  • @jovar7545
    @jovar7545 Рік тому

    this is crazy. Thanks for the innovation!

  • @phil9461
    @phil9461 Рік тому

    Coach Nick - Always love the videos! Learning the Xs and Os in 🏀 and sports in general is always dope. With that said…the first thing that came to my mind was if I were the opposing coach on offense, how would I counter this? Ideally you could still dare the defense with a screen on that trailing defender who’s chasing from behind. In that window..the guard/ball handler would raise up for a mid range or 3. And if any of the help defenders bite, the play becomes a simple kick to the wings or baseline cut to the basket.

  • @afrohawk
    @afrohawk Рік тому +1

    So, basically create a 5 v 4 in the halfcourt and chase from behind. That's cool. Definitely need a good rim protector and good rotation off ball to on ball on passes. Totally agree with chopping feet to closeouts. I think that's completely wrong and should not be coached. I always liked stabbing one foot or the other on closeout and effectively declaring a side, even the power hand side. The most important thing about defense is to eliminate options by forcing a choice on the offensive player instantly so that you don't have to guess about what's coming next. I never minded trailing the offensive player a half step because he still has to gather the ball before shooting and that half step can be made up then. Nice video and definitely an interesting concept.

  • @talentkid234
    @talentkid234 Рік тому +1

    I remember Ricky Rubio doing this to Harden during that stint when he was averaging 40+ points on the rockets

  • @iri101
    @iri101 Рік тому +9

    From watching your video, It seems like the heat zone has a lot of principals that your defense purposes.
    I would love a revisit of the most recent nba finals to see what joker/Murray pick and roll did against it.

    • @fullcourtball
      @fullcourtball Рік тому

      It would be interesting to see...though that duo is probably one of the most difficult pick and roll/pop duo to defend ever, if not the best. Don't think this defense really applies in that specific situation...those two have too many offensive options in their arsenal :)

    • @lancemacmillan
      @lancemacmillan Рік тому

      Yeah, I was going to say this would have to be personnel specific...but any defense would be anyway. To sit behind Jokic and deny him the three and 'force' him to pass to a cutter or rumble to the basket for a floater...(shudders 😮) ...Miami is going to have PTSD about that for years!

  • @TheMacThat
    @TheMacThat Рік тому +1

    Five defenders looking at the ball and using the sidelines as extra defenders opens up the fluidity of the defense. Would love to see what coach Spo thinks of this, lol.

  • @JC-ch7lr
    @JC-ch7lr Рік тому +3

    We ran this in highschool as a matchup zone only difference we overplayed to keep the ball out of the middle and to one side of the court....teams were confused and we knew we had them when they tried to run their man to man offense vs this zone.

    • @bballbreakdown
      @bballbreakdown  Рік тому +1

      Love it.. any video footage??

    • @AiirxGeordan
      @AiirxGeordan Рік тому

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@bballbreakdownsouthern Miss Men’s basketball runs a matchup zone not too different from what he’s describing other than the keep it from the middle.

  • @peteryu9866
    @peteryu9866 Рік тому

    Scottie talked about this when he spoke on how to guard Harden.. Years ago.. Trailing behind the offensive player to deny the shot and force movement..

  • @willhooke
    @willhooke Рік тому +49

    I remember Kobe saying to guard Steph from the side
    And Steph struggled
    Very interesting progression Coach Nick 👏🏻

  • @candorsspot2775
    @candorsspot2775 Рік тому

    NBA coaches watch this channel. Fully expect to see this implented next season! Love your channel coach Nick!

  • @crassbusinessman3122
    @crassbusinessman3122 7 місяців тому

    Coach, I absolutely LOVE thinking outside the box with concepts like this. Craftiness is a skill that us shorter, less athletic players need to bridge the gap. But my question is, couldn't a player who is substantially longer/faster blast right by, leaving the defender out it no man's land?

  • @stephencheney9811
    @stephencheney9811 Рік тому

    As chaotic as it looks, it would make college games more fun to watch. They just pass it around the 3 point line for 20 seconds of the possession.

  • @jesser6423
    @jesser6423 8 місяців тому

    Is there any follow up to this? Would love to see how it has been implemented. Love radical ideas!

  • @rodojeda96
    @rodojeda96 Рік тому +1

    I'll tell you exactly to beat this: you get the pass, let the defending player settle behind you, but you don't rush into a drive, leading to a long 2 or an uncontrolled drive into the paint defender with the worry of the not visible player behind you... instead you feel where the defender is, move to cut them off from the basket as much as possible (this is called putting them "in jail"). Then you choose when you attack. You can take a big step up to the three point like and shot the 3 right away... you can be more measured and head to the paint to pull a second defender and kick out, or you can just see a lane (say you have some kind of speed or size advantage) and really attack fast, trying to beat the second defender/ get to the rack before the defender behind you can catch up to cause trouble. The key to this is that instead of being rushed, and then having your options limited/ getting exposed to turnovers because you don't know how close the "wolf" behind you is, you take a second to feel him out, push him back a bit, maybe pick a side if he's playing you more to one side, and then you strike. That way you automatically get a step or two in front of him, and thats all you need. At that point attacking this defense isn't much different than attacking a traditional D after you have beaten your perimeter defender pretty badly. QED.
    To be fair though, the principles of this are so interesting, you could use them opportunistically at times, and even implement it as a kind of gimmick scheme to surprise teams or deal with particular players. It's still mind-blowing. Thank you Coach Nick, I would give you buckets though.

  • @grapplerke
    @grapplerke Рік тому +5

    I feel this gives up 3pt shooting to knockdown shooters who are role players and strong finishers in the dunker spots. I think this is definitely worth doing at the high school level and even college.

    • @bsn0730
      @bsn0730 Рік тому +1

      Yeah watching some of those plays, it looks like if you have a guy with a quick trigger in the right spot (alley oop finisher, corner marksman) and even just a decent passer, you could get some really high quality shots. I bet it'd be a great disruptive call for defense though if you switched to it suddenly a few times a game like how the heat would break out their zone coverage in spots over the last few seasons

    • @grapplerke
      @grapplerke Рік тому

      @@bsn0730 Yeah I can’t imagine playing like this for the majority of the game against good teams with good ball handlers, shooters and passers. Definitely a good disruptor at any level without a doubt though.

  • @Scoots1994
    @Scoots1994 Рік тому

    I saw this in spots over the last few years being used here or there. One advantage of the closeout to get behind a player it means body momentum is away from the offensive player and may cut down on this ticky tack fouls on closeouts. When the refs know the scheme is to go by the offensive player then the offensive player moving in front of the moving defender is more likely to be a non-call.

  • @AndreZamudio
    @AndreZamudio Рік тому +3

    I love this new concept, definitely gonna start implementing it with my team 👍

  • @nickyfresh12
    @nickyfresh12 Рік тому

    Love the bravery to implement something like this. I've enjoyed your videos ever since I realized I shot the ball better with a turn instead of square.

  • @maartenvz
    @maartenvz Рік тому +1

    Amazing combination of proven ideas. At first i was sceptical: Houston smoked the jazz in that series. Then i checked the stats: both harden and Paul had a lot turnovers. But the jazz shot 26% from three while Mitchell was 32% overall, no wonder they lost badly.
    My initial idea to counter this is to have a shooter relocate behind the ballhandler, this would create a 4 on 3 for the ballhandler. However the trail defender on ball could close out to the shooter. Man this is interesting!

  • @Omnis2
    @Omnis2 Рік тому

    Coach Nick's defense makes opposing teams watch a video sponsor ad until the shot clock runs out.

  • @lon_1023
    @lon_1023 Рік тому

    Feel like only super long range shooter can play against this effectively. It’s really hard to use this if the offense player is 2 steps behind the 3 pt line. But there are only that few players can shoot like that. Sounds fun and workable especially in lower level of basketball

  • @elanzankman4399
    @elanzankman4399 Рік тому

    The most interesting part of this idea is the closeouts, because you can close out way more aggressively if you're not worried about staying in front of your man. That would take away a lot of catch-and-shoot threes, which is a cool idea, but then the shooter can just take one dribble inside the arc and pull up for a wide open 18-footer. "But that's the shot you want them to take!" Maybe in high school, but NBA players will knock down that shot every single time if you give it to them.

  • @christopherflores5405
    @christopherflores5405 Рік тому

    A few years ago, scottie pippen explained he'd defend harden this exact way when he was asked how he'd do it if he was playing today.

  • @gamingcentral1252
    @gamingcentral1252 Рік тому

    I’m going into my senior year and we ran a very similar version of this, with the main point forcing the offense left. In theory this works, but we were not good enough at it, not smart enough/to dumb to understand the principles. We got burned whenever we used it.However I could see this working well with a smart team that is athletic.

  • @shannonhall4871
    @shannonhall4871 Рік тому +1

    you should set out to design an offence to beat your new defence, like work out how to get an open 3 against this defence.

  • @LakerFan
    @LakerFan Рік тому

    Fire 💪🏼🔥

  • @david_lam1666
    @david_lam1666 Рік тому +4

    wouldn't the chase on the wings provide the guards easy middle-penetration?

  • @povang4474
    @povang4474 Рік тому +1

    Watch Steve Kerr implement this defense this upcoming season. Kerr did admit to watching coach nick n only coach nick in a past interview, but that was 10 years ago. Still coach nick got Kerr for an interview

    • @bballbreakdown
      @bballbreakdown  Рік тому +2

      Oh, he said the same thing in the interview I just dropped 2 weeks ago!!

  • @andrewdorie4010
    @andrewdorie4010 Рік тому

    Coach, would love to see you breakdown Paul Westhead’s coaching with the Lakers vs Riley’s coaching? Maybe even compare the way he used the system with the Lakers vs his other coaching jobs.

  • @studyofhoops
    @studyofhoops Рік тому

    This is similar to some of the concepts of what Murcia in Spain runs. Obviously they don't stand directly behind, but their idea is that the 5 man protects the paint and everyone else puts as much pressure as possible to funnel the ball into their 5 man. They play super physical, take on some unconventional positions, and use scouting to force the more talented players on the other team into uncomfortable situations. Similar to what you're explaining here.

  • @roberthickey4201
    @roberthickey4201 Рік тому +1

    Your 5 is going to get in foul trouble and if you youre undersized at the 5 it will be a problem. Guards will attack and finish over them.

  • @pugshugs2870
    @pugshugs2870 Рік тому +1

    I’m not going to dislike out of respect for all your previous content.

  • @arizcedieisales3391
    @arizcedieisales3391 Рік тому

    It is also a 2K defense where most guards three hunts. And as a lock you gotta go over the screen and hip ride from the sides

  • @chrisneukum9542
    @chrisneukum9542 Рік тому

    i actually tend to always front a big man in pick up and almost prefer to guard from behind/side. its like that video on the unorthodox nba player who does chase defense.

  • @JSFrederic
    @JSFrederic Рік тому

    interesting how in the past, where slashing/cutting is more "popular", offense put their defender in prison (behind them) is the way to go, but now its seems like totally different.

  • @shakiid7
    @shakiid7 Рік тому

    lol when u said "what if we just eliminated the PNR altogether by getting behind the guy with the ball?", my head just immediately went to that clip where gilbert arenas talks about how sorry rubio looked as a defender tryna guard james harden this exact same way.
    these type of strategies only work on players who lack the abilities to adapt to the multiple speeds of the game. this is mostly just creating a chaotic environment for the opposing team to run they normal offense but it's not stopping an elite scorer who's not afraid of contact and has the ability to score either from midrange or the three, you'll just get embarrassed that night

  • @jarrettborkowski8658
    @jarrettborkowski8658 Рік тому

    I love this idea. It’s basically forcing an offense to play inside the perimeter. If you do that and defend the post/interior well enough, teams are going to be forced to put up a midrange shot, which we all know is the worst shot in terms of points per possession in the game.

  • @WatchingLakersBasketball
    @WatchingLakersBasketball Рік тому +2

    This is nice im going to use this in the new 2k, NBA2K24 and use it against Playstation players.

  • @gavinmacaonghusa8122
    @gavinmacaonghusa8122 Рік тому

    I think this chase defence could really suit someone like matisse thy ulle who already often defends from behind the ball with chaos and deflections

  • @Chris.Tamayo
    @Chris.Tamayo Рік тому +2

    This is probably a stupid question but what’s stopping me from putting the defender in jail since there already behind me then making the big commit to my drive or shot then dumping it off or lobbing it to my big in the paint and If they don’t commit (the big) I can either pull up fast for a foul since I’m running full speed and there on my back with all there momentum

    • @Kodreanu23
      @Kodreanu23 Рік тому +1

      I agree with the question. Nick's philosophy is let them have floaters all they, that's inefficient shot, but what about lob game, that is very efficient

    • @Chris.Tamayo
      @Chris.Tamayo Рік тому

      @@Kodreanu23 I watched the defense a little more to try to understand it I think (I could be totally wrong though) that since the defender is behind you he might really be able to actually get a deflection on your lob especially if he’s tall and lanky because he would probably be expecting it obviously against 6 foot casual ymca players that’s not happening but against a 6’7 lanky defender pretty sure he can pull it off thus negating this strategy im a point guard and I’m 6 feet tall and consider myself a capable ball handler but when there’s a guy with a 7 foot wingspan behind you it’s hard to play at your usual pace

  • @FunkyJ_13
    @FunkyJ_13 Рік тому

    Please show us more of this!!!

  • @emmanuelvolquez2975
    @emmanuelvolquez2975 Рік тому +7

    Using this combined with other zone concepts that allow the players to transition from different defensive sets it’s actually top notch.
    But if used repeatedly, as most sets in basketball, it’s exploitable

    • @chanachon56
      @chanachon56 Рік тому +5

      Yeah this is basically a more aggressive version of a 1-3-1 zone. Used to run it with my summer team before the pandemic hit and we got mauled with off ball screens and back cuts. In my experience it works best in short spurts of a game to disrupt an opposing team's scoring run, but if you use it as your main defense, smart players will be able to counter it.

    • @Fidel_cashflo
      @Fidel_cashflo Рік тому +1

      Yes look at what the Clippers were able to do to the Jazz with 5 out. Drive, kick, and get a full head of steam at the rim protector

  • @edvincentiiialbano8890
    @edvincentiiialbano8890 Рік тому

    Coach, I hope we could see a video of modern pnr offenses trying to score on this defense instead of just a probing offense.

  • @Bojeezy
    @Bojeezy Рік тому

    I feel like a lot of teams implement a similar defense already. I could be wrong.
    It is almost like a matador defense but with the a center like AD getting the guards to funnel into him.

  • @brightonmwemezi4684
    @brightonmwemezi4684 Рік тому +1

    You pull this on someone like Chris Paul, Kyrie or Steph mqybe on steph elite passers and ball handling they will punish you after the 1st quarter. It may be a surprise and bothersome when its initially done Luka would feast you get behind him like that and he will lock you back there

  • @LEBATO
    @LEBATO Рік тому

    Interesting but even with those guys at the gym, they had a bunch of open *corner* threes and give and go opportunities that I just feel elite level teams (NBA, some FIBA) would destroy. Like other defenses, I think it's probably a good one to try for a few minutes and once they figure it out, switch it up.

  • @luizsalazar87
    @luizsalazar87 Рік тому

    Definitely looks disruptive on the perimeter and forces more players to be passers and drivers.
    Would like to see it implemented in a collegiate or NBA game extensively.
    Seems like you would need an athletic big that could challenge the middys while also being fleet of foot enough to stick with driving guards.
    If a guard is playing behind the ball then a big is forced to step up, leaving at best a SF to guard the paint as most teams only play one true big. At 5:11 a lob to an athletic big looks open or even if the guard throws a brick the putback is there for the blue shirt player under the rim.

  • @grizz_fan3243
    @grizz_fan3243 Рік тому +1

    Coach, you should get some practice jerseys so it's easier to see the teams

  • @flipsolo
    @flipsolo Рік тому

    A clickbait that actually blew my mind away. Definitely changed my perspective! I love this game is always evolving.

  • @rudinah8547
    @rudinah8547 Рік тому

    If spacing is the superpower that offenses have been using, then cut that off by putting a box on them, defending from outside. Genius (and crazy)

  • @aaronc6997
    @aaronc6997 Рік тому

    This seems like a natural evolution from old school pick-and-roll defense, where the on-ball defender would chase over the top of the screen. They'd end up chasing the ball handler anyways, and the big man would be defending the drive in drop coverage. Every defense has a pick-your-poison element, and at a time where teams have made a conscious effort to move away from the mid-range jumper, forcing offensive players back to the mid-range in new ways makes a lot of sense.

  • @wayneerichsen
    @wayneerichsen Рік тому

    Wow, just wow. We will Def see this in the near future, I just hope that you get some credit.

  • @GT234LIFE
    @GT234LIFE Рік тому

    I like this concept, I remember the Lakers did something close to this to the Rockets in the playoffs, similar to the Jazz

  • @michaelrushing4365
    @michaelrushing4365 4 місяці тому

    Selectively use the chase against players who can only shoot 3’s and who don’t have good midrange. While training the other defenders to play ball denial. It could work great against the right opponent.

  • @salvadorteran5181
    @salvadorteran5181 Рік тому

    I remember Scottie Pippen trying to explain this concept when T-Mac asked him how he would defend James Harden

  • @usafo6546
    @usafo6546 Рік тому

    In the circle of life, this would bring the game back to inside-out, instead of outside-in. If this works, in the NBA, the big man will, once again, become dominant, as the offense will need a post up terror, to force double teams, for open outside looks

  • @chiggsytube
    @chiggsytube Рік тому

    We want the offense, it's that simple. Defense today is so much more cerebral, done right it is beautiful to watch.

  • @Blhitelikesnba2k
    @Blhitelikesnba2k Рік тому

    Very interesting. Definitely worth trying.

  • @hootboon5323
    @hootboon5323 Рік тому

    Best of luck coach! hope you revolutionize everything

  • @YvngGoat_
    @YvngGoat_ Рік тому +3

    I actually really like this defensive concept

  • @shakel32
    @shakel32 Рік тому

    What I would like to examine is how many corner 3s you're letting them, and then apply the average %of that shot against the number of shots you're allowed. It seemed to me this D is like a crazy 1-3-1 which would be easily punished by Euroleague level and most definitely NBA level, but of course it's hard to tell with so little footage.

  • @matthewdambrogio6573
    @matthewdambrogio6573 Рік тому

    Super interesting. It’s more interesting how no one has done this. Wat comes to mind for me is how there r great behind the ball defenders like thybulle I also think this is a super advanced defense that I think could also be someone should show this video to the thinking basketball guys and get their thoughts great video

  • @MikeTheNBAGuy
    @MikeTheNBAGuy Рік тому

    This is a neat concept but it looks like it should immediately fall apart if the offensive 5 just cuts to thr basket as his own man is forced to step up in the drop coverage

  • @JADiaz10
    @JADiaz10 Рік тому

    It’s really hard to do this because drawing a foul is quite easy of you’re an NBA level athlete. I’ve seen Jimmy Butler draw fouls from behind by quickly pulling up and the defender would brush him in the back for a foul. It’s doable if you work at it and stay mindful that any moment the dribbler might abruptly stop. But it’s hard cause you might stay too mindful and then they’ll proceed to drive thru the lane and leave you dusted.

  • @Biggiiful
    @Biggiiful Рік тому

    No joke, I was literally arguing for this on different online discussions and to my dad after Harden started exploding. I was saying it would literally be better to stand behind and to the side to take away his step back 3 and force him to drive for layups or midrange 2's without fouling him.

  • @berrytonejones
    @berrytonejones Рік тому

    Great concept and explanation of it 👍🏾

  • @kingkettle2748
    @kingkettle2748 Рік тому

    My question is what about off ball screens involving forward and off ball guard and even forward and center away from the ball drawing the zone away from the ball handler and allowing for easier penetration and kicks back out

  • @vincenttsoi0524
    @vincenttsoi0524 Рік тому

    With a guard that knows how to hold their defenders with their back ( someone like dragic used to do this very well) could prob exploit the set quite a bit 😯

  • @timl998
    @timl998 Рік тому

    I always go behind or to the side when I know they take forever and dribble too much or if they can't drive. Then I get the ball back when they miss

  • @gritbasketball9667
    @gritbasketball9667 Рік тому

    Love it!! Very Tough and innovative. Great stuff Coach Nick!

  • @leothelion2593
    @leothelion2593 Рік тому +1

    This wouldn’t work. Players like Trae and Steph love having guys on their backs to draw fouls, so the defenders anticipation would have to be impeccable, because the second the ball handler stops on a dime and he runs into them it’s a foul

    • @athancoreextreme
      @athancoreextreme Рік тому

      yes steph, trae and luka. they always try to put opponents behind them intentionally.

  • @WammyGiveaway
    @WammyGiveaway Рік тому

    Bigger question: which NBA team do you see needing this defense the most to the point it can win them a title?
    Can I make a suggestion: make the 5 morph. There are players who can play both forward and center positions; I call these hybrid players cent-wards. At points in your defense, depending on opponent, have the 4 tag with a 5 so that the 4 is now restricted to the paint and the 5 pairs with the 1 or 2. Best time to deploy the switch would be while the offensive point guard is setting up a play from near half court. Wonder if you could switch as the play is being carried out. Idea here is that offense thinks center is still anchoring the paint, but as they get ready for the score, lo and behold its a much more athletic power forward patrolling the paint instead, hence the "morph". Keep the center relatively close to the paint for an emergency switch when need be, and maybe you got something.

  • @airborne_seal
    @airborne_seal Рік тому

    The one flaw I see is that the corner players in the offense are quite stagnant in these scrimmages. I feel like this defense would be easily broken down by a simple back door cut from almost any player as it allows an easy pass and then either the finish, lob or kick-out to opposite corner / wing. That would put the defense in scramble mode and potentially cause some missed rotations but if coached properly it would definitely limit the PnR offense. Another potential flaw would be how a PnP would likely cause switches and allow the guards to drive, pass out, relocate back to their original spot and then get the ball back to then isolate against the big. I could see guys like Fox, Lillard, Steph, Lavine, Harden, Edwards, etc. taking advantage of their dribble drive abilities and give themselves a 12sec iso from the wing. That being said, there is no such thing as a perfect defense, and you have to give up something no matter what scheme you run, so I’m not trying to discredit the defense. This would stop the PnR effectiveness but would likely allow more corner 3s and back-door cuts, imo.

  • @alm5851
    @alm5851 Рік тому

    very cool! would love to see more of it.

  • @courtneysheffield5686
    @courtneysheffield5686 Рік тому

    I think this can be beaten with crisp passing and quick shooting. However I think it could work even in the NBA. Impressive.

  • @TheCaptainBlast
    @TheCaptainBlast Рік тому

    Funniest thing about the way the game is trending, is that teams will counter this type of defense with post ups and overloads, aka going back in time.

  • @steverliu1886
    @steverliu1886 Рік тому

    id like to see what happens when the offense runs more backdoor cuts and give and go's. It looks like those cuts are more available against this defense. That being said, those become layups challenged by help defense rather than 3's.

  • @zackthomas1031
    @zackthomas1031 Рік тому +2

    I see Curry and others like him get guys on their back like that on purpose and absolutely destroy them

  • @hezcobar
    @hezcobar Рік тому

    Really amazing concept coach

  • @MochaeMoepfli
    @MochaeMoepfli Рік тому

    Rubio tried this with Harden too. He was laughed at.
    I do it too but mainly because the young guns are faster than me.