MY BACK SCREEN - SET A SCREEN WITH YOUR BACK. (yes I know what the regular back screen is) I set up MY back screen by starting as a traditional pick n roll. making it known and obvious that I'm coming to set the traditional screen.. My defender will tell his teammate that a screen is coming on his right side. my defender will also be helping defend the screen on the right side as they communicate that the screen is coming from the right. At the last moment I slip behind the on ball defender to set a screen with my back on the on ball defenders LEFT SIDE. I usually do this with shooters. my defender is out of position to help, this should be a wide open shot attempt. Ill be in position to roll and continue the action if needed. It generally just leads to WIDE OPEN SHOTS. Its hard to guard in my opinion. easy to start action this way
Screen play is practised constantly. You can give thrm numbers/names if you like and make them into offensive plays. So yeah guard may call them out to stop confusion with offence. May not always work but usually frees someone up on court.
If you are running set plays or continuity they are embedded in your offense hopefully with flow if everything fails. If you are running a rules based offense, you usually have one or two rulesets that create certain screens, otherwise the fancier ones with screen the screener action are usually built into your quick hitters, defensive set counters, SLOBs and BLOBs. Sorry for the late reply. For youth basketball just use the KISS principal. None of them are going to be running Spain Action, Loop or Floppy action any time soon.
A double screen can be two players standing right next two each other... shoulder to shoulder. A double staggered screen is one player standing in front of the other player with some separation.
0:14 screen away
0:27 down screen
0:37 back screen
0:51 zipper screen
1:04 UCLA screen
1:17 flare screen
1:33 flare screen (angle 2)
1:45 staggered screen
2:18 bump screen
2:37 curl screen
2:58 corner pin
3:13 double screen
3:30 New York screen
3:47 flex screen
4:04 post down screen
4:16 post back screen
4:35 Iverson screen
4:57 floppy screen
Ty
Thank you Coach for the breakdown, this is fantastic
one of my favorite videos on youtube.
0:48 that was the most polite layup
Thank you for creating this video. OUTSTANDING!!!
Easier to understand if you had defending players too
if you had an imagination you'd be dangerous
@@edub90 o shit you got him
Wow great explanation coach !
6:04 the players trying to hold it together after he misses the lay-up lol
MY BACK SCREEN - SET A SCREEN WITH YOUR BACK. (yes I know what the regular back screen is)
I set up MY back screen by starting as a traditional pick n roll. making it known and obvious that I'm coming to set the traditional screen..
My defender will tell his teammate that a screen is coming on his right side. my defender will also be helping defend the screen on the right side as they communicate that the screen is coming from the right.
At the last moment I slip behind the on ball defender to set a screen with my back on the on ball defenders LEFT SIDE. I usually do this with shooters. my defender is out of position to help, this should be a wide open shot attempt. Ill be in position to roll and continue the action if needed. It generally just leads to WIDE OPEN SHOTS. Its hard to guard in my opinion. easy to start action this way
Thanks to you , i am able to understand when i have to set a screen for a guard.
These are the common screens in our team: away, down, pin, UCLA and stagger.
Great video. What is the difference between Iverson screen and sttager screen??
Iverson is for a iso and stagger for a open shot.
UConn just won back to back National titles by using lots of screening as apart of their offense to wear opponents down 😀
do you call timeouts or set plays in order to use the screens, how do the players know what screen to set is that called out by the guard?
Screen play is practised constantly. You can give thrm numbers/names if you like and make them into offensive plays. So yeah guard may call them out to stop confusion with offence. May not always work but usually frees someone up on court.
If you are running set plays or continuity they are embedded in your offense hopefully with flow if everything fails. If you are running a rules based offense, you usually have one or two rulesets that create certain screens, otherwise the fancier ones with screen the screener action are usually built into your quick hitters, defensive set counters, SLOBs and BLOBs. Sorry for the late reply. For youth basketball just use the KISS principal. None of them are going to be running Spain Action, Loop or Floppy action any time soon.
Nice one!. I think the term double screen and double stagger screens are the same. An i right?
A double screen can be two players standing right next two each other... shoulder to shoulder. A double staggered screen is one player standing in front of the other player with some separation.
@@BreakthroughBBall thank you so much.
Awesome! Thank you!
Great video
Thanks Great Vid
Wheres the elavator and hammer screen
👌 It's good
4:02
What? No Follow Screen? Great Video though.
How am I supposed to remember all these screens
just watch the screen)
Great video but those players need to work on their layups
Que zica
Too many screens.