Ep 1374 Slings and Stones: Weaponizing the Undersized Roster Titelbild

Ep 1374 Slings and Stones: Weaponizing the Undersized Roster

Ep 1374 Slings and Stones: Weaponizing the Undersized Roster

Jetzt kostenlos hören, ohne Abo

Details anzeigen
https://teachhoops.com/ If you walk into a gym and immediately start apologizing for your team's lack of height, you are handing your players an excuse to lose before the opening tip. In a championship-level program, being undersized is never an anchor—it is a tactical green light to distort the geometry of the floor and play with terrifying speed. When you lack traditional rim-protectors and low-post giants, you cannot play a conventional, slow-tempo game. You must turn the court into a 94-foot laboratory of cognitive chaos. This episode details how to retool your offensive spacing and defensive pressure to make the opponent’s height an absolute liability. When an undersized team tries to play a traditional half-court game against a giant, your Effective Field Goal Percentage ($eFG\%$) will plummet because you are driving directly into a forest of shot-blockers. To win, you must artificially inflate the number of possessions in the game. We want to force a high-variance, fast-paced game that wears down the opponent's physical standard. By forcing a relentless transition game, you ensure that your shots are taken before their giants can run back and establish their defensive shell. An open transition look will always yield a higher $eFG\%$ than a contested half-court set. If you stand on the block when you're 5-foot-10, you are doing the defense a favor. Undersized teams must completely vacant the paint on offense. The 5-Out Concept: By pulling all five players beyond the three-point arc, you force their giant, slow-footed rim protectors out of the paint. They are forced to guard your skilled players in the Mid-Range Desert or out on the perimeter. The "Blow-By" and Kick: Once the paint is empty, the court opens up for explosive, downhill attacks. When a guard beats their man off the dribble, the giant must rotate out from the opposite side of the floor, creating an immediate long-recovery closeout that leads to wide-open rhythm 3s. You cannot let a bigger team comfortably walk the ball down the floor and enter it into the post. If they establish deep post position, your interior shell is broken. Pick Up at 94 Feet: Use an active, "interrupted" press to burn time off the shot clock and force their guards to use energy just advancing the ball. The "Under-Cut" and Front: If the ball does get near the low post, your bigs must front or three-quarter deny the passing lane. You cannot play behind. If the entry pass is made, perimeter players must immediately "dig" or double-team from the blind side to force a hurried kick-out pass. Show Notes1. The Math of Disruption: Increasing the Pace Variance$$eFG\% = \frac{\text{FGM} + (0.5 \times \text{3PM})}{\text{FGA}}$$2. The Offensive Weapon: Space and "Five-Out" Flow3. The Defensive Mandate: Ball Pressure and "Interrupted" TrapsThe Undersized Identity: The Battle MatrixTactical SituationThe Traditional MistakeThe "Giant-Killer" StandardOffensive SetTraditional inside-out post entries.5-Out Positionless Flow with hard cuts.Defensive ShellPassive 2-3 zone that gives up rebounds.Relentless ball pressure; full-court denial.ReboundingTrying to out-jump the opponent.Violent, physical "Hit and Hold" block-outs.Shot SelectionRushed mid-range pull-ups over length.Extra-pass perimeter 3s on the scramble. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
Noch keine Rezensionen vorhanden