How To Plan For Success In Youth Basketball!
By - Joe Haefner
"What do I do? Where do I start?"
"How do I incorporate all of these skills into practice?"
"What offense should I run? Motion? Dribble drive? Flex? Princeton? Swing? Shuffle? High-Low? Set plays?"
"What plays should I run? Should I run any? Are these too simple? Are these too complicated? How many out of bounds plays do I need? What about a press breaker?"
"What defense should I run? Man to Man? 3-2 zone? 2-3 zone? Amoeba? 1-3-1 zone? Match up? Full court pressure?"
After your head is ready to explode, you're probably thinking, "I shouldn't have volunteered to do this!"
Almost everybody who has coached youth basketball has had these thoughts and feelings go through their head at one time or another. Because coaching youth basketball can be quite overwhelming. Here are some ways to simplify it and make things easier for you.
But don't worry. Take a deep breath and exhale because we're here to help. You can learn from our successes and mistakes.
For youth basketball coaches your priorities should be:
- Character development & making basketball enjoyable
- Athletic development and skill-work
- Defensive & offensive concepts (Motion offense and man to man defense are the best for long-term development, but that's not the point of this article.)
Here is what I would do if I were starting to coach a team whether it was 6th grade or 2nd grade.
First, what would I like them to develop and learn before they reach high school?
- Athleticism
- Ball Handling
- Passing
- Footwork
- Lay Ups
- Shooting
- Basic Offensive Concepts
- Basic Defensive Concepts
Second, what should I focus on this year?
I split my practice between offensive skills, offense, defense and scrimmaging. It usually goes something like this:
- Athletic development and offensive skills - 30 minutes
- Defense - 15 minutes
- Offense - 15 minutes
- Scrimmage - 30 minutes
- 1/3 skills and athletic development
- 1/3 offense and defense (small-sided games)
- 1/3 scrimmaging
I will work on the primary focus every practice. I will work on the secondary focus every 2 to 4 practices.
Now, if you do this for 3 or 4 years with your focus shifting and progressing, that's when you develop basketball players!
Examples of primary and secondary focus for a 3rd to 5th grade team:
Skills primary focus - Ball handling and footwork Skills secondary focus - Lay ups, passing, shooting Offense primary focus - Cutting and getting open - V-cuts, L-cuts, basket cuts (give and go), and backdoor cuts. Offense secondary focus - Introduce ball screens, introduce screens away from the ball, baseline out of bounds play, sideline out of bounds play, press breaker. Defense primary focus - Defensive stance, 1v1 defense, positioning when 1 or 2 passes away, moving on the pass, sprinting to areas. Defense secondary focus - Defending cutters, post players, ball screens, screens away from the ball. |
This might take you an extra 2 to 3 hours at the beginning of the year, but it will save you many more hours during the season and beyond if you decide to coach for multiple seasons.
Create a practice plan template for 2 to 4 practices. It will include your primary skills and secondary skills. You are not worried about specific drills here, just the categories of skills and concepts you want to work on. For example:
Practice 1 Template: Athleticism - 6 minutes Ball Handling - 10 minutes Footwork - 6 minutes Form Shooting - 4 minutes Lay Ups - 4 minutes 1 v 1 Defense - 5 minutes Defense Positioning - 5 minutes Defending Cutters - 5 minutes Cutting and Getting Open - 5 minutes Small-Sided Game - 5 minutes Special Situation - Inbounds Plays - 5 minutes Scrimmaging - 30 minutes - 3v3, 4v4, 5v5 - Use different rules (no dribble - 2-dribble limit, pass and move, etc.) |
Practice 2 Template: Athleticism - 6 minutes Ball Handling - 10 minutes Footwork - 6 minutes Passing - 4 minutes Lay Ups - 4 minutes 1 v 1 Defense - 5 minutes Defense Positioning - 5 minutes Defending the Post - 5 minutes Cutting and Getting Open - 5 minutes Small-Sided Game - 5 minutes Special Situation - Press Breaker - 5 minutes Scrimmaging - 30 minutes - 3v3, 4v4, 5v5 - Use different rules (no dribble - 2-dribble limit, pass and move, etc.) |
Create a Drills Binder
After you create a template, you can find your favorite drills and games for each section, print them out and put them in a binder. That way, you can look at your template before each practice and pick out your appropriate drills.
Now, if I only could get back all of those hours the first five years that I coached and I wasn't doing this.
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