

|
Breaking the Press Plus Late Game Situations
OverviewThe great part about this full court press break is that you break the press by breaking a post man up the sideline to catch the ball and he passes to a guard cutting down the middle of the floor. This press break is great because you can score off of it. The half court press attack is out of a 2-1-2 alignment, but has movement to that will hurt any half court trap. The Late Game Situations are ways to attack the defense and get a great shot when the game has less than four seconds to go. These are simple to execute.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: 1. Press Break Part 1 2. Press Break Part 2 3. Press Break Part 3 4. Press Break vs 1-2-1-1 Press 5. Press Break vs 2-2-1 Press 6. Press Break You Cannot Run 7. Half Court Trap Offense 8. Late Game Half Court Play 9. Home Run (Full Court Play) 10. Screen (Full Court Play) Each play is on a single page with four court diagrams and both offensive and defensive players depicted. Each diagram also has a narrative description, describing the player movements. At the bottom of the page is a General Comments section where key points to the play are stressed. The playbook is illustrated with numerous play diagrams and narratives for ease of understand and ease of incorporation into your play system.
By: Duane Silver Publication Date: 2000 Pages: 12 Size: 8 ½” x 11” Bound: Paperback RETAIL PRICE: $10.00 NEW OR USED: New
ABOUT THE AUTHOR At the age of eleven Coach Duane Silver knew he wanted to teach the game of basketball. While growing up in Central Missouri, he spent many hours studying and playing the game. After coaching seven years in Missouri and moving to Waco Texas in 1977 to coach at La Vega High School, compiled the following record:
- 493 wins in 29 seasons,
- 8 district championships,
- 6 regional finalists, and
- 9 time coach of the year.
Since retiring in 1999, Coach Silver has studied miles of video and talked to numerous high school and college coaches about their best offensive and defensive plays. Most of the plays diagramed in the various playbooks developed by Coach Silver come from Division I programs all across America.
|
|