I have been watching more high school
and junior basketball than ever, and I am worried about what
I see. The canary in the United States' basketball coal mine
has not yet died, but it is starting to teeter on its perch.
No reasonable basketball person can refute the fact that the fundamental
skills of American players are slipping, and so is the American
game. I believe a primary reason is an increased emphasis on coaching
the game, and a decreased emphasis on teaching our kids how to
play the game.
Pete Newell, the legendary coach and teacher, has often said that
basketball is "over-coached and under-taught". He is
absolutely right, and that is finally catching up with us, as is
the rest of the basketball world.
Generally, "coaching" consists of team preparation,
the devising of game plans and schemes to defeat opponents. When
you are coaching, you are dealing with strategies, different offenses
and defenses, and putting in plays to take advantage of the skills,
strengths and weaknesses of your players. The measure of a coach
is the quality of the development of his system, and has been distilled
into winning.
"Teaching" consists of instruction and training of individuals
in the fundamental skills of the game, and in teaching players
how to play, instead of how to run plays. The measure of a teacher
is not in winning, but in the fundamental soundness and skill level
of the players taught. A player with excellent fundamentals and
skills can play successfully in any system.
Generally, American players are less skilled than their European
counterparts. The United States produces the best "athletes" in
the game, but not necessarily the best "basketball players".
Here are the reasons why American coaches, at all levels, have
gotten away from teaching, and have gravitated more to coaching.
Immediate Gratification of Coaches: Coaches, especially
at the grassroots and high school levels, seem more interested
than ever in winning rather than developing well-skilled and fundamentally
sound players. They are impatient, and too focused on winning games
instead of developing players.
It takes time to teach and instill discipline. While it may seem
more important to spend the majority of time in practice working
on the execution of halfcourt offense, or putting in new set plays,
it is far more important to develop the skills of your players.
Coaches do not have enough time with their players anymore, which
means that floor time cannot be wasted.
High school coaches get less floor time than ever to teach, and
less and less access to their players. Players now play an excessive
amount of games over the summer in AAU competition, which means
that they play many games and have far fewer practices.
While young kids are busy traversing the country to play in AAU
competitions, they are spending hour upon hour running up and down
the court in a helter-skelter atmosphere where, 95 percent of the
time, they do not have the ball in their hands. What this does
is cement bad habits -- and habits, good or bad, are what players
revert to under stress.
If these same players were in focused practice environments instead
of in so many games, they would spend the majority of time with
the ball in their hands, working on their skills and footwork.
Increased Specialization: Basketball in this country has
become over-specialized, and players have become "systematized".
Kids are identified by size and body type into positions way too
early on in their devopment and are "coached" differently.
As young kids, players are told, "you are a point guard," "you
are a power forward," "you are a center." Then the
guards and big guys are separated, sent to opposite ends of the
floor, and coached to work upon different skills that are specific
to position.
In Europe, players are encouraged to work on the same skills, whether
small guard or big forward.
The result of this specialization is that our players are boxed
into positions, and therefore limited. Why should kids be labeled
and limited into being "point guards" or "shooting
guards" and coached to be only that? A point guard is coached
to be a primary ballhandler, while a shooting guard is coached
to be a scorer and therefore limited in making the "transition" to
the point. Similarly, big guys in America are used as screeners,
rebounders and low-post robots. Very few programs in America, college,
high school or lower level, produce versatile and skilled big men
who can dribble, pass and shoot.
We cannot expect the players to combat this trend. Players want
to play and will do whatever the coaches tell them to do because,
ultimately, the players want to play out on the floor, and coaches
control playing time. Doing what the coach tells you to do is a
necessary element of gaining playing time at any level. And we
cannot expect players to simply work on individual skills on their
own. We would not expect kids to educate themselves outside of
a classroom environment, we certainly cannot expect it in sport.
European programs approach teaching differently. Players are not
limited in how much they can practice, and therefore spend from
60 to 90 minutes in the morning working on footwork, shooting and
ballskills. The same players then practice another 60 to 90 minutes
in the afternoon on more team-oriented concepts. There is no separation
of big guys and guards, every player works on the same skills.
As a result, European players are generally more well-rounded and
more fundamentally sound. And they are more coveted by coaches
at all levels.
Shoe Companies and AAU Basketball: Contrary to popular
belief, the shoe companies and AAU programs are not full of bad
people looking to exploit kids. As in any endeavor, there are good
people and bad people in those organizations. However, it is clear
that the goals of the shoe companies and AAU programs are at odds
with the proper teaching and development of fundamentally sound
players.
Whether well intentioned or not, shoe companies are in the business
of selling shoes, not growing the game. While the major shoe companies
have "grassroots" programs, they are more interested
in growing their influence than in growing the game. The best evidence
of that is in the national camps run by Nike and adidas every summer.
These camps are designed to showcase players against the best competition,
not improve their skills. Instead of running stations in the morning
or early afternoon, where the players would spend time at each
different basket in the gym working on individual skills, they
play games all day.
The coaches and scouts evaluating these players would much rather
watch the kids in one game per day and get the chance to evaluate
skill levels through station work. And the kids would be better
off as well. But teaching is not the goal.
The same goes for AAU programs. Far too many AAU coaches are more
interested in playing and winning games, rather than teaching young
players the skills necessary to be successful players. While young
kids are travelling the country playing games, they are not able
to practice or work on their games. It is really that simple.
Skills 'Players' Need to Have
Fundamentally sound players need to be able to handle the ball,
shoot the ball, pass the ball, and use their feet. Unless a player
has these basic skills mastered, he will be limited and therefore
easy to guard and difficult to play with.
Here are the basic skills needed by every player on the court:
Ballhandling: If a player cannot handle the ball with
either hand, he will get attacked and overwhelmed by the defense
because he cannot go anywhere off the dribble. To be a competent
ballhandler, a player needs to be able to control the ball with
either hand, and know the proper use of the dribble given the situation.
Once a player knows when and how to dribble, how to set up his
man to make a dribble move, and has the basic skills and footwork,
he becomes much harder to guard, and much more valuable to any
team.
The best way to become a better ballhandler is to handle the ball
more often. Repetition is the key to success as a ballhandler,
whether it is doing game speed drills in dribbling around cones
or executing the footwork and handling of a spin move, rocker step
or reverse pivot. Ballhandlers must also learn to handle the ball
playing against a defender. That is the only way to learn how to
protect the ball, use the body, and learn to set the defender up
for counters. If you want to make players better handlers of the
ball, make them handle the ball. And make the big guys handle it
in the same situations you ask guards to handle it.
Shooting If you cannot shoot the ball, you will always
be able to get an open shot, because nobody guards a substandard
shooter. Like ballhandling, the best way to become a better shooter
is to shoot the ball over and over again at game speed. The motto
for shooters in practice should be "game shots, game spots,
at game speed". Shooting "game" shots over and over
creates muscle memory, and provides confidence to the shooter.
The first thing shooters must learn to do is to look at the basket
when they catch the ball. Defenders must believe that you are a
threat to shoot the ball, and nobody will by that if you don't
look at the basket, and no good defender will go for a shotfake.
In looking at the rim, a player will be able to see what is going
on under it as well. To be a good shooter, a player has to use
his feet effectively to create space and get open, and must be
ready to shoot as the ball arrives. Good shooters go straight up
and down without drifting, and therefore don't have to shoot at
a moving target. They have their shooting hand under the ball,
and the elbow under their shooting hand. The motion should be up
and not out in order to shoot a soft ball with good trajectory
and velocity.
Whatever shot a player wants to perfect, the proper repetition
of that particular shot is the key. No player can get that proper
repetition by simply playing in games, but must be made to do it
in practice.
Passing: No skill in American basketball that is more
neglected than passing. Good coaches will tell you that the quality
of the pass determines the quality of the shot. That is absolutely
correct. In order to score, the defense has to be moved, and the
pass is the most effective way to move a defense.
Players need to be taught how to properly throw two-hand chest
passes, overhead passes, bounce passes with either hand, and to
pass with exactness and imagination. The first rule of passing
is that, if you have a clear path to an open player, pass him the
ball. You do not pass-fake to open people, you pass the ball to
them. Passing should not be a last resort, after you have exhausted
all possibilities to obtain your own shot. Rather, you should pass
the ball to get your team the best quality shot. Watch any game,
on any level, and see for yourself how many times passes are made
only when all other avenues have been closed. It happens a lot.
If a player cannot pass, he cannot play, and the ball dies in his
hands.
Footwork: Basketball is played with the feet, and every
phase of the game is dependent upon good footwork. In any game,
a player plays 90 percent or more of the game without the ball.
Learning how to play with your feet, offensively and defensively,
is of vital importance for basketball players at any level, and
an area in which youngsters need the most attention and instruction.
Without attention to detail of the footwork necessary to execute
basic moves in the game, and to create space, the player is severely
limited.
The United States has the best athletes, the best coaches and the
most basketball resources in the world. We need to spend less time
coaching, and more time teaching, especially at lower levels of
the game. We need to encourage coaches to teach, not just to coach,
and for players to practice, not just to play. There is no reason
why our best athletes cannot be our best players. If we do a better
job of teaching, the level of play in the United States will skyrocket,
and the game will be better for it. |