Iona coach Billi Chambers gives you insights, drills, and teaching points for her ball screen offense that allows for balanced attacks from the perimeter and the post. Coach Chambers shares the basic actions of the offense along with options based on your personnel. If you are a fan of continuity ball screen offense, you should check this clinic out.
Running a highly efficient 4 Out 1 In Motion offense can be difficult to teach. In this simple, instructional course by Coach James Jones of Yale you will his 4 Out offensive system. Coach Jones reviews the basic philosophy around the offense, teaches the foundational spacing and actions of the offense, and discusses special options and adjustments. Watch an exclusive free lesson to start building or refining your motion offense.
In this course, Coach Ryan Pannone presents "The 3-2 PnR Motion Offense".
Coach Pannone uses this offense to play a modern style of play without modern style players (stretch bigs) with 3-2 PNR Offense. Coach uses these areas to break his system:
1. Transition offense focused on space, pace and balance.
2. Half-court with rules
3. Attacking different ball screen coverages
In this course, Coach Chris Ogden teaches everything you need to know about the Motion Offense in order to create new opportunities to score and add an extra type of offense to your team's arsenal. He explains everything from cuts to screens to shots using UTA's in-game film in order to show you how his Motion Offense truly works. If you are a coach who needs a new type of offense to run or have any questions about the Motion Offense, then this is definitely the course for you!
In this course, Coach Clif Carroll breaks down UMHB's Motion Offense for us. He takes us through things like types of cuts and screens, drives and shots, and much more that you need to know to run the Motion Offense effectively to give your team a competitive advantage on offense. If you are a coach who wants to learn more about the motion offense, then this is the course for you!
“Wikipedia” vs “Encyclopedia” [Help me get this new playbook name right…]
NOTE: I do have a brand new playbook I wanted to let you know about, but before we get to that, I had a technical question I need to ask you first...
If I present a digital product to you (like this playbook) can I still call it an “Encyclopedia”?
Or
Am I showing my age whenever I do that?
After all, we know that “Wikipedia” is the online world’s version of the encyclopedia, so is the word “encyclopedia” itself passé?
I’d love to hear your input after you read the information below!
Anywhoo…
(I don’t want to get too off topic, but I want to be sure I’m staying up with the times. ☺ )
Back to the playbook!
You know how excited I get when I get to announce a new playbook.
So here we go! (Insert the sound of trumpets here…and a visual of pigeons being set free)
I now have my hands on a brand new playbook called the “Encyclopedia of Motion Offense”
140 pages long
Breakdown of ALL the sets of motion offense
With 28 pages dedicated to just drills
The Table of Contents goes like this:
Philosophy, Rules, and Organization
Reads After Passing
Screening Situations
Screening Actions
Concepts Versus Teams that Switch
Concepts – Playing off the Post
Secondary Actions
Half Court Sets From Motion Teams
Drills, Drills, Drills…
As the name implies, if it has ANYTHING to do with the Motion Offense, it’s in here!
Now, if you go to Wikipedia, you’ll find a discussion on the motion offense in basketball…history…references…variations…etc.
What you WON’T find is anything like this actual collection!
So…I think you can see the purpose of my original question…
For now, I’m sticking with “Encyclopedia of Motion Offense”
The word still inspires that air of completeness, doesn’t it?
It might be audacious, but in this case, it DEFINITELY works.
See you courtside,
Scott “up with times” Peterman
Yes, give me instant access to the Encyclopedia of Motion Offense!!