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Click the star to bookmark this page. Create you own playbook by bookmarking your favorites. Here's how to setup your Playbook (you only have to do this once).

In Chrome, click the 3 vertical dots on the right side, select "Bookmarks and Lists", and then "Show bookmarks bar".

Next, under "Bookmarks and Lists", click "Bookmark Manager" (or Ctrl+Shift+O). In Bookmarks, again click the 3 vertical dots on the right and click "Add new folder". Enter "Basketball Playbook" and save it.

You can add subfolders (Plays, Offenses, Defenses, Drlls, etc) to the Basketball Playbook folder to even better categorize your favorites.

When you click the "Add to Playbook" button on any webpage, select the folder or subfolder to place the bookmark in. Optionally, instead of using the "Bookmark This Page" button, just press Ctrl+D.

You can also do this in Microsoft Edge using the "Favorites" menu, and also in Firefox.

You can Export your Basketball Playbook to your device, in the "Bookmark Manager" (Ctrl+Shift+O).
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Basketball Play - "Blazer"

By Dr. James Gels, From the Coach’s Clipboard Basketball Playbook
"Helping coaches coach better..."

See the animation

Here's an effective play that you can run against man-to-man defenses.

Note in Diagram A that we are clearing out the right side of the court. Our post players (O4 and O5) move to the high post and the top of the key. O2 and O3 clear out to the left corner and short corner. The point guard O1 initially dribbles to the left wing, and keeps the dribble going. O5 starts moving toward O1 on the wing and O1 starts a dribble toward O5. O1 stops, makes a hand-off to O5 while screening O5's defender. O5 gets into triple threat position facing the hoop.

Blazer play Blazer play

After handing off and screening for O5, O1 cuts around O4 to the hoop (Diagram B). O5 makes the over-the-top lob pass to O1 for the layup.

Notice that we have a tall post player O5 making the pass over a shorter defender (assuming a defensive switch), and a quick, point guard O1 beating the slower post defender on the cut.

It's amazing how such a simple play often gives you a layup. The hand-off and initial screen often confuses the defenders, whether to switch or not, and even when switching, it seems that the defender is often a step or two behind O1. You would think that O4's defender would switch and pick up O1, but oftentimes it just doesn't happen. If they do switch, pass to O4 who moves to the ball-side elbow.







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