Basketball Press Offense - Flood Press Break
By Dr. James Gels, From the Coach’s Clipboard Basketball Playbook"Helping coaches coach better..."
Coach Bob Hurley has used this press break, which he calls "Flood", for attacking the 1-2-1-1 , or 1-2-2 full-court press defense. This works well against teams that pressure and deny your guards the inbounds pass, or aggressively trap the first pass.
Coach Bob Hurley
O1 sprints up the right sideline, but upon reaching half-court, turns and sprints back to the ball, to the middle near the arc. Meanwhile, O4 and O5 sprint up from their half-court spots for the inbounds pass from O3. It's very important that both O4 and O5 sprint to the 3-point arc area, and not the elbows, for good spacing.
After receiving the inbounds pass, O4 (or O5) passes to our point-guard O1 in the middle (diagram B), and usually O1 can speed-dribble up the court and break the press from here.
Sometimes O1 will be open for the inbounds pass from O3 (diagram C), if O4 and O5 are not open, but O1 really has to cut hard and fast to get to that spot in the middle.
After making the inbounds pass, O3 stays below the ball for a safety pass back if O1 is not open for the pass (diagram B).
This is a fairly simple, but effective press-break, The keys are:
- O4 and O5 sprint to the arcs (not the elbows or paint).
- O2 sprints all the way to the hoop.
- O1 sprints hard and cuts back hard to get the pass. O1 should have the dribbling skills to beat his defender 1-on-1 in the open court.
- O3 stays behind the ball for the safety pass back.