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Mailbag Episode (Youth Spacing, Assistant Roles, and Disruptive Defense)

Mailbag Episode (Youth Spacing, Assistant Roles, and Disruptive Defense)

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Join Mark and Tyler for a special Mailbag episode of The Hours podcast! Celebrating over 600 members in the Savvy Basketball community, they tackle listener-submitted "smart questions" that show effort and application. This episode dives deep into coaching philosophy, from youth development to high-level defensive strategy, emphasizing principles over prescribed plays and function over form.

Get ready for an in-depth discussion on how to teach modern basketball, why reacting to your opponent means you've already lost, and how to improve shooting effectively mid-season.

💡 Key Points & Timestamps

  • Youth Coaching: Spacing with Non-Shooters (4:12)
    • Crucial Principle: Spacing is for passing, not for shooting at that level.
    • Third graders can shoot from distance, but they need to be taught a system that generates power and functionality over traditional form shooting.
  • Head Coach Problem: Utilizing Capable Assistants (14:38)
    • Recommendation: Ask the assistants to write their own job descriptions and identify their "areas of genius".
    • Example roles: Scouts, running practice sections, shooting coordinator, game subs, driving competitiveness, extra work/gym-opening.
  • Disruptive Defense: Guarding Stagger Screens in Lock Left (19:03)
    • A coach asks how to guard stagger screens in the "Lock Left" defense.
    • The Goal: Disrupt timing by making the ball "go to jail" (forcing the ball handler to the left side/sideline).
    • The 5-Step Savvy Coach Checklist:
      1. Why do you care? Focus on what you can do, not what they do.
      2. Check the math. Is this action truly hurting you, or did one play just feel bad? (Look at percentage of possessions and points per possession) .
      3. Rewind the tape. What happened before the stagger screen that allowed them to run it? (The on-ball defender didn't make the ball go) .
      4. Create your problems (e.g., getting better on the wall, rebounding) rather than fixing theirs (stagger screens).
  • Shooting: Function Over Form (44:20)
    • Observation/Fix: Players often have feet that are too narrow and a ball load position (Position 1) that is too high (chin-level), limiting their ability to transfer force from the ground.

🎯 Action Items for Coaches

  1. Redefine Winning: If you coach youth, evaluate your practice plans. Are you coaching for long-term development or short-term wins? Use the Big/Small/Big perspective.
  2. Assign Autonomy to Assistants: Ask your assistant coaches to write their own job descriptions detailing their roles and areas of expertise to give them ownership.
  3. Stop Reacting to Opponents: Apply the 5-step checklist. Before defending an opponent's specific action (like staggers), check the math to see if it's a real threat and rewind the tape to see what your team did (or failed to do) to allow the action to happen.
  4. Teach Functional Shooting: Do not start with form shooting close to the rim. Adjust foot width and ball position to generate maximum power first. Do not move in if a player can't reach—force the functional adjustment by shooting from the desired range (or even further back).
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