Presumably you are making videos to teach those watching--6 minutes for 3 moves is not a good use of time. And why would you have picking up from a chair be part of your rhythm?
It's not only about 3 moves. It's about providing context for how to teach the moves and why to teach them. The chairs are just a tool for learning a skill. If you have bad passers (timing and location), it will hinder the quality of the reps and the amount of reps being done. Personally, I use both depending on the situation I'm in.
Some constructive criticism from one coach to another... I like how you ask your players at the beginning of the video what they have to do. However, you asked a question to the tall player and he took forever to answer you, instead of waiting for an answer you told him before recording and he either forgot or you were originally not clear enough and should have clarified with him before recording your video. You should have clarified with him before recording by asking if he has any questions. This would make the beginning of your video easier to watch. But instead at the beginning it just makes it look like the coach is a know it all. Near the end of your video you get up close to the player to have him cut faster for a shot, what you should have done was tell him between shots what your looking for instead of risking injury. When he shoots your feet are under his and you can see this when he tries to land he always moves his feet to the side which has him concentrating on the landing instead of his shot and footwork when shooting. Then you say its okay to miss your shots but I disagree, Its good to practice footwork with shooting but there is a reason for missing. Work on the players footwork and if he is missing figure out why by watching his shot and tell him what to fix between his shots. This is called active coaching, What you are demonstrating is coaching by teaching trial and error on the players side.
Allen, wow. You have some nerve. Kelbick is a legend. Your post is equivalent to lecturing Michael Jordan (athlete to athlete, you know) on how to jump. You are not a coach in the same sense as Kelbick. KNOCK IT OFF.
it’s amazing how good a coach Mike from breaking bad is
A joke ahead of its time
@@taboo0 "The moral of the story is...no more half measures. Don't just learn how to shoot Waltuh. Go all the way and get the ball."
Love the teaching here. Tons of great stuff. Why shoot from the chair instead of catching a pass?
Keeps you low
It's good but can u make a video on how to play inside the paint..and also to improve jump height
Go to our channel and the search box type in "Post", you will find helpful videos for you: ruclips.net/user/BreakthroughBBall
you can also apply the same footwork to posting up and making post moves in the paint .. footwork fundamentals - gota love em. :)
Can you do one for PGs
Presumably you are making videos to teach those watching--6 minutes for 3 moves is not a good use of time. And why would you have picking up from a chair be part of your rhythm?
It's not only about 3 moves. It's about providing context for how to teach the moves and why to teach them. The chairs are just a tool for learning a skill. If you have bad passers (timing and location), it will hinder the quality of the reps and the amount of reps being done. Personally, I use both depending on the situation I'm in.
Because the devil is in the details.
Where is your video?
Some constructive criticism from one coach to another... I like how you ask your players at the beginning of the video what they have to do. However, you asked a question to the tall player and he took forever to answer you, instead of waiting for an answer you told him before recording and he either forgot or you were originally not clear enough and should have clarified with him before recording your video. You should have clarified with him before recording by asking if he has any questions. This would make the beginning of your video easier to watch. But instead at the beginning it just makes it look like the coach is a know it all. Near the end of your video you get up close to the player to have him cut faster for a shot, what you should have done was tell him between shots what your looking for instead of risking injury. When he shoots your feet are under his and you can see this when he tries to land he always moves his feet to the side which has him concentrating on the landing instead of his shot and footwork when shooting. Then you say its okay to miss your shots but I disagree, Its good to practice footwork with shooting but there is a reason for missing. Work on the players footwork and if he is missing figure out why by watching his shot and tell him what to fix between his shots. This is called active coaching, What you are demonstrating is coaching by teaching trial and error on the players side.
Allen, do you know who Don Kelbick is? Your hubris is off the chart.
Allen, wow. You have some nerve. Kelbick is a legend. Your post is equivalent to lecturing Michael Jordan (athlete to athlete, you know) on how to jump. You are not a coach in the same sense as Kelbick. KNOCK IT OFF.