Triangle Zone Offense vs. Man to Man Defense - Part 2 of 4 - Doug Schakel Basketball
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- Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
- (Part 2 of 4) Using players to demonstrate, two-time Hall of Fame coach Doug Schakel, skill development coach for the 2015 NJCAA Div. II National Champions, shows how to adapt the Triangle Zone Offense to attack a man to man defense. Flowing from the fast break/secondary break into the Triangle is easy and seamless. The adaptations for attacking a man to man defense include:
--Basic Continuity
--Preliminary Rapid Pass and Player Movement
--Wing Cut Options
--Sideline Triangle Options
--The Post "Buddy System"
--Counters vs. Pressure/Overplay
--Special Plays
You can utilize all kinds of personnel groupings. The Triangle Offense is easy to learn and suitable for youth, high school, or college players.
coach we have used your offense for four weeks now ,my ninth grade boys are picking it up pretty good . we finished second in a tournament this pass weekend. thank you
Eric- Glad the offense is working well for you. Did I send you the game videos of an AAU 8th grade boys team running it?
Michael Jordan may have taken 6 NBA Championships without the Triangle, but "The beauty of the Triangle O is that it can feature the greatest player, without being reliant on the greatest player." MJ didn't have to work hard for each basket AND there' ALWAYS a counter to any defensive manipulation. Thank Coach for simplifying it !!!
I coached High School feeder program for 5 yrs using UCLA High Post, Flex Offense, & Triangle Offense. I used the versions from the Hall of Famers.
I love 2-Guards Fronts in a 2-2-1 Look. San Antonio Spurs Motion Offense has the BIG at Top of Key. That is the current Copy Cat set that most NBA teams use now.
With 2-Guard Fronts, the Off-Ball defender loves to JUMP the passing lane for a deflection/ interception & 1-Man Fast-Break.
Your way of having a Big for Ball Reversal is SAFER because his defender is SLOWER plus can't leave the basket area.
You are right. Those bigger defenders aren't comfortable defending away from the basket. We work hard to teach our posts the ball skills necessary to drive from that high post area. We would like 3 point capability from the posts as well....puts those inside defenders in a real bind. --Doug Schakel
Yes, you could run a flex cut by the corner guard. This is the beauty of exchanging ideas. Can't tell you the number of times someone has seen something I presented in a clinic setting and came up with a variation that we ended up adopting too.
He really showed the importance of the one motion never knew how much possibilites the bigman has with that option
I love it when you have a WING player that loves Post-ups.
The wings like to post up too! --Doug Schakel
If I have a Left-Hander, he automatically plays at the LEFT wing. After that Wing entry & corner fill, I run Shuffle Cut. The Center must take 2 steps out for Traditional Screen. Screener turns baseline for Alley-Oop Dunk or Tip In.
Than you. I love your videos.
I haven't coached in 3 years, but to keep up with this 2017 style, I would DEMAND that one of my Bigs (Center or PF) be a 3-point Specialist. Defenses are crowding the paint & daring your guards to win with 3-pointers & defend the basket. Having a BIG that is great at 3-points tears their defense apart. So much so, that I would take a Small Forward (3-spot)& put him at the PF /4-spot. Mike D'antoni taught the NBA by moving Shawn Marion to the PF spot during Steve Nash Phoenix Suns Era.
Today's Offense is Spread Pick & Roll, too simplistic for me.
I agree with having bigs who, in addition to posting up, can shoot the three.
I was fortunate to have 12 All-American post players and we thought it was very important to develop them into all-around basketball players. The more their skill set expanded, the more versatile (and valuable) they were.
I, too, once put a 3 at the 4 spot; he averaged 26 ppg for us. --Doug Schakel
Ty Coach much love
I watched a few things on the Triangle online from Basketball Breakdown. They have it slightly different. Instead of the opposite wing they have a forward there but lower in a post position. It allows for pinch post action. Is the pinch post not as prevalent in the way you show him against Man?
We call out "2 Up" or "3 Up" when we want to run the pinch post action. If we call out "2 Up", we want the 1 to pass to the 3 and 1 runs to the ball side corner, establishing the triangle. Now 2 (isolated wing) comes from the opposite wing "Up" to the top of the circle; thus "2 Up." The weak side post sets up just above the block on his side. 3 passes to 2 at the top of the circle and 2 runs the pinch action with the weak side post (who comes up just above the FT line and inside the FT circle. If we call out "3 Up", we would enter to 2 and 3 would come "Up" to the top of the circle.
Could you use a flex cut when you skip the ball to the weak side for the cutter?
do you still run your x cuts when playing against a zone defense like you show in this video
No, we run "Spread Cuts" instead. When the ball is passed into the Low Post, the Wing runs straight across the free throw line area to the wing spot on the other side of the floor....occasionally the Wing can get a return pass in the paint. Then Corner Guard starts a cut across the baseline and we often find him open in the short corner. If the CG does not receive a pass, he continues across the baseline to the corner on the other side of the court. On the pass to the Low Post, the Isolated Wing runs to his elbow area and, as the ballside Wing begins to clear the lane area, continues on to the wing spot just vacated by the ballside Wing.
The Low Post, of course, can attempt to score at any time or can fan the ball out to any of the perimeter players including the high post.
could you run this as a zone or a man
Sorry, Marques!! Missed your comment...I am 6 months late!! Yes, we use this offense against man or zone. Go to "Doug Schakel You Tube" and find the video entitled "Triangle Zone Offense." -Doug Schakel
Coach I sent you an e-mail a few minutes ago.
+Nicholas Brooks Got your e-mail...hope my response was helpful. --Doug Schakel
Yes sir Coach Schakel it was but do you have any breakdown drills in pdf format that you'd be willing to send?
+Coach Brooks Sorry, I don't have any drills in PDF form. I hope to do that in the future. Right now I am getting several new videos ready to produce.
Excellent, Coach Schakel, I am looking forward to them. Godspeed sir!!
I would suggest less popup textmessages.
Zane- I know the popup annotations can be a distraction to some. In several of our videos I mention that I will give you way more information than you will probably ever use. I do it for those coaches who want all the details they can get. Thanks for your post! --Doug Schakel