Basketball Transition Defense: Are you Tom Izzo or Dick Bennett?

3
0
 Basketball Transition Defense: Are you Tom Izzo or Dick Bennett?  Links0

photo

Why is this Important?If you ask most coaches to describe what the game of basketball is when you simplify it to its basic principles they will give you offense and defense. While this is true, Bobby Knight believes that transition is a critical component of sound basketball. Think about it for a second…if you are a great half court defensive team, but you allow transition lay-ups, how good is your defense? In a worse cast scenario, if your players aren’t crashing the glass for the offensive rebound and they aren’t back in transition, then where the heck are they? We are going to examine where they should be in regards to two different philosophies on what a team should do after a missed shot. For more information, join our online coaches club at Basketball Coaches Club or email me. 

Offensive Rebounding or Limiting Transition Opportunities

As a coach you basically have to choose between two options in regards to transition defense. Remember that you can’t be good at everything or you are going to be good at nothing. For example, if you try to crash the offensive glass, but you expect the other team not to score any lay-ups in transition then you are setting your team up for failure. CHOOSE and EMPHASIZE your philosophy based on the talent of your team. Also remember that the philosophy a coach chooses should mirror their offensive philosophy. I would like to present the two basic philosophies that most coaches adopt in regards to transition defense.

 The Philosophy to Offensive Rebound

Tom Izzo, the great coach at Michigan State, has built his program on the belief that most teams aren’t good at the defensive box out. His teams are among the nation’s leaders in rebounding margin (+11.7) since he took over the Spartan program.  He spends at least 15 minutes each practice on teaching his players the habits to crash the offensive glass. They fight and compete to tip the ball, keep it alive, and own the offensive glass. A byproduct of this hard work is that his teams are fantastic at defensive box outs because they are used to going to “war” (a drill he uses) each day in practice. Most teams don’t compete like the Spartans on the glass. For more information, take a look at his DVD: Tom Izzo-Dominating Rebounding & Man to Man Defensive Drills.

 Basic Offensive Rebounding Principles
  • Choose if you are more athletic than the best teams in your conference
  • Point guard to half court line and everyone else to the paint to rebound
  • Stress that 70% of all rebounds come opposite – overload that side on shots
  • Practice and chart – do your players get 4 to the paint and the PG to half court in your drills? Offense? Defense?
  • Teach them to tap the ball against the backboard if they can’t come down with it
  • Keep the ball alive – TIP it!
  • Celebrate offensive rebounding
  • Never accept it, but be prepared to see teams fast break more often
  The Philosophy of Limiting Fast Break Opportunities

On the other hand, another great coach that believes coaches have control over transition, Dick Bennett of Washington State, would send two and sometimes three players back depending on the opponent in an effort to neutralize fast break opportunities. His teams traditionally held opponents under 60 points per game. Coach Bennett’s philosophy was that his team was better than your team at half court execution on offense and defense. His teams only pressed if behind in games late and they played strictly man-to-man defense. In other words, his teams were simple to prepare for, but difficult to beat because of their execution. For more information, take a look at his DVD: Dick Bennett’s “Pack-line” Pressure Defense.

 Basic Principles of Limiting Transition Opportunities
  • Choose if you are less athletic than the best teams in your conference
  • Send the PG to the opposite FT line and the Off Guard to the half court line
  • Another option is to also send the shooter back immediately against superior teams along with the two guards
  • Stress that we are not giving up ANY transition lay-ups
  • Work on defending scramble situations in the full court every day
  • Teach how you want to match-up and remember that open shots NOT match-ups beat you
  • Practice and chart – do your players have defensive balance in your drills? Offense? Defense?
  • Choose offensive sets that allow for defensive balance; For example: stay away from 1-4 low sets or the Flex. Instead use 2-3 high sets or 4 out – 1 in motion
Prepare them the best you can so that your team can achieve to the best of their potential because you put them in the best situation to succeed. Transition is often overlooked and the main thing a coach needs to do is decide from Day 1 what their team is going to do in regards to defensive transition. Teach that all year long and emphasize it in practices and games. I hope this article has helped you to better understand the two basic philosophies of transition defense. If you want to learn more about these coaches or philosophies, join our online coaches club at Basketball Coaches Club or email me.

Tags:

Comments

Related Content

Related Stories
3

Magic Playoff Sked: No TV Love For Dwight Howard and Crew by

The Magic-Raptors playoff schedule was released late Wednesday night, way past Sentinel deadlines. What might strike you is how unsexy the TV execs view the Magic and Dwight Howard, putting them on NBA TV twice in the first four games and then at ...
1

One game, some thin ...

Who am I kidding? I didn't watch that scrimmage last night.Once it became an irrelevant game I cancelled my trip. Then last night I taped it and then checked the box score out online when it was done. When I saw that Bosh played 15 minutes I gave ...
4

Don Nelson’s season-ending KNBR interview: Time to stop feeling sorry for yourself, Don

I’m a Don Nelson guy. Have been from the first shocking day the Warriors hired him almost two years ago. Think he’s done an incredible job since then. He’s so much better than any of the last bunch of Warriors head coaches it’s ...
13

Austin Wins Game One of NBA D-League Finals

The Austin Toros defeated the Idaho Stampede 95-89 tonight in Game One of the best-of-three 2008 NBA Development League Finals presented by Delta, at the Austin Convention Center. The Toros brought the 2299 fans out of their seats in the opening 20 seconds of the contest when Josh Gross put the exclamation point on an Andre Barrett pass. The alley-oop dunk gave the Toros a 2-0 lead, their ...
3

Carlisle, Izzo in running for Bulls job

While Rick Carlisle is the leading candidate for the Chicago Bulls coaching job, multiple league sources say that an intriguing name has gained momentum within the franchise’s front office: Michigan State’s Tom Izzo. Bulls GM John Paxson granted Carlisle the first interview in the process, two league sources said, and Carlisle made a strong impression. But Chicago officials were still busy ...
Related News Articles
McWilliams-Franklin on USA Roster for Good Luck Beijing Tournament
USA Basketball Women's National Team member Taj McWilliams-Franklin (Los Angeles Sparks) will join the U.S. squad in Beijing in time for the opening game against Australia in the 2008 Good Luck Beijing Tournament, USA Basketball announced today. ...
Leave a Comment Comment