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The Purpose of Practice
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2:30 pm
June 19, 2010


180shooter

Member

posts 155

1

Last week, I spent the week running basketball camps for a high school coach. We had sessions for high school players; 6th-8th graders; and 3rd-5th graders.

With each session, I had a different purpose. However, I managed the camp based on the players’ enthusiasm: if they appeared to enjoy something, we continued; if they did not, we stopped.

Old school coaches would think the camps for 3rd – 5th graders were a joke, but several parents asked us to run the camp again every week of the year. I probably spent no more than 20 minutes per day on drills, and we never played a second of 5v5. On the last day of camp, as I tried to create some new, fun games, we played capture the flag with basketball rules for almost 90 minutes and the players never lost their enthusiasm. In fact, it was the first time all week that they were not begging me to play steal the bacon by the end of the first hour.

I have never directed a camp (or practice) with so little actual basketball, but I do not know if I have ever had a camp as successful. The players appeared to love playing team tag, dribble tag, sharks & minnows, steal the bacon and capture the flag. Not once did a player ask to scrimmage or play a “real game.” In fact, by the last day, when I tried out freeze tag (did not go as well as planned: cannot play freeze tag with equal numbers per team), the players actually finished a game and started the next game without me having to say anything.

I think the camp was successful because I got out of the way. During capture the flag, I had to intervene once because there were too many disagreements about who got tagged or whether someone should have been in jail or not, but once I explained that we were going to play fair or play not at all, we had no issues. In fact, in the last game, there was a close call as to whether a player crossed the line before getting tagged and I asked the tagger if he got him in time and he said no – he played fair even when given the opportunity to decide the outcome of the game.

Even when we did drills, we went for short spurts and worked on important skills, so the players maintained their enthusiasm. I essentially focused on lay-ups, ball handling, jump stops, pivots and passing during the week – I did not introduce shooting to this group. One day, we did a right-hand lay-up drill (not the most skilled players in the world and many were beginners) for over 20 minutes and nearly every player maintained his enthusiasm and effort level throughout the drill with no direct supervision (I walked around to six different baskets).

The key with this age group is to make the activity fun so that they want to continue. I concentrated on agility and ball handling the most because the skills are most accessible to the age group and the games are easy and fun. As a bonus, improvement was visible.

I tried a couple generic straight-line ball handling drills to introduce the proper technique for dribbling. One young player was in front of me, s I watched him most intently. He struggled. He slapped at the ball and could not keep his head up at all. Later, when I watched him while we played dribble tag, he attacked other players, changed directions, controlled his dribble and looked up. He was a much better ball handler and practiced more game-like skills while playing tag than during a straight-line drill. If that is the case, why even bother with the boring drill when the fun game involved more realistic practice and improvement?

The 6th-8th grade group was more difficult because of the disparity of talent. Some players would not have been too good for the 3rd-5th grade session, while several would have been okay with the high school players. There were also several cliques of teammates, which always makes a camp environment tougher.

However, these players rarely lost their enthusiasm. Every drill had a purpose and an end-goal, and we moved quickly between skills and games. For instance, when I introduced shooting, each group made 20 shots at a spot and then moved to the next practice. While the goal may interfere with learning to some degree (players concentrate on making shots rather than learning the correct shooting technique), the goal maintained concentration.

On the final day, I split the group into 3v3 teams and we played 3v3 games to 3 baskets. I put the bigger, older players at one end and the younger, smaller player at the other end. When I watched the older players, I was disappointed by a lack of effort. We had played an advantage passing game before the 3v3 and it was probably the poorest effort of the camp. I gathered the older players and asked for help. I explained that they were not playing with any enthusiasm or effort in this drill or the previous drill. I asked if they wanted to continue or move on. Several suggested a move to cut-throat, rather than the 3v3 games. I had them finish a couple more games and then we played cut-throat. After the discussion, they played hard for the rest of the camp, and again there were no complaints about the lack of full-court games or 5v5 or “real basketball.”

When coaching young players, sometimes we allow our adult sensibilities and perspective to get in our way. Young players do not need to develop adult-level skills. It does not matter if none of the players shoots like Ray Allen or handles like Steve Nash. Instead, the goal is to make the game fun so the players want to play more. Sometimes that means fewer drills or less specific skill development and more fun games and general skill development (tag, for instance).

Do you have any great ideas for summer basketball camps? Please share in the forum.

By Brian McCormick
Director of Coaching, Playmakers Basketball Development League


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3:04 pm
June 22, 2010


isaackwapongjnr

Member

Ghana-WestAfrica

posts 7

2

Last year my organization run the first summer basketball camp in Ghana in the month of July and it was a great experience for me as a coach to partake in the development of 50players consistently. This been our first camp we didn't know what to expect but we did have some fair ideas from reading wide on other basketball camps across the world espercially in the USA. I remember even sending Brian McCormick a mail on what skills should we concentrate on. We didn't know how it was going we where going to be able to manage very young kids and young adults at the same time so we decided to make the age cut off point was 10years unfortunately at the end we had no 10year old's show up we had between 12years to 20years.

We had a total of 50campers with just 3girls, we had 6 stations set up and we did no fun game drills because of the age levels but unfortunately that made us miss out two days of not working on skill level specific groups. One coach mentioned it on the third day of camp and we quickly adjusted the groups again. As the saying goes ” It is better late than never”.  Nevertheless almost all the players had fun going through the stations, i suppose it was because for many this was their first time really learning the game and also having been their first ever basketball camp. One thing that we did each day was after going throught all the daily skills, guest speakers and video sessions we had 3 on 3 scrimmage games, many a times players lost focus on the purpose of implementation of skills and got so into just putting the ball in the net and winning. On the last day camp tournament the U16group implemented more of the fundamental skills they had learnt rather done the U20 group. The main reason was that we made the U16 play a 3on3 tournament, whiles the U20 played a 5 on 5 tournament. The U20's had not played any full court games through out the camp and didn't know how to transfer the 3 on 3 scrimmages into the 5 on 5 games. But at the end we had a successful camp.

This year we are learning and building on the 2009 camp and are focused more on skill levels rather than ages and we will be incopurating more fun game drills for both the novices and the intermediate as we believe this makes practise more fun and less rigid and we will stick to 3 on 3 games which i believe is the best way to teach Novices & Intermediates how to implement skills into games. 

By: Isaac Robert Kwapong Jnr

Director & Coach: Dynasty Basketball Association Ghana-West Africa

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