This Friday, November 25, we are bringing in Paul Hoover, developer of the "Pro Shot Shooting" system to run a 3 hour clinic with our entire program, 7/8th grade, Freshman, JV, and Varsity teams. Paul's "system" is more like a philosophy on shooting, 70% of which focuses on the mental aspect of the art of shooting. I am excited to have Coach Hoover and his staff come in and think it will serve as a "tune-up" for our players as we head into the season. The purpose of the clinic is not to "re-build" or re-construct our players' shooting forms, although in some cases, that may very well be just what the doctor ordered! The true purpose is to provide our players with several "teachable moments" in the area of shooting and give them some perspective from someone who has worked with several NCAA and NBA level players. This particular clinic is limited only to current players on one of our 4 schoolwide teams; however, if all goes well, we may bring Coach Hoover back for a more extensive 1 or 2 day clinic in the Spring when we would open it up to the entire surrounding community. Stay tuned!
For over a decade, our program, from top to bottom, has run two basic offensive systems: the flex offense ("Gator") and the Wheel offense, a hybrid of the Shuffle offensive system. The two systems worked well for our teams over the years, despite the fact that "everyone knew it was coming". But for the past 2-3 years, I have gotten antsy with our offense; the exact things that used to make those systems so attractive to me (sharing the wealth, interchangeable parts), were beginning to expose themselves as detriments. I found myself tinkering, re-working, shifting, and essentially trying to "re-invent" the Wheel to not only fit our personnel,but the results I wanted from them. Then late last season, I had a conversation that would prove to be influential. I have always been a big fan of Rick Torbett and his Better Basketball series. The guy knows his stuff and yet doesn't come across as too rigid in his teaching of fundamentals and his attention to detail is impressive. Then someone told me about his "Read and React" offensive system. At first glance, it seemed like a hybrid of the Dribble Drive offense made popular by Memphis University, but upon further research, I found it was really unlike anything I had come across before - and in basketball, that is not just rare, it is unheard of! But change an entire offensive system to something completely new? Yikes. I have to admit, it took me at least a month to finally take the plunge, Even then, after we had purchased the DVDs that teach the initial system, it took me another few weeks of indecision before I finally decided to jump in feet-first - and let me tell you, I am glad I did. At first glance, the system seemed overwhelming - heck, it has over 20 layers! But after immersing myself into the system, it began to dawn on me - this is EXACTLY what I had been searching for. The "system" is really just a series of "reactions" that must be learned in order for the offense to run. It is shocking just how flexible the system is and how much creativity in not just allows, but encourages from our players. The real difficulty is just getting the players to "un-learn" some common, age-old offensive basketball habits (ie. elements of Motion) and instead, begin to "Read and React". I started introducing the system to our varsity guys this spring and for the most part, we were able to run the system in our summer league at about 60% efficiency, without even really touching upon the last 10 layers of the offense. Now, as our Fall preseason begins, we have begun incorporating elements of the offense into our open gym workouts through a series of breakdown warm-ups that touch upon nuances of the system. Although some of the players' heads are spinning right now, I really think it won't take too long before the light bulb goes on and they start to truly "get it"... until formal practices begin in November and we are really able to "coach them up", though, we won't be able to see their learning curve. Until then, we will simply continue to spoon feed them some elements of the our new system and hope for the best! | AuthorCoach Ackerman just completed his 14th season at the helm of the WY Boys Basketball Varsity Team. During his 14 year tenure, the Bulldogs are 283-97, with 11 Divisional/Sectional Titles, 3 League Titles, and a District 3AAA Championship. He is also in his 10th season as the head coach for the golf team, with a 282-36 record , with 8 Divisional crowns and 3 League titles. Coach Ackerman and his wife Jennifer have a son, Dylan Chase, and a daughter, Parker Emerson. ArchivesApril 2012 CategoriesAll |
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