Organizing Your Practice Time - 25 Time Proven Ideas by RANDY BROWN
Preparing for practice is a key step toward success. Teaching time on the floor with your players is limited and valuable. Much time and thought should be put into each practice session to maximize productivity and make positive steps forward as a team. The quality of your practices will eventually determine how many games you win or lose during the season. The talent level of players, number of players, time, facilities, and equipment are all things to consider when putting your practice schedule together.
The following is a collection of ideas that will contribute to more organized and productive practice sessions.
KEYS TO ORGANIZING PRACTICE
1. Each day ask this question: What do I want to accomplish this practice session?
2. Certain aspects of the game should be performed every day. These include ball handling, shooting, defense, rebounding, passing, and setting picks.
3. Be a teacher on the floor and assume nothing when teaching. These four points are important when teaching: explain, demonstrate, perform, and critique. Use positive comments.
4. Teach new concepts early in practice sessions when players are most alert.
5. Once new ideas have been taught, repetition is the key to progress.
6. When showing a new concept to the team, walk through it first so players can see what is expected. This is the whole-part-whole concept.
7. Follow up demanding drills with free throws or less strenuous drills. Shoot free throw when fatigued to replicate game settings.
8. Simulate game conditions in practice so players are accustomed to these conditions. Use the game and shot clock to simulate various game situations.
9. Practice what you stress and believe in. Work on those things you will use in games.
10. Build conditioning into your drills to avoid excessive running after practice. Don’t make players dread the end of practice. Great teaching can be done at the very end of practice sessions.
11. Limit drills to 5-7 minutes. Half and full court team situations will take a bit longer, depending on your goal for that drill.
12. Explain the purpose of drills. Share with players the reason for drills and why they must be mastered.
13. Organize drills to minimize periods of player inactivity. Keep them constantly involved.
14. Stretching and warm-up drills should get players ready to practice and help avoid injury.
15. Meet with certain players before practice for needed individual or small group work.
16. Meet with your coaches before practice so that all teaching points and practice goals are understood.
17. Meet as a staff following practice to discuss how the practice went and identify things to be worked on or repeated the next day.
18. Construct a master practice plan for everything that needs to be covered throughout the course of the season. Break the master plan down into weekly and daily practice plans.
19. Consider the number of players, balls, and assistant coaches in order to utilize your facility to its fullest.
20. Use managers or student assistants as helpers in practice. Managers make great passers in practice.
21. Incorporate jump ropes, toss backs and blocking dummies into your practice.
22. The floor should be swept before practice and have towels and water available at courtside.
23. Use video tape equipment to tape practice so coaches and players can evaluate the previous day’s practice or scrimmage.
24. Include a saying or emphasis of the day on each daily practice plan and share it with your players
25. End each practice on a positive note. Team oriented drills give them a feeling of togetherness as they leave the floor.
Beginning coaches must devise a practical practice plan template that you can use daily. There are many ways to design your plan for optimal use and effectiveness. Select the practice plan that fits you and your staff’s needs best. As you organize your practices, attempt to stay with the original time allotted for each drill or activity.
Take your coaching one step further by writing notes or reminders after practice on the back of that day’s sheet. These changes, observations, and ideas may become a big part of your next big victory. They also come in handy when planning the next days practice and will provide insight into your own coaching for years to come.
Randy Brown has dedicated his life to the game of basketball. His 18 years in college basketball highlights a successful 23-year career. Coaching positions at Arizona, Iowa State, Marquette, Drake, and Miami of Ohio fill his resume. Mentored by Basketball Hall of Fame coach Lute Olson at Arizona, he learned the game from the best. At 39, Randy became the head coach at Division I Stetson University in Deland, Florida. His efforts have helped develop 12 NBA players including Steve Kerr, Sean Elliott, and Jaamal Tinsley. His passion for mentoring young coaches and developing youth programs is known and respected throughout the country. Over the years he has authored over 50 articles on coaching basketball and has taught over 24,000 young players in summer camps and clinics. He works as a basketball consultant and mentor for coaches. He is also an author and public speaker. Randy can be reached at coachrandybrown@yahoo.com.
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WELCOME
THE QUEST FOR THE RING BASKETBALL SCHOOL HAS BOTH VIDEOS AND LESSONS FOR BETTER BASKETBALL--YOU NEED TO READ LESSONS AND WATCH VIDEOS FOR BEST RESULTS
Welcome. The School has both videos and written articles on how to play better basketball. There are several video players at the top, just below this note. Each of these players has 50 videos loaded into it. You choose which ones to watch from below where the videos play. You will see the titles as you go through the 50 videos at the bottom.
Some of these videos are extremely valuable, free basketball instruction, But WARNING: Some of these videos are not serious. They are just jokes, and if you are a serious basketball player, you should skip the joke videos.
When a video ends, the next one starts playing automatically, but you can always stop one video and watch any other one by clicking on it. You will find that you can very quickly choose which videos you wnat to watch when you use these players.
Welcome. The School has both videos and written articles on how to play better basketball. There are several video players at the top, just below this note. Each of these players has 50 videos loaded into it. You choose which ones to watch from below where the videos play. You will see the titles as you go through the 50 videos at the bottom.
Some of these videos are extremely valuable, free basketball instruction, But WARNING: Some of these videos are not serious. They are just jokes, and if you are a serious basketball player, you should skip the joke videos.
When a video ends, the next one starts playing automatically, but you can always stop one video and watch any other one by clicking on it. You will find that you can very quickly choose which videos you wnat to watch when you use these players.
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To be the best basketball player you can be, you should both read lessons and watch videos, not only one or the other. Also, there are other very good basketball lessons sites listed in the right column, under the list of Quest Basketball School lessons.
Please note that when you read lessons in the reader, you will usually have to use the vertical scroll on the side of the reader to be able to see all of the lesson.
To read a lesson, simply click the title, or else the icon to the left of the title, and the lesson will appear right in the reader. You do not have to scroll anywhere to see it. When you are done, to close a lesson you have opened, click the title again, or the icon to the left of the title. The titles and the icons to the left are like on-off switches. After you close a lesson, the full list of lessons appears again, and you are now ready to make a new selection.
If you do not like the readers, you can also read lessons by scrolling down below the video players. Below them, the lessons appear, 4 of them on each page, in the order from most recent to oldest. There is an index of lessons in the right hand column. To use that index, click on the triangles to show the names of the lessons. Then click on the lesson you want, and a a new page will load, which will have that lesson on it. But the lesson will be below all of the video players, so you have to scroll down below the video players to see that lesson.
To be the best basketball player you can be, you should both read lessons and watch videos, not only one or the other. Also, there are other very good basketball lessons sites listed in the right column, under the list of Quest Basketball School lessons.
