Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball


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As a beginning coach, I ignored warm-ups and employed half-speed two-ball dribbling drills as a warm-up for more intense activenesses for the duration of practice. When I moved to Sweden to coach a professional women’s basketball team, the players were married to their warm-ups and could not function without an extended warm-up period. When I practiced with the club’s men’s team, I felt like more than half the exercise was a warm-up. I acquiesced, in a sense, with my team: we arrived before our exercise time and players jumped rope for 5-10 minutes above the bleachers as our warm-up and then we did one sub-maximal drill on the court before moving into our practice.

In our initial game, our contestant expended 25 of the allotted 30 minutes of pre-game warm-up using a basketball. Later in the season, I watched another player go through an broad plyometric pre-game warm-up. While Americans criticize European players for their defensive deficiencies, the Swedish players’ defensive footwork impressed me. We in general assume that a foreign-born player with adept footwork formulated her footwork by playing soccer, but as I reflected on my experience coaching abroad, it appeared as though their pre-game and exercise routines concentered on footwork and led to it is development.

The following season, as I prepared workouts and exercise routines, I enforced a series of warm-ups to begin practice: drills to focus on footwork and jumping ability. Coaching women, the pre-practice jumping and agility program is an undertake to increase performance and reduce injuries, as researchers believe women may reduce the peril of ACL injury through a little plyometric routine.

I use three usual warm-up routines: (1) jump rope’ (2) stations or (3) full court dynamic warm-up (carioca, running backwards, bounding, lateral bounding, high knees, butt kicks and high/power skips). Our warm-up now lasts 10-15 minutes.


Warm-up Stations

When we do our station warm-up, we jog, backpedal and carioca. Since we have 10 players, we work in pairs. Our focus is to instruct quick changes of direction and first-step quickness.

Station 1: Mirror Drill (15 seconds on, rest for 15 seconds, 15 seconds on)

We instruct most of our on-ball defensive stance and motion through this drill and later in 1v1 drills. The players face each other and one player starts as the offensive player and one as the defender. The offensive player leads, moving laterally, and the defensive player tries to stay face to face. The offensive player’s goal is to give rise to space amid the two of them, while the defender tries to stay within the width of the offensive player’s body.

Station 2: Mikan Drill

The original player goes for 30 seconds and then the second player goes. Drill exercises baby-hook shots. Start underneath the basket and step out with the left foot on the right side to shoot with the right hand; grab the ball from the net, keeping the ball above your shoulders and step to the left side of the rim with your right foot, shooting with the left hand. Continue.

Station 3: Jump Squats

Squat and jump as high as possible, swinging arms high into the air. Focus on a soft landing so they land in the right manner from a vertical jump and absorb the strength of the affect all around the muscles of their legs, not just in the quadriceps and knee joint. Squat to a half-squat, with the bottom of the thighs parallel to the ground before jumping.

Station 4: X-Lay-ups

Make as a great deal of lay-ups in 30 seconds and then switch. Start at one elbow, dribble and try a lay-up. Rebound and run to the other elbow; dribble and undertake a lay-up from the other side. Continue for 30 seconds.

Station 5: Partner Shooting

Player 1 passes to Player 2 and closes out. P2 catches, shoots and follows her shot. P1 contests the shot and relocates, moving without disturbance and calling for the ball. P2 passes to P1 and contests shot. Partners shoot for one minute.

Station 6: McHale Drill

Left hand tips ball without disturbance versus the backboard while the right hand grabs the net (rim). Do six and switch to the right hand side. Right hand tips ball versus backboard while left hand grabs the net (rim). Repeat on the left hand side for a total of 18 tips. Switch partners.

Station 7: T-Drill with 2 Ball Dribbling

Set up the T-Drill with cones 5-7 feet detached in the shape of a T. Start at the base of the T and sprint forward while dribbling two balls. Shuffle to the left cone, then to the right cone and at last back to the intersection. Back pedal to the base of the T. Go three times and rotate. The other player exercises stationary two-ball drills while resting.

These quick drills provide a fast-paced warm-up that needs little instruction and insures the players break a sweat. Our focus is getting through the drills quickly: players sprint from station to station and exercise with intensity in each drill. The warm-up focuses on ball control (6 and 7), quick changes of direction (1 and 7), jumping (3 and 6) and shooting (2, 4 and 5), training a potpourri of attainments in a short amount of time.

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball Pic

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball Picture

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball Photo

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball Pic

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball Image

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball

Sports For Her Dribbling Basketball Image


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