www.lawlessrepublic.com BYU Men's Basketball stuns #3 Gonzaga on the road. Ends the longest active home game win streak in the nation. First win against a ...
College Basketball previews at //www.BookMaker.net/videos with Brian
Blessing and Tood Fuhrman. Updated basketball odds and lines break down for
the Jan 28 Monday college basketball games, from a betting perspective.
Minnesota Golden Gophers vs. Indiana Hoosier Pick Prediction College Basketball Odds 2-15-2015
The Basketball Drills You Should Not Be Running: Fake Fundamentals With Brian McCormick
LISTEN TO THE FULL PODCAST HERE: //bit.ly/1GEMCYo CLICK HERE TO BUY BRIAN'S INCREDIBLE BOOK: //amzn.to/1Fha20t Coach Nick sat ...
i love the three man weave. never really considered it a fundamental
though.
more of a 7 second or less fast break drill. instead of running in a
straight line dribbling the ball, you have three players passing the ball
at the same time running at full speed. catching the ball while running
tryign not to travel and at the same time giving your players a reason to
run at full speed during practice.
probably more of a fun way to keep your players conditioned more then to
build fundamentals. pass the ball, run at full speed, don't catch and
dribble, keep in mind that there might be a teammate in better postion to
score on an easy/uncontested layup.
---------
edit.
ok. i commented before Brian McCormic made his full comments ont he 3-man
weave. i'll just leave the comment on co-signing his view about
conditioning concerning the 3-man weave.
---------
edit-edit
ive been apart of a 3 man weave in a few pick up games more then once but
never in a real game though. not to my memory anyways.
one time there was one player where neither of wanted to finish so we just
passed the ball to each other in a playful manner to the point i stated as
i passed the ball, "Age before beauty" before one of us had to score. good
times.
+BBALLBREAKDOWN having two lines opposite of each other the players tend to move either closer to the middle or one side moves toward the middle while the other moves back alittle for catching and and passing. that drill always bored me. regardless. always loved the suicide drill for conditioning. rarely used to shoot while running those though just running back and forth in-between lines. besides have two line opposite of each other, no other passing drill comes to mind.
This is a really interesting take on fundamentals. I used to participate in
so many three man weaves and triple threat drills when I was younger, but
no one really questioned the drills. I have practically never seen a full
court 3 man weave in competitions. Time to rethink those old school drills.
Great breakdown as always!
what I hate the most is the call for walking. In USA bball, you see players
on the run travelling all the time, one, two and more steps before
dribbling. In Europe (and especially, the shitty level league I´m in, wher
it´s called ten or twenty times) calls for walking are made every game,
several times even. There should be a consensus for that.
I appreciate people wanting to advance the game of basketball but this guy
is really stretching the truth/context of situations. He must work for Fox
News lol.
No seriously, he just seems like yet another person trying to make it seem
like they are on to something new in order to gain fame or money.
+Coach I calculated it in a practice. We counted passes completed at an NCAA D2 practice and a 7th/8th grade practice. I write in the book about three-mean weave as conditioning. Not necessarily what I do, but at least there is a purpose. My problem is when you tell me this is passing practice or will make your players better passers in the game. Then, the players commit turnovers and the coach yells at them about how much they practice passing. My argument is that they don't really practice passing; certainly not with the same constraints as a game.
I know there's a built in skepticism about coaches from other coaches. But I can assure you Brian (nor I) are in this for anything other than helping players improve to their best ability.
+Brian McCormick I don't argue that there are better passing drills (on the move or stationary) than the 3 man weave. But the way you are presenting it in this video, its as if the kids will get nothing from the drill. I'm not sure how you calculated the 1.5 passes per player either. I have seen different variations of the drill the higher the level. I personally don't use the 3 man weave to teach passing, I use it as more of a conditioning warm up. Again I have no issue with you (or anyone for that matter) challenging the old philosophies or techniques. The guys at Pro Shot have done so and made me a believer. But seeing your list of drills was more telling to me. Your explanation on why the defensive slide and the two hand chest passing with thumbs down drills were pointless (or however you described them) was very situational. I know plenty of good defenders who move their feet very well and they stay low and wide. I also know a ton of really bad defenders who stand up, turn their hips and run. They usually end up on someone's youtube mix tape (or in the NBA lol).
+Coach Is there a better way to teach passing on the move? I would argue that there is. More importantly, what dictates a pass in a game? Are those same things present in the three-man weave? If not, how do you learn to pass under the same constraints that are present during a game? Furthermore, how many repetitions do players really complete during a three-mean weave drill? Most of the time is spent running or standing in line, not passing. Is that a good use of time, especially with youth teams that may practice for 2-3 hours per week?
+BBALLBREAKDOWN +Padooshka I don't completely disagree with what Brian McCormick is saying. In certain context he is correct. For instance no one runs a traditional 3 man weave on a fastbreak. But that doesn't mean the drill isn't useful in teaching how to pass on the move. In a real game you should/would throw more two hand passes with both thumbs down, than you would the other type of passes he described. In certain situations of course you're going to throw a wrap around, overhead, or one handed passes, but to say that jr. high kids aren't learning anything useful from throwing two handed passes with both thumbs down is ridiculous. Same goes for his defense. Sure you may have to completely turn your hips and cross step when guarding someone reall quick or someone full court. But proper technique (in slow mo or not smh) of staying low and wide will do a better job of keeping your man in front of you and stop you from ending up on your backside when they hit you with a crossover or snatchback.
How can you care about advancing the game of basketball and not appreciate this guy's contribution?! Have you not run hundreds of three man weaves and step sure drills?? I would've loved to play for this guy
I think you're way off on what u think his motivation is. Brian is trying to help coaches improve.
What a Heated Basketball Game Can Do to a Coachs Body
In this video you will find a few of the training exercises we use with our athletes to help build conditioning and develop individual strength before each w.
Duke Beats Florida State 78-56
Rodney Hood scored 18 points to help Duke beat Florida State 78-56 on Saturday, giving Hall of Fame coach Mike Krzyzewski his 900th victory at the school.