Bob Anderson- Williamsfield
This is a man to man set with multiple options.
#1 passes to the wing then makes a UCLA cut off #5’s screen.
If #1 is not open, they immediately go across and set a screen on #4.
If #4 is not open on the cut, the ball is reversed and on the reversal, #1 sets a cross screen again on #4. The defense has to defend a guard-post cross screen twice in a row.
Immediately after setting the cross screen, #1 goes up and sets a Backscreen on #5 for a lob pass.
The ball goes back to #1 at the top and the play can be run again if desired.
Evan Massey- Galesburg
This is a simple baseline ob vs zone defenses.
As the ref is handing the ball to the inbounder, the inbounder will stare at #1 in the opposite corner. We want a baseline defender to go out on them.
#4 cuts first to the ball, #5 cuts second off her. #5 wants to cut to try to pin the post defender on that side. #5 is usually the post who will be open.
If neither post is open, #3 will pass in to whichever corner is open.
#2 will shoot if open. If not open, #2 will dribble off the baseline, and pull their defender with them. #3 fills behind and we look to pass back to them for the shot.
This is one of my favorite End Line plays against a zone. It is pretty simple with some different options. 2 breaks to the corner with 4 screening the low man in the zone for a possible shot in the corner. However, the thing we would get from this was 4 slipping the screen for a layup. The inbounder needs to make a good overhead pass fake to the corner. The 5 man also needs to post hard to keep the middle man occupied.
If the first option isn't open, the 5 man slides up to the mid-post for a lob entry. The inbounder steps in to get a tip back pass from 5. We also had a call that we automatically used the tip back option
Coach Cooper was one of the best at not only developing great sets but identifying adjustments to make vs how the defense was playing. With these two sets, he shares two actions he ran to counter teams switching.
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