Exploring basketball's best ideas, strategies, and coaches around the world Happy Sunday! Welcome to all the newest subscribers from around the world. ICYMI: Last week we recapped the "Best of the Best" in our Summer Review. Get caught up on all you may have missed HERE. This Week at a Glance:🔥 Hiring Announcement: Eric Fawcett joins the Slappin' Glass Team! 🔒 SG Plus Content: Ballscreen X-Outs - Positioning & Execution 🎧 Slappin' Glass Podcast: Brook Cupps {Centerville} 📢 Dr. Dish Amazon Giveaway! 🥇 Best of the Week: Screen the Screener & Ghost Flares 📚 Interesting Stuff: Idaho Basketball Coaching Podcast & Run TMC Podcast Slappin' Glass Appearances! Let's dive in... The Good Ol' "X-Out"This week, we're spotlighting a key defensive X-factor: the "X-Out" rotation and its role in supporting the ballscreen coverage. While the concept itself isn’t new, a trend we’re noticing is the subtle shift in positioning to invite the corner skip pass—triggering the X-Out as a planned response, rather than a scramble. In a perfect world, a defense would only need minimal help on a ballscreen, relying solely on the two defenders involved to neutralize the action. But in today’s game, where guards are more skilled than ever and offensive systems more complex, staying in a shell for an entire possession is nearly impossible. (Though if your team can pull that off, we’d love to have you on the podcast!) What we’re seeing now is a shift from reactive to proactive coverages, not just in terms of the coverage on the ball but in how teams are positioning their help and tags around the ballscreen, dictating more than ever where the ball can go during the PNR. Through precise body positioning, clean rotations, and sharp hip angles, defenders are limiting the ballhandler’s kick-out options. The result? A more predictable offense, and a predictable offense is far easier to counter. Let's get into it. X-Out PositioningIn a two-side tag situation (when the ball is going away from the two-man side) teams are commonly sending the low man to provide early, aggressive help all the way to the midline. This allows the tag defender to fully engage the roller and hold their ground, knowing they are not responsible for the first pass out of the pick and roll. The top defender, meanwhile, slides to the elbow and flips their hips to be parallel with the sideline, a key detail in the coverage. With the low man committed to the roller, the top defender is now tasked with “splitting two.” Their priority being to position themself on a line between the corner shooter and the ball, forcing any skip pass to be floated, not fired. Zooming In: Notice the defender’s foot and hip angle. This stance allows the X-Out defender to better track the ballhandler and orientate themselves between the ball and the corner. Opening up to maintain vision on the ball enables a quicker reaction to the pass on the flight. X-Out ExecutionFew things scramble a defense more than a two-way closeout (when a defender first closes out to the ball or a cutter, then has to recover back to their own man) or when multiple defenders fly out at the same shooter after a kick-out. These breakdowns often stem from help coming from multiple positions, leading to confusion and overlapping responsibilities... While not impossible, see our breakdown on Coach Legname's PNR Coverage {🔒}, the high level of sophistication and length behind tasking both players to control the roll can leave either defender vulnerable to getting caught in a two-way closeout if their timing is not right and both players facing long closeouts on any pass out of the ballscreen. As offenses become increasingly adept at moving the ball out against aggressive coverages, defenses are adapting by clarifying responsibilities and shortening rotations by stressing the X-Out defender get early to the elbow, putting them in the best position to deter corner skips and/or arrive on the catch. Zooming In: Corner skips off a high PNR have challenged defenses for decades, but can become much more manageable when the defense anticipates it as the most likely option, and, crucially, is positioned to adjust and rotate accordingly. Watch as the moment the ballhandler gets to two feet and loads up to make a pass, the elbow defender immediately starts working his way to the corner. Sure, some of this is reading the eyes of the passer as well as his mechanics, but this is also a calculated maneuver based on what the defensive structure is allowing. This early movement to get to the elbow allows him to make an aggressive play on the ball and arrive on the catch and take away the middle drive. Slight Tangent but Relevant: This type of backside movement by the elbow defender is very similar to the backside rotations of what makes Joe Gallo's 2-3 Zone at Merrimack so lethal. As we discussed with him in our "Film Room Session" breaking down the zone rotations {🔒}, on an slot drive away from the top defenders (like above), the guards are taught to "not get their feet in the paint" and instead rotate to the backside elbow to read and steal in skip passes. Returning back to today's PNR X-Out rotations, on the flight of the pass, the low man immediately sprints back towards the wing to complete the X-Out, and can do this with confidence knowing that he only has one direction to go in this one-way closeout scenario. You'll also see him initially closing out to the gap as opposed to his man, which deters both the quick extra pass as well as the middle drive. Here's a look at that again... This clip shows two players executing a perfect X-Out that also had a great deal of aggressiveness looking for deflections, another positive trait of this structure. The early low tag and the open stance of the top defender ensures that both players have full vision of the ball which puts them in position to read the action, make decisions, and be playmakers. What can be an extremely challenging defensive rotation for a lot of teams is made much easier by this defensive positioning and creating a predictable X-Out scenario. Holding The Line Since the X-Out defender is functionally splitting two on the first pass, a common counter to this defense is the ballhandler stringing out the coverage and having an exaggerated fill behind. In this scenario, the X-Out defender must hold the line, staying low enough to deter the pass to the corner before recovering out to the fill behind. If the defender chases the fill too early or too high, they open up a clean pass to the corner, making a true X-Out nearly impossible. The discipline to hold the line and trust their ability to close out to the fill behind is essential. It’s worth noting that this two-side protection always pairs with an aggressive show on the ball as the primary coverage. Ideally, plays like these, where the ballhandler strings out the coverage and hits a simple fill, should be neutralized by the two defenders on the ball. If they do their job well, the coverage should contain the ball within the same third of the court the screen was set. Adjusting The Line With this X-Out positioning generally paired with an aggressive ballscreen coverage it is rare for the handler to get in deep, but if so (either on busted coverage or scout based) it is the responsibility of the elbow defender to adjust the line, or stay at the same level of the ball should it go below the free throw line... Zooming In: As you can see, the defender is perfectly positioned at the elbow, but begins to drop the moment the ballhandler gets a step beyond the free throw line. With so much traffic in the lane a primary pass to the 45 is unlikely, and the X-Out can begin with the elbow defender dropping towards the elbow. This defensive coverage shows how difficult rotations can be simplified through intentional positioning and clear assignments. By shrinking the number of viable passing options, especially on the backside, teams can create predictable outcomes that defenders are trained to anticipate and cover. For much more on Ballscreen X-Outs SG+ Members can now enjoy this week's newest deep dive on SGTV... Together with Dr. Dish Our friends at Dr. Dish Basketball want to hear from you! Share your coaching philosophy and thoughts right now and get entered for a chance to win a $100 Amazon gift card. Slappin' Glass Podcast🎙️ This Week on the Podcast: Brook Cupps, Head Coach — Centerville High School (OH) Known for his deep work on leadership, identity, and building self-disciplined teams, Coach Brook Cupps has led Centerville to state championships and developed a clear voice around what matters most in coaching. In this conversation, he shares how clarity, humility, and truth shape everything he does. Here are three big takeaways from the podcast this week: 🔍 1. Clarity Over MotivationCupps doesn’t believe in coaching through motivational tactics. Instead, he builds through clarity—of standards, habits, and identity. “If your team needs to be motivated, you’ve already lost. What they need is clarity.” 🧩 Key Insight: Clarity isn’t what you say before the game—it’s what you’ve built every day before it. ⚖️ 2. Discipline Isn’t Control—It’s OwnershipRather than micromanage, Cupps teaches his players to make decisions through a shared set of values. The goal is internal control, not external force. “I’m not interested in controlling kids—I’m interested in helping them learn to control themselves.” 🧩 Key Insight: Discipline doesn’t come from rules. It comes from standards players take personally. 📉 3. Tell the Truth, Even When It HurtsCupps speaks about the importance of telling players the truth—even when it risks discomfort or playing time. “If I tell a kid he’s playing well when he isn’t, I’ve just lied to him. And if I do that enough, he won’t trust me when it matters.” 🧩 Key Insight: Trust is built through honesty, not harmony. For much more from Coach Cupps, including thoughts on Motion Offense listen to the full episode here...
Together with Hudl Hudl Powers Every PossessionIf you’re already using tools like FastDraw, FastScout, or FastRecruit—you know how essential they are to your workflows. And now that they’re fully part of the Hudl ecosystem, they’re more powerful than ever. From film and play diagrams to scouting reports and custom recruiting boards, everything flows together. One system. Built for high-performance programs. Learn more about Hudl and their variety of products or subscribers to Slappin' Glass can also directly email Winston Jones of Hudl at winston.jones@hudl.com. Tactical"Back-to-back Screen the Screener action to loosen up the help, shift the coverage, and free a big for the layup." ✚ Pair With: A double drag RIP series with a screen the screener exit and/or pitch to ballscreen exit. 🔒 SG Plus Content: Our deep dive into the Argentina Break and the options that flow from the cross screen. 📺 Ghost Flare - DHO • Delayed Flare "A creative wrinkle out of the ghost flare action. After the ghost screen, instead of immediately flowing into the flare, the ballhandler plays a DHO, adding a layer of misdirection and timing to the flare screen." ✚ Pair With: Creating a short corner ballscreen off the UCLA screen to facilitate an advance pass and chase into a Ghost Flare. 🔒 SG Plus Content: Our breakdown of how the Ghost Flare can be used to revive stalled possessions. Interesting Reads & Stuff🎙️ There are some terrific basketball podcasts out there, and we want to thank a couple of them who invited us on as a guest the past couple of weeks. You can listen to both below:
📚 Extraordinary Lessons from Sport that Apply to Life Too It means the ability to meet the moment with presence, flexibility, and a next-play mentality. It means staying in the game. It means giving your all. It means responding instead of reacting. It means caring deeply. It means laying it all on the line. It means coming up short. It means exceeding expectations. It means doing all of this while staying grounded, maintaining respect for your competition, keeping your head up, and continuing to show up as best you can. 15. Invest in slow growth 16. The problem with the race to the bottom is you might win 17. Uncomfortable facts are often the most helpful ones 18. A good deal is better than a big deal Quote of the Week
“And I urge you to please notice when you are happy, and exclaim or murmur or think at some point, 'If this isn't nice, I don't know what is.” ― Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
Thank you for reading and have a great week coaching, Dan and Pat info@slappinglass.com We're proud to partner with the leading Sports Travel company in the basketball world, Beyond Sports! Follow the link above to learn more about why more than 600 universities have trusted Beyond Sports for their team's foreign trips. Let them know Slappin' Glass sent you! |
Exploring basketball's best ideas, strategies, and coaches from around the world.
Exploring basketball's best ideas, strategies, and coaches around the world Happy Sunday and welcome to all the new subscriberss from around the world! ICYMI: Last week, we dove into Part 2 of our "Film Room" Series with Cal Poly SLO Assistant, Kyle Bossier. This is one of our favorite "Film Room" sessions of all-time, as Coach Bossier lays out everything about Cal Poly's dynamic offense. This Week at a Glance: 🥇 2025 Mid Year Summer Review 🎤 Slappin' Glass Podcast: John Patrick...
Exploring basketball's best ideas, strategies, and coaches around the world Happy Sunday! Welcome to all the newest subscribers from around the world. ICYMI: Last week, we dove in to Part 1 of our Cal Poly SLO film room session with assistant coach Kyle Bossier who laid out the foundations of their "4 Out, 1 on the Move" offense. Part 1 focused on the spacing, cuts, and stampede techniques they utilize in order to create high percentage driving angles. Read Part 1 HERE. This Week at a Glance:...
Exploring basketball's best ideas, strategies, and coaches around the world Happy Sunday! ICYMI: Last week, we released our latest Modern Game Truths collaboration with The Pro Lane on Perception Speed. Read the newsletter HERE. This Week at a Glance: 🔒 SG Plus Content: Cal Poly SLO - 4 Out, 1 on the Move {Part 1} 🎧 Slappin' Glass Podcast: Francesco Tabellini {Paris Basketball} 📢 Hudl + FastModel 🥇 Best of the Week: Horns Alignment & Stagger Screening 📚 Interesting Reads: How to Become the...