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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’s breakdown looked at the evolution of the handoff, and how offenses are using earlier deliveries, changing angles, and secondary movements from the big to create cleaner advantages before the defense can recover. Read the newsletter HERE. This Week at a Glance:🔒The Practice Lab: More Ideas to Steal, Shape, and Bring to the Floor 🏀 YouTube Deep Dive: Attacking Hedge & Plug 🎧 Slappin' Glass Podcast: Dr. Andy Galpin on Sleep, Strength, and the Hidden Stressors of Performance 🥇 Best of the Week: Turnout Punch & Argentina Break But first... LAST CHANCE TO SAVE ON A SG+ MEMBERSHIP For coaches considering SG+, a quick heads up: for the first time since launching Slappin’ Glass five years ago, SG+ membership pricing will be updated beginning July 1. SG+ gives coaches access to our full teaching library, Practice Lab, Deep Dive articles, Coaches Corner community, and SG SoCal Summit live event + replays. Current SG+ pricing is available through June 30. Beginning July 1, membership pricing will increase to: Half-Year Membership: $149 → $199
More Ideas to Steal, Shape, and Bring to the FloorThis week inside SGTV, we’ve added another round of Practice Lab videos, with new installments on 🔒 Ready Ups, 🔒 Ballhandling, 🔒 Finishing, 🔒 Variable Shooting, and 🔒 Games. Each piece gives coaches a practical idea, constraint, or teaching environment they can adapt inside their own practice. That’s the point of The Practice Lab. A working menu of ideas to steal, shape, and make your own.
Every coach knows their own team best: their players, their league, their practice rhythm, their staff, their gym, their limitations. No video library replaces that. But it can give you new starting points. A different constraint to try. That’s where The Practice Lab lives. Not just: “What’s the drill?” But: What problem is this helping players solve? The Learning LoopOne Brick. One Takeaway. One Tinker. Each week, I’ll use this space to share three things: One Brick: something I missed, messed up, or had to work through. The idea is simple: show more of the work behind the work. Not just the clean clips or finished thoughts, but the misses, adjustments, failed assumptions, and small details that helped move an idea forward. So, each week: one brick, one takeaway, and one thing I’m tinkering with. BrickThis week, I was working with a group of players on using more change of pace instead of constantly relying on change of direction. The goal was simple: do more with fewer dribbles. We set up a 1v1 where the offensive player started in the backcourt and attacked a defender positioned near half court on an angle. They had eight seconds to create an advantage shot. My first attempt was to reward the behavior directly. Any drive that included a change of pace earned an extra point. It worked… a little. But after watching it unfold, I changed the constraint. Instead of rewarding change of pace, I limited the offensive player to a single change of direction. Almost immediately, the solutions changed. Players began attacking with their initial speed advantage. They became more intentional with their driving angles. Change of pace started showing up naturally. Shot quality improved. The game began producing the behavior I was looking for without me having to score it directly. TakeawayThis was another reminder that small changes to rules can completely change the landscape of a practice. By limiting change of direction, players had to become more efficient with space. They had to manipulate defenders earlier, preserve their momentum, and be more selective about when they used their one directional change. The lesson for me wasn’t that change of pace matters. I already believed that. The lesson was that sometimes the best way to encourage a behavior isn’t to reward it. It’s to design an environment where that behavior becomes one of the most useful solutions available. TinkerI’m still exploring when it’s better to reward a behavior versus when it’s better to constrain the alternatives. Both can influence outcomes, but they seem to shape learning in different ways. The challenge I’m working through is figuring out when to point players toward a solution, and when to reshape the environment so the solution has a better chance to emerge on its own. 🔐 Become an SG+ member to gain complete access to The Practice Lab today! Attacking Hedge & PlugOn are most recent Youtube Deep Dive, we took a closer look at one of our SG+ breakdowns on attacking Hedge & Plug coverage with the reject and Gortat screen {🔒}. This is a topic we’ve been tracking closely at Slappin’ Glass. A few years ago, Hedge & Plug felt like an incoming trend. Now, it feels much closer to a staple. More teams are using it, more teams are building out of it, and there is a good reason why. At its best, Hedge & Plug {🔒} allows a defense to pressure the ball without fully committing two defenders to it. The big can impact the handler, the guard can plug the short roll, and the rest of the defense can stay compact behind the action. That combination gives the coverage appeal for both aggressive and conservative defensive coaches. For offenses, though, the answer has often been too simple: move it twice, get to the second side, and attack while the big recovers. There is still value in that, but the best Hedge & Plug teams are getting better at sitting on those passes. They are staying home away from the action, trusting the coverage to handle the ballscreen two-on-two, and preparing their rotations for the obvious outlets. So the next layer is not just getting the ball out earlier. It is finding ways to create the advantage before the defense gets to its rotations. That was the center of our Deep Dive conversation: rejecting the hedge, attacking the plug defender’s “micro closeout,” and using the Gortat screen to punish the recovering big. Moments Of VulnerabilityIn our conversation, we kept coming back to two moments where Hedge & Plug is most vulnerable. The first is the guard’s disconnect from the ball. In a lot of great ballscreen coverages, the on-ball defender stays attached, fights over, and works back in front. Hedge & Plug asks something different. The guard has to leave the ball, even briefly, to plug the short roll. That small disconnect creates the window for the reject, or the dribble back away from the hedge, allowing the ballhandler to alleviate ball pressure and begin manipulating the passing angles. And while many high-level Hedge & Plug teams are built to take away the short roll the reject can reopen that pass in a different way.
The guard plugging the short roll is often responsible for eliminating that catch on their own. To do it, they may cheat toward the ball, trying to stay between the handler and the roller while taking away the passing lane. The problem is that the guard is not always fully connected to the screener. And because the screener is usually the bigger body, with a larger catch radius, the plug defender can get caught playing the space between the ball and the roll instead of attaching directly to the roller. When the ballhandler rejects the hedge, that positioning can suddenly put the guard on the wrong side of the action. Now the pass that looked unavailable on the original path of the ballscreen opens back up, not because the offense forced the short roll, but because the reject changed the angle. The second is what we called the “micro-closeout.” When the guard plugs the short roll, they often drop a couple steps toward the nail before recovering back to the ball. It is not a long closeout, but it is an awkward one. The defender is usually square, wide, and loaded toward the roller. Now they have to change direction and recover back to a handler attacking with momentum. These are the moment offenses are beginning to exploit.
Win The Race, Clear Some SpaceThat is where the Gortat becomes such an interesting answer. If Hedge & Plug is designed to take away the short roll, savvy offenses are realizing they do not always need to fight the coverage at the nail. Instead of the big wrestling for a short-roll catch in traffic, they can sprint through the lane, win the race to the front of the rim, and get to the right side of the recovering defender. With the guard rejecting the hedge and the plug defender stuck in that micro-closeout, the Gortat creates one more layer of separation. The big clears the path, the handler turns the corner, and the coverage that was built to stay two-on-two suddenly has to solve a much different problem at the rim. Boomerang ScreensAnother concept we discussed is the use of the "boomerang" screen, a secondary uphill ballscreen after the primary action.
Zooming In: In this action, the offense is baiting the defense into the coverage with the initial ballscreen. But instead of the big rolling through and filling to space, they roll short, forcing the defensive big into a two-way closeout to exploit in creating a drop or late lateral hedge on the rescreen. Executing that coverage once is hard enough. Executing it twice, in rapid succession, with the big needing to recover and re-engage, is a much different challenge. We thought this could become another layer in offenses efforts to create better advantage against the coverage. If the first action does not fully break the coverage, the second action may stress the same pressure point again before the defense can reset. At the top of the Deep Dive, we talked about Hedge & Plug as something more than a passing trend. It is now embedded enough in the game that teams are building variations out of it: different levels of off-ball protection, different plug depths, different hedge angles, and different amounts of pressure on the ball. Because of that, there is not going to be one magic answer. The coverage is evolving, so the offensive solutions have to keep evolving with it. And that is what made this discussion so interesting. View the full conversation available now on YouTube! Together with the NABC If you’re a basketball coach, you belong in the NABC community!The NABC is the leading professional development and advocacy organization for coaches, serving over 5,000 members across all levels of basketball. Why join? Members gain access to the NABC Convention and regional clinics, exclusive awards and mentoring opportunities, valuable discounts, and a voice in shaping the future of basketball. If you're serious about growing as a coach and staying connected to the game’s biggest conversations, this is where you belong. Become a member today and make your impact as a Guardian of the Game. Learn more HERE. 🎙Dr. Andy Galpin on Recovery, Readiness, and the Cost of Coaching DecisionsThis week on the podcast we were joined by Dr. Andy Galpin for a conversation on strength, sleep, recovery, travel, and preparing players to perform. In our wrap-up, we came back to a few coaching questions that don’t always get enough attention: how much are we asking from our players, when are we asking it, and what are the costs? A few thoughts from our recap...
Listen to the full conversation with Dr. Andy Galpin now on Slappin’ Glass.
Together with Hudl Teaching Through FilmFilm is one of the best teaching tools in basketball…if it’s clear and easy to use. With Sportscode and FastDraw, Hudl helps coaches turn video into teachable moments, pairing clips with concepts players can actually understand. Instead of wasting time jumping between systems, coaches can focus on teaching, learning, and development. Hudl makes film a better extension of how you coach. For a deeper look at how these tools can support a program’s workflow, we broke down how we used the Hudl suite to connect film, analytics, player playlists, and FastModel data around one season-long point of emphasis: improving assist rate. You can watch the full breakdown HERE. 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📺 Turnout Entry - Punch • Clear • Corner Exit "Clearing the passer to the rim to receive the exit screen from the post player." ✚ Pair With: Rim cutting the point guard after the entry pass to set up a corner exit screen out of the post. 🔒 SG Plus Content: Our Deep Dive Breakdown on attacking passer stunts in off ball screening.
🔒 Argentina Break - Twirl Screen "Catching the defense off guard with a twirl screen flowing out of the initial cross screen." 🔒 Pair With: The "Cyclone Action" within the Argentina Break. 🔒 SG Plus Content: Our Deep Dive Breakdown into other screening variations within the Argentina Break. Interesting Reads57. There are two red flags to avoid almost all dangerous people: 1. The perpetually aggrieved ; 2. The angry. 91. Human mood and well-being are heavily influenced by simple things: Exercise, good sleep, light, being in nature. It’s cheap to experiment with these. I want to make a specific distinction. Yes, some people are wiser, kinder and more experienced than others. But all of them, yes all of them, are flawed former children figuring out life for the first time. It’s not that biology isn’t real, it’s that the concept of what an adult is that we inherited from childhood is a delusion. 📚 Why You Should Seek Out a Few Minutes of Awe Every Day Awe doesn't just feel good in the moment. Researchers increasingly believe it can shape our mental health, relationships, and physical well-being. Just a few minutes a day is linked to less stress, anxiety, and depression; lower inflammation; less loneliness; and more generosity and connection, researchers have found. “I don't think there's anything you can do that's better for you than a few minutes of awe,” Keltner says. Quote of the Week
“A master in the art of living draws no sharp distinction between work and play; labor and leisure; mind and body; education and recreation. He hardly knows which is which. He simply pursues his vision of excellence through whatever he is doing, and leaves others to determine whether he is working or playing. To himself, he always appears to be doing both.” ― Lawrence Pearsall Jacks
Thank you for reading and have a great week coaching, Dan, Pat, Eric, and Drew info@slappinglass.com |
Exploring basketball's best ideas, strategies, and coaches from around the world.
Exploring basketball's best ideas, strategies, and coaches around the world Happy 4th of July Weekend! Welcome to all the newest subscribers from around the world! ICYMI: Last week, our latest Deep Dive conversation on attacking Hedge & Plug coverage, looking at rejects, short-roll angles, micro-closeouts, Gortat screens, and the next layer of boomerang re-screens. We also dropped a new round of Practice Lab videos, continuing to build out a practical menu of ideas coaches can steal, shape,...
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’s breakdown looked at using the wide reject as an ICE solution, holding the big in coverage while triggering layered weakside screening actions away from the ball. Read the newsletter HERE. This Week at a Glance: 🔒 SG Plus Content: Zoom DHO - Early Pitch & Slip 🎧 Slappin' Glass Podcast: Jeremy Shulman {UT Martin} 🔑 The Practice...
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 highlighted how blur drag screens help offenses stay in attack mode when a clean early drag angle is hard to find. Read the newsletter HERE. This Week at a Glance: 🔒 SG Plus Content: Outer Third Ice Solutions - Wide Reject & Screening Automatics 🎧 Slappin' Glass Podcast: SG Deep Dive: College Basketball’s NIL Economy & Its...