Saturday, November 28, 2009

Opening Day Success

Melrose ran out to a quick 10-2 lead and defeated host Wakefield 35-12 at the Galvin Middle School.

The coaches were pleased at the effort, but note plenty of areas needing improvement:
  • Rebounding positioning and blocking out
  • Running the lanes on the fast break
  • Advancing the ball with court vision to see breaking teammates
  • Avoidance of traveling off the dribble when stopping to shoot or pass
The next practice is Monday night at the Lincoln school.

The next game is next Saturday at Revere at the Beachmont Middle School at 2 p.m.

Anonymous quote of the day: "I watch more basketball than Doc Rivers."

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Opening Day



The fifth grade travel basketball team has prepared assiduously for the season, and open Saturday at 9:00 A.M. at Wakefield's Galvin Middle School on Main Street. On with the show, this is it.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Opening Game Vs. Wakefield, Saturday

"Failing to prepare is preparing to fail." - John Wooden

The girls continue to work hard preparing for their opening game at Wakefield on Saturday. In addition to ball handling, running, and defensive drills that are staples, the team continued to work:

  • Sideline plays
  • Out of bounds plays
  • Press breakers
  • Offensive sets (lines on a page) designed to promote spacing

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Training Tips


Practice technique and quickness.
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More drills.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Practice Reminder

Sunday, November 8th 2009

11:00 A.M. at the Common

Always bring a sweatshirt and water!

Take Home Lesson

Shooting Drills and Program

Taking It to the Next Level

By Ron Sen, MD

From time to time, we'll put up some information for reference. Coaches don't make you a player, you do.

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Becoming a talented offensive player requires many different skills, including ball handling, passing, moving without the ball, creating separation from defenders, and shooting. None require more individual practice than shooting. Shooting is the LEAST TAUGHT part of basketball. Included is a program developed from years of personal experience, coaching, and videotape review of premier college players, specifically Indiana’s Steve Alford. I’ve also copied some directly from the National Association of Basketball Coaches Manual. I got a lot of my instruction and beliefs from Sonny Lane, who is in the Wakefield High School Hall of Fame and Massachusetts Basketball Coaches Hall of Fame.

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Basketball is a voluntary activity. If you want to improve at basketball, studying, chess, checkers, or cooking, there’s only one way: PRACTICE.

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First, you have to understand that proper technique WILL NOT FEEL RIGHT to you at the beginning and RESULTS WON’T COME IMMEDIATELY. That’s okay.

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Shooting basics. The player must be in balanced shooting position, feet about shoulder width apart (the dominant foot is aligned with the basket), square to the basket, with the shoulder, elbow, and hand aligned to the basket. If the elbow flies out, the power of the shot will vary tremendously, causing shots to be either short or long. The opposite (guide) hand helps stabilize the ball. Basketball is played with the ball on the fingers, not the palm, and shots are released from the finger tips. The ball must be released with backspin.

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Ideally, preparatory for the shot the player will already be getting body positioned for the shot, AND receive the pass about shoulder high from which the shot can be released high with appropriate follow through.

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First, some words on free throws, from Paul Westhead, about the importance of mental imagery in sports.

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  1. Shoot five – physical practice
  2. Picture five – mental practice
  3. Close eyes picture five – mental practice
  4. Close eyes and shoot five – physical/mental practice
  5. Open eyes five – physical practice.

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I used to have the twins practice shooting free throws eyes closed…it works!

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General Shooting Background and Drills

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Here is a diagram of spots around the key for use in the shooting drills and shooting games. I believe that the most important shots in basketball and layups and free throws, which should offer HIGH PERCENTAGE scoring chances. However, competing at a high level requires skill from all areas. In practice settings we have to be able to make 70-75 percent of open shots from A through E, 7, 8, and 9. If we cannot make them in practice, it isn’t realistic to expect to make them in pressured situations.

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Drills and games:

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  1. Warmup: one-handed shooting. Stand in position 1 or 3 and make six consecutive one-handed shots with proper technique. Move to spots 4 and 6 and do the same. These should be made off the backboard using the square as a target.
  2. Around the World. In sequence, shoot from spots 1 through 10, and make the shot. If you miss, you can ‘challenge’ one time, and if you make, you continue. If you miss, you restart at one. When you complete ‘10’ you restart from ‘10’ and work backwards. The idea is to complete ‘The World’ in 20 shots and take as few shots as possible. Impossible? I’ve done it hundreds of times.
  3. Blind man’s bluff. Stand with your back to the basket, at A through E. Throw the ball over your head. When you hear the ball hit the ground, turn, catch, and fire!
  4. Bill Bradley: From positions A through E. You compete against “Bill Bradley” one of the great shooters of all-time. You get one point for each basket and Bill gets three when you miss. You have to make 11 and miss only 3 to beat Bill.
  5. Elbow Room. Setup a chair or trash can (defender) at each elbow. Have your partner pass you the ball at 7 (or 9) the elbows behind the defender…take 10 from each spot as quickly as you can – alternating side to side. Again the idea is to develop quickness, accuracy, conditioning, and confidence.
  6. H-O-R-S-E. You know the drill.
  7. ‘21’. Similarly, you know the game.
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Alford shooting workout. Best done with a partner. Develop quickness, accuracy and confidence.

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  1. Shooting in the key. 15 jump shots inside the painted area.
  2. 10 free throws. Make as many as you can.
  3. Shooting off the glass. 10 jump shots from 10-15 feet off the glass from the side of the painted area.
  4. 10 free throws.
  5. Outside shots – 15 jump shots from 15 feet
  6. 10 free throws
  7. Creative shots – 15 shots, create your own, off balance, off-the-dribble
  8. 10 free throws
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National Association of Basketball Coaches

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  1. Hustle shots. Layup. Sprint to foul line. Back to ball. Shoot. Back to ball. Repeat.
  2. Layups. Start at elbow. Power drive (one dribble) to basket on right. Layup. Speed dribble to opposite elbow. Power drive (left) for left-handed layup. Repeat on right.
  3. Wing-to-wing. (with partner)…Shoot from wing (B or D). Partner rebounds and passes to shooter at opposite wing (conditioning and shooting drill)
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This isn’t meant to be a complete or comprehensive guide to shooting drills, but we have to start somewhere if we want to get to the next level. Remember, the fun begins with skill mastery.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Team Roster

The girls have worked hard on developing fundamental skills:
  • Ball handling
  • Passing
  • Creating separation off both the dribble and the catch
  • Layups
  • Fundamentals of defensive positioning
  • Rebounding
We haven't emphasized either scrimmaging or shooting at this point. Incorporating fundamentals into coordinated team play will be an ongoing process over years.

Currently, we anticipate a base 42 game schedule, 26 in the Middlesex League and 16 in the River Valley 'A' League.

The Team

Chrysta Barbaro
Colleen Denning
Katie Donovan
Bella Federico
Leonora Ivers
Shannon Jones
Kaitlyn MacInnes
Gabrielle McDonnell
Anne Morrison
Caroline Nolan
Erin Reardon
Michaela Short
Catherine Torpey





- The best bloopers are a click away

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Introduction

Dear Basketball Parents:

We look forward to working with your daughters to help them successfully develop as student-athletes. In basketball, success comes through preparation, effort, and attitude to maximize skill, athleticism, and knowledge of basketball.

We will emphasize development of fundamental offensive and defensive basketball skills, intersecting physical training underscoring the DNA of Melrose basketball: the running game. These skills will serve them well as they prepare to compete in both the Middlesex League and the River Valley 'A' League, one of the best youth leagues around.

The program of instruction is not about the coaches or the parents, but about your daughters, helping them to achieve success through competition. When you are pleased with the progress of your children, let them know. When frustrations occur, let us know.

Travel basketball presents a journey, not a destination. Basketball has a role in your child's life, but it comes after family obligations and school. When accommodations are necessary, please let us know. In addition to meeting school and practice obligations, your children need to get adequate rest and dress properly for the cold weather basketball season. We encourage players to wear hats and gloves whenever the weather necessitates it.

Your daughters are a special group of young athletes who have the potential to succeed in all of their endeavors. We will help however we can to make that happen.

Sincerely,

Ralph Labella
Mark Pearson
Ron Sen

When I have a complete list of email addresses I will generate an email list for the group. This may help facilitate communication, ride sharing, etc.