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Speaker AHello and welcome to the 82nd edition of the Coach's Corner Roundtable on the Hoop Heads Podcast.
Speaker AEach episode of the Coach's Corner Roundtable will feature our all star lineup of guests answering a single basketball question.
Speaker AA new Coach's Corner Roundtable will drop around the 15th of each month.
Speaker AOctober's roundtable question is what's your philosophy on building an effective transition offense and defense?
Speaker AOur coaching lineup this month includes Dominic Amorosa from Strake Jesuit College Prep, Jake Boyd from Luther College, Eric Bueller from Arapaho High School, Stephen Halstead from Grace College, Mike Kahler from Elkhart Lake High School, Bob Krasancik from Menor High School, Raul Plesares from Maryville College, Chris Richardson from Wheeling University, Don Showalter from USA Basketball, Kevin Snyder from Cherry Creek High School and Mo Williams from Salisbury University.
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Speaker ALet's hear from our panel about how they build an effective transition offense and defense.
Speaker ADominic Amorosa, Strike Jesuit College Prep in Houston, Texas Dominic Amorosa, Head Basketball Coach at Strike Jesuit in Houston, Texas Key to effective transition offense is teaching guys to win the first three steps both offensively and defensively.
Speaker AI think once you got guys committed to winning their race going down and back, you can build from there.
Speaker AOffensively, we want to throw the ball ahead as much as we can.
Speaker ADefensively, we want to load to the ball side and communicate, talk and point.
Speaker AAnd that's my philosophy.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AJake Boyd from Luther College.
Speaker AThis is Jake Boyd with Luther College, answering this month's Roundtable question.
Speaker AWhat's your philosophy on building an effective transition offense and defense?
Speaker AOur philosophy on building defensively in transition is probably fairly standard in wanting to sprint back and stop the ball, but might differ slightly as we also simultaneously aim to cover certain areas we designate as the most essential pieces of our half court scheme for that particular opponent.
Speaker AFor example, we played a really good big last year and wanted to double him each possession, so we wanted two specific guys to run back, find him and position themselves accordingly with no other specific responsibilities.
Speaker AOffensively, our philosophy is dictated by our defensive philosophy, so we're more measured, but we want to attack with great spacing from wide angles that make for easy scoring opportunities at the rim, aiming also to avoid overpassing.
Speaker AI really like a rule Coach Showalter shared of not making more passes than the number of defenders you're facing in transition.
Speaker ASo I stole that.
Speaker AThere are so many ways to be successful in transition, but I think your personnel always plays a huge part in your philosophy on transition.
Speaker AI'm excited to hear everyone else's thoughts on this.
Speaker ABest of luck to everyone as the season begins.
Speaker AThanks always for having me guys.
Speaker AEric Bueller, Arapahoe High School, Centennial, Colorado hey, what's going on, hoop heads?
Speaker AThis is Eric Bueller at Arapahoe High School and this month we were asked what our philosophies are in building our transition offense and defense and on the offensive end.
Speaker AI think it's paramount that you get kids to believe in running the floor hard and looking to run and trying to create running opportunities every chance they can.
Speaker AI think that's just hard to instill in kids and to create a new habit with them.
Speaker ASecond is being comfortable playing in space.
Speaker AI think a lot of kids grow up and they run sets or they run half court offenses and they don't quite understand how to use the the full length of the court to their advantage or how to gain an advantage in transition.
Speaker AAnd then the next thing we do on offense is we encourage playmakers to get to spots.
Speaker AIf you can get a kid that can create a head and you can pitch it ahead to them.
Speaker AWe always like those one on one opportunities or two on one opportunities with our best, most skilled players in transition.
Speaker AAnd then if you want to get in the nitty gritty of it, you just, you can get a lot of great offensive looks by adding the rim runner or some ghost screens or a trailing ball screen or transition automatically into pin downs.
Speaker AAll of those Type of actions with flow and pace can be really deadly on the offensive end.
Speaker ADefense, I feel, is a lot simpler.
Speaker AIt's not quite as hard to instill in kids, but obviously you kind of look to see what you can get away with rebounding on the offensive end.
Speaker AIf you're a tag up type person, which we've done at times when we had really good guards that could rebound, we had some height that could create tips and deflections, loose balls coming off the glass, we would send four or five guys, sometimes the glass to create extra opportunities for us.
Speaker AOther years when we knew we didn't have kids with that type of mentality or that ability.
Speaker AYou have one back or two back, depending on who you're playing, what the scout is game by game.
Speaker ABut typically you have your point guard or the person that's farthest back, they get back and they kind of help build that wall and help communicate what needs to be done in that defensive transition look, just some things we've done over the years.
Speaker AThanks for having me on again, guys and look forward to talking to you again.
Speaker ABye.
Speaker AStephen Halstead from Grace College.
Speaker AHey, this is Stephen Halstead from Grace College tuning in for the Hoop heads Roundtable, number 82.
Speaker AAnd this question this week is regarding what your philosophy on building an effective transition offense and defense is.
Speaker AAnd this is one thing that we feel really passionate about at Grace is we have really excelled in our transition offense the last few years.
Speaker AA lot of it has been personnel based.
Speaker AWe've had a lot of really good players that operate best in transition where they just have space.
Speaker AAnd the way that we're able to build an effective transition offense and defense is first and foremost, we do something with it every single day.
Speaker AIn practice it is.
Speaker ANormally you warm up in practice, you do your dynamic, you do some finishing, passing, shooting drills, and then you get into live play.
Speaker AAnd we're playing 10 to 15 minutes out of a transition segment every single day.
Speaker AAnd with that you're going to get a lot of reps with.
Speaker AHaving the advantage is typically how we'll set it up.
Speaker AOffense will have an advantage and you're trying to just make the right reading decision and get good looks.
Speaker AAnd defensively, it's a lot about just effort.
Speaker AI think getting back, hustling in and getting back and keeping the ball in front is such a key part of building an effective transition defense as well.
Speaker AMike Taylor from Elkhart Lake High School in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin.
Speaker AMike Kaler, head boys basketball coach at Elkhart Lake High School in Wisconsin in transition offense.
Speaker AWe generally want anyone who gets the defensive rebound to push the ball up the court and have a sprinting rim runner to put pressure on the rim and then sprint to fill the corners to expand the defense.
Speaker ANow, given how an offensive possession may start, that may not always be possible with a rim runner, in which case we still want to sprint the floor to five out.
Speaker AThe general goal is to try to create an advantage within the first six to seven seconds of the possession, whether an entry pass into the rim runner to collapse the defense or creating an advantage through ball screens, dribble handoffs or other actions and then playing out of those advantages.
Speaker ADefensively, in addition to the standard sprint back and have each player get their butt facing the baseline within four seconds or so, we try to limit the opponent in transition even before the possession begins by quality shot selection and by crashing the boards.
Speaker ABob Krasancik, Mentor High School Mentor, Ohio Coach K Mentor High School Offensively and defensively Philosophy Offensively, we never want to let the defense set or we never want to play 5 on 5.
Speaker ADefensively, we want to trap and force the quickest, lowest percentage shot possible.
Speaker AIn practice we use the shot clock 7 seconds, 6 seconds where offensively we want to get a high percentage shot off within that amount of time and defensively we want them to get a shot or we want to get a turnover.
Speaker AWe've led the state probably seven out of the last 10 years in scoring.
Speaker AIt's not about scoring, it's about just doing all the little things.
Speaker AThe hustle, the intensity, the fundamentally sound program that we are.
Speaker AAnd if everything goes right, we will score a lot of points.
Speaker AWe will win basketball games and that definitely is our philosophy.
Speaker AThanks coaches.
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Speaker AThis is coach Raul Placerus, Maryville College head coach.
Speaker AOur philosophy on building an effective transition offense and defense?
Speaker AWe'll start with transition offense first.
Speaker AI think it's just taking advantage of numbers using Our speed to create high percentage scoring opportunities, it's important to make quick decisions and capitalizing on numerical.
Speaker ANumerical advantages.
Speaker AI think again, conditioning is paramount in the fall to get ready for game play.
Speaker ACommunication and execution are critical, especially to avoid turnovers as you're playing a fast pace offense.
Speaker AOn the defensive end, I think it's about rapid recovery, neutralizing your opponent's fast break.
Speaker AI think it starts with sprinting back, protecting the paint and forcing the offense to tougher decisions without fouling.
Speaker AI think that's critical, avoiding fouls and transition and giving easy points up.
Speaker AStrong transition defense for us, you know, it's about anticipating, it's about disrupting rhythm and we just got to be aligned.
Speaker AWhether you're a pressure man to man or you're covering gaps, whatever it is, got to do it at a high level while you are also fatigued.
Speaker AI think transition basketball, I think speed and conditioning, like I said, are very important.
Speaker AIt's a race.
Speaker AOffensive players must sprint, beat defenders down the floor and take advantage of mismatches.
Speaker AOn the defensive end, it's about beating the offense to the paint and protecting the basket.
Speaker ASo those are keys in transition.
Speaker AAgain, decision making under pressure I think defines success.
Speaker AWe try in our program, we thrive on quick, smart reads.
Speaker AWe better know when to attack, pass and pull back when needed.
Speaker AAnd it's about making split second choices to the best of your ability.
Speaker AOn the defensive end, communication is critical and I think it's important for the point guard to establish that from the beginning.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ACommunication creates proper and clear trust.
Speaker ASo that's important to us.
Speaker AWe'll drill it a lot in practice and then, you know, having a team that from a spacing and a versatility standpoint, create the flexibility and what you can do.
Speaker ASo those are things that we try to do on both sides of the floor.
Speaker AI think for the most part is emphasizing the preparation of those things, the awareness and the adaptability of the things you do on offense and defense.
Speaker ASo appreciate the opportunity and wishing everybody the very best as the year starts.
Speaker AChris Richardson from Wheeling University.
Speaker AThis is Chris Richardson, head men's basketball coach at Wheeling University, answering this month's roundtable question.
Speaker AWe'll start with transition offense.
Speaker AThe same thing that we look for in a half court offense, which is optimal spacing and creating an advantage.
Speaker AIt's the same thing we look for in transition.
Speaker AAnd the beauty of transition is you have the entire court to work with.
Speaker AWe want to take advantage of that.
Speaker AWe want to put the defense in situations in transition where they cannot stop the ball and close out to the next pass.
Speaker ASo whatever we have to do from a spacing standpoint, there's a number of things we look for.
Speaker AThat's what we're looking to do.
Speaker AThat's what we drill.
Speaker AThat's what we work on.
Speaker AThat's what we drive home every day that we work on transition.
Speaker AYou know, we want the defense in a situation where no matter what they do, we have an answer they're never right.
Speaker AAnd we drill this eight seconds at a time.
Speaker AWe feel like we can get a great shot in eight seconds in transition if our spacing is right and we've taken, you know, taken the advantage and run with it.
Speaker ALike I said, offense is all about creating an advantage and transition.
Speaker AYou automatically have an advantage once you get to.
Speaker AOnce you get the rebound because you have more people converting than they have back.
Speaker ASo create that advantage, keep it, and then punish it.
Speaker AThat's our whole key offensively.
Speaker AA ball handler needs to look ahead.
Speaker AWho has the best opportunity to attack space.
Speaker AIs it you?
Speaker AHave they not stopped the ball?
Speaker AIf they haven't stopped the ball, it's still you.
Speaker AWhat about a teammate?
Speaker AAre they loaded up to the paint so much that if you kick it ahead, we're either going to attack a long closeout or get a rhythm 3.
Speaker AThose are the things that we're thinking about in transition.
Speaker AAnd then if we do push it, do we have a matchup advantage?
Speaker AWe know going into a game who we want to attack.
Speaker AWe're not going to hunt that.
Speaker AWe're not going to slow our offense down just to look for, you know, the guy that we want to attack or the multiple guys we want to attack defensively.
Speaker ABut if we see that in transition, we certainly want to exploit it.
Speaker AWe drill everything in an advantage, disadvantage situation.
Speaker ASo four on two, four on three, five on three, five on four.
Speaker ASomebody wins every possession.
Speaker ALike I said, it's only eight seconds at a time, one possession at a time.
Speaker AAnd then we go back the other way.
Speaker ASay the red team was on offense.
Speaker ANow the red team will be on defense, you know, at a disadvantage.
Speaker ASpeaking transition, defense, offense is all about attacking space.
Speaker ADefense is about shrinking.
Speaker AHow can we shrink the space to hold down the fort until we are evenly matched?
Speaker ANumber one is take great shots.
Speaker ABad shots are outlet passes for the other team.
Speaker APoint blank period.
Speaker ANumber two is pickup point.
Speaker AWhere can we responsibly stop the ball?
Speaker AWe're not going to turn the guy loose by picking it up too high, and we're not going to get too deep to where we're stopping the ball at the free throw line or inside the three point line and we never have an opportunity to get back to five on five.
Speaker ASo what is that responsible pickup point?
Speaker AThat's something we work on a lot in the preseason.
Speaker AAnd again, we drill in a disadvantage.
Speaker AWe want to win those first eight to 10 seconds offensively, really the first eight seconds.
Speaker AAnd then defensively we want it to be a lot quicker than that.
Speaker AWe want to be back within four to five seconds so that we can get matched five on five and play as much five on five as possible on the defensive end.
Speaker AA couple other thoughts.
Speaker AAgain, if your transition defense is struggling, look at three things.
Speaker AShot selection, pick up point and then no man's land.
Speaker ANo man's land to us is people that don't crash but they don't get back.
Speaker AThey're kind of stuck there in the middle of nowhere, just loitering around in no man's land.
Speaker AWe're a very aggressive offensive rebounding team.
Speaker AWe're not real big, but we're aggressive on the glass and that could put our transition defense at risk.
Speaker ABut we're big on charting what we call do your job.
Speaker AIf you're a rebounder and you don't go, you know, we mark it down.
Speaker AIf you're a get back guy and you either crash or you stay in no man's land, we mark that down.
Speaker AWhen you grade it out.
Speaker AWhen you look at the overall percentage of the time that we do our job really correlates to success.
Speaker AThe games that we have a high do your job rate, we're successful in the games that we don't typically are not.
Speaker AWhat gets measured gets done.
Speaker AHope this was helpful.
Speaker ADon Showalter, USA Basketball hi, Don Showalter here from USA Basketball and my philosophy on building an effective transition offense and defense, first of all, it starts with your team.
Speaker AYou know, if you're going to have a really good offensive rebounding team that will take care of a lot of your transition defense and you don't have to send as many people back.
Speaker AIf you're going to be a poor offensive rebounding team and the opposition is going to get a lot of defensive rebounds, you probably need to send two or maybe even three players back on defense to stop the in defensive transition.
Speaker ASo I think kind of depends on your team.
Speaker AIf you're a really good rebounding team, I would crash four guys to the boards and get one back and go from there because they really offensive rebounding you have is is your best defensive transition as far as transition offense, I think again, it depends a little bit on your team.
Speaker AIf you have really good players that can take the ball off the board and power dribble out or down a court, that is really the fastest way to start your offensive transition.
Speaker AWe always run two people, the corners on each side.
Speaker AWe like to get that court spread out.
Speaker ASpacing is really important.
Speaker AThree things we look for in an offensive transition are we want layups, of course.
Speaker AFirst, second thing we look for is, is free throw.
Speaker AGet the free throw line.
Speaker ASo be aggressive going to the basket.
Speaker AAnd the third thing is uncontested threes.
Speaker ASo those are three things that we really look for on our offensive transition.
Speaker AThank you, Kevin Snyder from Cherry Creek High School in Greenwood Village, Colorado.
Speaker AHey, Mike.
Speaker AKevin Snyder here from Cherry Creek High School boys basketball in Colorado.
Speaker AThis month's question is what's your philosophy on building an effective transition offense and defense?
Speaker AStarting offensively, I first look at the level of talent that I have compared to the rest of the league.
Speaker AIf I have more talent, I'm going to play faster.
Speaker AThat's a Goliath strategy.
Speaker AIf I have less talent, I'm going to play slower.
Speaker AThat is a David strategy.
Speaker AThink North Carolina versus Virginia.
Speaker ASecond thing I'm going to look at is personnel.
Speaker AAm I playing 3 out, 2 in, 4 out, 1 in, 5 out in the half court?
Speaker AThat will determine where I want my guys running in the full court, what spots they need to go to to flow into half court offense.
Speaker AAnd then third and final thing is just personal philosophy.
Speaker AYou know, my own beliefs about transition is going to influence how I'm going to set up running lanes and where guys are going to go and what secondary actions, if any, we're going to run on the defensive end.
Speaker AFirst thing I think about is how many guys am I sending to the offensive glass.
Speaker AThat's going to determine rules and roles for guys on defensive transition.
Speaker AAt the high school level, you got to get really good at protecting the rim.
Speaker AThere's not as many three point shooters.
Speaker ASo we make sure that we run back to the paint and then match up from there.
Speaker AOur communication has to be on point.
Speaker AAnd then last but not least, the area between the two free throw lines is the racetrack.
Speaker AThat is a race against the other team.
Speaker AWhether it's transition offense or transition defense.
Speaker AYou're trying to beat your man down the floor in the racetrack.
Speaker AAll right, Mike, be well and go Bruins.
Speaker AMo Williams from Salisbury University.
Speaker AHi, this is coach Mo Williams from Salisbury University.
Speaker AI'm here to answer the roundtable question for this week.
Speaker AHow do we build an effective offense and defensive strategy?
Speaker AWell, I think number one, what we really want to focus on is before anything, anything we do, it has to be based on what fits with the players that we have.
Speaker ASo every year, based on the recruiting and the players that we get, we're really focused on how we want to play on both sides of the floor.
Speaker AWhat I'll say is I think it's very important that both sides of the floors have to match.
Speaker ASo if you're going to be a fast pace offense, you have to play and do some things defensively to speed the other team up to create some of those.
Speaker ABut I'll tell you, for us it's rooted first into the players that we have and recruiting to it.
Speaker AThe second thing is just making sure that on both sides of the ball it matches.
Speaker AAnd then the third thing is being convicted that it works even when it's not going well.
Speaker ACoaching with conviction that it works.
Speaker AThe last point of what we try to really do is after we have that conviction and believing that it works, so the players see it and hear it from us as coaches, we have to have very tangible evidence that it works and how they can improve.
Speaker ASo that's where we'll build our analytics and what we track based off of those things.
Speaker ASo if we're playing fast, how fast do we want to play?
Speaker ACan we track it?
Speaker AAnd then defensively, what are ways that we can create turnovers and how can we track it?
Speaker ASo I'm a firm believer of what gets measured gets improved.
Speaker AIf you believe in it, it works.
Speaker AIf you have the right players, it works.
Speaker AAnd lastly, if it's balanced on both sides of the ball, it could be effective.
Speaker AThanks for checking out this month's Coach's Corner Roundtable on the Hoop Heads Podcast.
Speaker AWe'll be back next month with another question for our all star lineup of guests.
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