
Quick summary
- Every BLOB needs a safe release first.
- Use screens to create layups, not only jump shots.
- One counter is enough for youth teams.
Baseline out-of-bounds plays should create a good shot or a safe inbound. For youth teams, those two goals matter more than having a large playbook.
Build a three-play package: one safe inbound, one layup action, and one counter when the defense overplays the first option.
1) Give the inbounder a safety valve
Every BLOB needs a player flashing back to the ball. A turnover under your own basket is too expensive.
2) Screen for layups first
Use simple screen-the-screener or cross-screen actions to put a cutter at the rim before settling for a jumper.
3) Add one counter
If the defense jumps the cutter, slip the screener or pop a shooter to the corner. One counter is enough if players execute it fast.
4) Practice the inbound pass
The passer needs footwork, fakes, and timing. A good play fails if the inbounder telegraphs the pass.
Need rebounding roles after set plays? Read the rebounding guide.
Related resources
- Basketball academy management software - Commercial overview for tuition, attendance, registrations, and parent communication.
- How it works - Practical workflow for basketball academy operations.