
Quick summary
- Spacing beats panic before the ball is inbounded.
- Use the middle as a pressure release.
- Teach players when to pass forward, reverse, or hold.
A press break does not need ten options. It needs calm spacing, a safe inbound, one middle release, one reversal option, and players who know when to attack.
The press wants rushed catches near sidelines. Your press break should create catches facing the court with two passing options.
1) Space before the inbound
Use depth and width. One receiver comes to the ball, one stretches behind, one flashes middle, and one safety stays available.
2) Catch and face
The first receiver should not dribble into pressure. Catch, pivot, see middle, see sideline, then decide.
3) Use the middle carefully
A clean middle catch breaks most presses, but a lazy middle pass becomes a layup the other way. Teach pass fakes and strong angles.
4) Attack after the press is beaten
Once the ball gets ahead of the trap, look to score. If the advantage disappears, reset and run offense.
Need transition rules after beating pressure? Read the transition offense guide.
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