
Quick summary
- Man defense uses bodies; zone defense uses areas.
- Assign crash, balance, and safety roles on offense.
- The shot location predicts rebound location.
Rebounding changes depending on the defense. In man-to-man, players usually know who to hit. In zone, they must find bodies from areas.
Assign rebounding roles before the shot: who hits, who pursues, who protects balance, and who leaks only by rule.
1) Man defense: body first
The closest defender contacts the matchup, turns, and pursues. Guards cannot watch the shot; long rebounds often belong to them.
2) Zone defense: area then body
Zone defenders must step into bodies crossing their area. If they only stare at the rim, offensive players will crash through gaps.
3) Offensive rebounding roles
Send defined crashers, keep one or two balance players, and teach shot-location reads. Corner shots rebound differently from paint shots.
4) Practice pursuit angles
Rebounding drills should include contact, flight tracking, and second jumps, not only balls tossed directly to players.
Need the zone context? Read the zone defense guide.
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