By adam.warner - Last updated: Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Pick up two competitive shooting drills from NBA coach Kelvin Sampson. These drills have been used in high school, college, and NBA practices alike and are particularly effective at the youth level as well. Add these shooting drills to your youth basketball practices to improve your players’ ability to score the basketball from anywhere on the floor.
Seven Point Drill
This is one of Coach Sampson’s favorite drills because you can compete against yourself. Each player starts with seven points. Players will start by shooting and if you make it, you are down to six points. Then you will sprint as hard as you can to sideline and then make a defensive slide back. Then catch it and shoot it again.
The goal here is to get to zero. Start by shooting from the elbows (just make sure you go to opposite elbows and sidelines each time). Players get 2 1/2 minutes to complete the drill and get to zero.
Cross, Change Direction, Pull up Jumper at the Elbow
Here’s a great drill for players to work on multiple skills at once. Have players dribble down on one side of the court, make a crossover move, change direction with the dribble, and shoot a pull-up jumper at the elbow.
Make sure players get one foot in the paint on those pull-up jumpers. Also, get one side of shooters and one side of rebounders. Start by dribbling with the right hand and then make the crossover and dribble with the left.
The previous clips can be seen on Championship Productions’ DVD ”Daily Dozen Shooting Drills for Youth Basketball” featuring Kelvin Sampson. To check out our entire collection of shooting-oriented DVDs, click here.
By adam.warner - Last updated: Wednesday, July 11, 2012
The following shooting drills are designed to improve any player’s ability to score on the basketball court. Overseen by legendary basketball coach Kelvin Sampson, these drills have been used in high school, college, and NBA practices alike and are particularly effective at the youth level as well. In addition to focusing on shooting and layups, each drill places an emphasis on fundamental aspects like passing, communication, and spacing the floor/balance.
4 Minute, 15 Second Shooting Drill
Here’s a tremendous continuous drill perfect for warm-ups. Whether at the youth or high school level, you can do this drill for as long as you want. Start by sprinting down to the baseline 3-on-0. The middle player should start his or her pass to the left side before dishing to the right side player for a right-hand layup.
As the right side person attempts his/her layup, the left side person continues to the elbow area for a jumper. Meanwhile, the middle player gets a jumper as well. Altogether, there will be a layup and two jumpers. Remember, two players always remain on the opposite end as passers. They join the drill on the way back as outside players. The middle person continues on (down and back) and doesn’t serve as a baseline passer.
An NBA team should make 110 shots in 4:15. Every shot counts. College teams should make between 105-110. As for the youth level, let’s find out. Attention Coaches: After running this drill, let us know how many shots your players made in 4:15. Comment below and leave your tally to compare with other teams around the country!
Two-Minute Shooting Drill
Put two minutes on the clock. Start by having your players go to four baskets with two balls at each basket. This is a competitive shooting drill designed to get players a ton of shots in a short period of time. Best of all, players get to compete while doing it.
Shoot two balls at each basket and start off at the elbows. Each basket will go up against the other remaining baskets. Whichever basket has the most made baskets at the end of the two minutes wins the drill. If you lose, the entire losing team hits the baseline for sprints.
Remember: Shoot the ball, get the rebound, throw it to the person behind you, and then go to the same line you came from.
Magic Elbow Drill
The Magic Elbow Drill works on players curling into shots. One of the best ways to get someone a shot is to come down the floor on transition and a player screens down on the weakside of the floor, opening up a curl, catch, and shoot for a teammate.
Put two players or coaches just inside the elbows (to ensure players always go around the elbow when catching and shooting). Simply, a passer feeds a shooter curling around the elbow for a catch and shoot. Shooters should always get their own rebound. Once you pass, you turn into the shooter and sprint out immediately.
The previous clips can be seen on Championship Productions’ DVD ”Daily Dozen Shooting Drills for Youth Basketball” featuring Kelvin Sampson. To check out our entire collection of shooting-oriented DVDs, click here.
By nate.landas - Last updated: Tuesday, December 7, 2010
We have recently released two new youth basketball DVDs featuring Dr. John Tauer. Tauer is the Assistant Men’s Basketball Coach/Offensive Coordinator and Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of St. Thomas. St. Thomas is the only NCAA team (out of 1,000+) to be in the top 10 in the nation for field goal percentage each of the past five years (2006-10). Dr. Tauer is also one of the country’s only full-time psychology professors who also coaches college basketball. For the past 16 years, Dr. Tauer has directed his own summer basketball camps, working with thousands of young players during that time.
Below are the two new basketball DVDs Dr. Tauer has produced in conjunction with Championship Productions:
A Hierarchy of Individual Skills for Youth Basketball
- Excellent age-appropriate, progression-based skills instruction
- Learn drills that are competitive, rewarding, and fun
- A great resource for parents and coaches
A Hierarchy of Advanced Skills for Youth Basketball
- An excellent teaching progression using a hierarchy of drills for advanced offensive skills
- Youth demonstrators allow you to watch the common mistakes and areas of challenge for young players
- Dr. Tauer’s experience as a successful college player, coach, youth camp director and psychology professor, make this one of the most insightful DVDs ever made
By nate.landas - Last updated: Friday, November 5, 2010
We have recently released two new basketball DVDs featuring Ray Lokar. “Coach Lok” has coached basketball at the youth, high school and college levels for 30+ years! He is the Southern California Lead Trainer for the Positive Coaching Alliance and director of the Basketball4All Foundation. Lokar’s new DVDs are titled:
Ray Lokar’s Fundamentals Factory and Practice Planning Set
Ray Lokar’s Fundamentals Factory for Youth Basketball
Ray Lokar’s Building an Effective Youth Basketball Practice
By nate.landas - Last updated: Thursday, October 21, 2010
Jerry Petitgoue, a 3x Wisconsin State Champion and 19x Conference champion, has recently released a feeder system for youth basketball. Petitgoue’s feeder system allows coaches at younger levels to run an effective practice that includes similar drills, systems, etc. to what will be ran at the high school level. His system has proven to be very successful and coaches all over the country have been looking for this topic!
The Championship Feeder System – Youth Basketball Practice for Grades 1-4
The Championship Feeder System – Youth Basketball Practice for Grades 5-8
The Championship Feeder System – Shooting Drills for Youth Basketball Practice