Quote:
Originally Posted by
holybich 
do NOT "run." as a person suggested above. running is aerobic exercise, which slows you down (do I have any evidence for this? no, but I heard that the average marathon runner has a vertical leap of 20 inches. the NFL tests vertical leap of all draft prospects because there is a major correlation between vertical leap and speed.
do sprint workouts instead. basketball players do not run up and down the court in games, they sprint up and down the court.
I agree with crossovers+layups, and 10 minutes a day of just ball handling. If you are lazy like me learn to shoot. but ball handling is always a priority, once you are good at that you can keep playing pickup games.
^^^
Don't agree with that at all. You need to have pretty damn good cardio to play basketball at a high level. I've always incorporated running into my training (as have all of my coaches and trainers). I don't train like I would for a marathon, but doing some extra 30 or 40 minute runs has always helped my basketball. Doing sprints is great training as well, but to tell someone to not run is pretty ridiculous. Watch an NBA game or college game. Unless its a fast break, they aren't sprinting.
Also, some general tips for better basketball (some of these might have been covered already..):
On defence:
-Force your man in the direction of his weak hand when he drives
-Watch his chest or stomach when he has the ball (you won't get caught with head fakes or ball fakes)
-Instead of trying to block the ball, try to block his vision when he's shooting.
-BOX OUT WHEN SOMEONE SHOOTS - then go after the rebound
-Never forget help side defence - if your teammate get beat, closest guy rotates over, and everyone else adjusts.
-Call screens and bump the cutter
On offence:
-Move without the ball - things like going to the corner when someone drives baseline can make the difference between a turnover and an open jump shot.
-Set screens
-Go after every rebound unless you're the last guy back
-Don't force bad shots. Take whats open, but if it's not there, find the open guy.
Training:
-Take a lot of shots, but take them at game speed. Shooting practice should be at the same speed/intensity as game situations.
-Practice dribbling - stationary dribbling, crossovers back and forth down the court, two ball dribbling, dribbling while sprinting, etc, etc.
-Eat well, get lots of rest, and lift weights (you could go into great detail about weights/plyos/etc, but at this point, just getting out and playing is more important. Being a bit faster, or jumping an inch higher won't help if you can't shoot or dribble).
-Play 1 on 1 to work on your skills. Try to play someone better than you so you can learn from them.
-Play as often as you can.
Again, sorry if some of this has been covered already. Keep us posted on your progress.