Handling Various Basketball Game Situations -- 15 Dos And Don'ts For Game Time

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1. DO establish game time expectations and stick to them. For example, if a player is late and you've established that a late player doesn't play in the first half, then don't let them play in the first half -- even if they're your star player.

2. Don't yell at the referees. This gives your players permission to yell at them and it sets a bad example. Everyone, including referees, make mistakes. They're doing their best. If you disagree with a call, talk to the referee the way you would expect to be talked to if you made a mistake.

3. Do bench players for inappropriate behavior during a game. Inappropriate behavior on my team would be pushing a player, yelling at a referee, yelling at the crowd.

4. Don't let players get away with not doing their best. If your players are not giving 100% of themselves, then bench them until they're ready.

5. Do keep yourself in check and remember that you're dealing with youngsters. Yelling at them isn't going to get the results that you desire.

6. Do establish a time-out ritual. This means that your players know exactly what to do and expect during a time out. One suggestion is to have benched players make room for players coming off the court. This way they can towel off and grab a drink while they're listening to the coach.

7. Do call time outs to rest your players without making a substitution.

8. Do call time outs to correct problems with execution.

9. Do call time outs to call a special play for end of period or end of game situations.

10. Do call a time out to restore order if chaos is reigning on the court.

11. Do use halftime to focus on what the team is doing right and what they need to do in the second half.

12. Don't use half time to focus on the negatives. This only deflates the players. Be positive!

13. Do win with class and lose with dignity! Win or lose like you want the opposing team to win or lose.

14. Don't discuss tactics immediately after a game, save it for the next practice.

15. Do keep all conversations before, during and after the game positive regardless of the outcome!

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Coach S says:
4/13/2019 at 5:01:01 PM

Here is my issue with "equal" playing time with any youth sport. If you are lucky enough to have a team where every kid try's their heart out at every practice ,at every game and on their own time I am ALL for equal playing time! Regardless of skill!

However when I have a kid that lets just say is naturally talented but messes around at practice because they don't feel like they need to take this "easy" drill serious or have a bad attitude because one of their teammates turned the ball over or missed a shot. Or any other negative actions that are not in the best interest of the TEAM. Those kids earn extra time on the bench.

I teach you get what you give.
When a child comes to practice and says check this out coach, I worked every day after school and I can do that thing you showed me. That kid now receives the game time that entitled self proclaimed superstar child gave away.
If you give your all to the team the team will give everything it has to offer to you. You give nothing you get nothing.

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Joe Haefner says:
2/28/2009 at 8:56:40 AM

Hi John,

I believe you can condition while working on your basketball skills. Organize your drills, so you are pushing yourself and improving your basketball endurance. Remember, basketball is short quick bursts (5 to 30 seconds) usually with a slight break that amount of time. So set up your drills where you go hard for 5 to 30 seconds. Take a break and shoot a few free throws.

You don't have to do this the entire practice session. Maybe, the first half of practice, you are working on skills. While the second half, you are working on the skills at game-speed and pushing yourself.

Otherwise, if you want to condition separately I've seen people work up to being able to run 16 yo yo's in 16 minutes. You start each yo yo and every minute. So if it takes, you 20 seconds to run the first one, you rest for 40 seconds. If it takes you 25 seconds to run the second one, you rest 35 seconds.

You may want to gradually work yourself up to running 16 yo yos over a few months.

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Matt says:
4/10/2016 at 7:30:05 AM

Hi Jeff,

I think you are spot on recommending working on conditioning and basketball skills together. We use to spend 10 minutes or so each practice having the boys run sprints, suicides/guts/lines, etc. I coach at the youth level, and can say, not a single one of my players enjoyed the conditioning portion of practice. As soon as we would say “line-up”, you could see in the player’s body language the trepidation. Frankly, I don’t blame them.

So we eliminated conditioning drills in favor of drills that worked on both conditioning and basketball fundamentals. Instead of running sprints, we run a 3-on-2 2-on-1 Fast Break drill, as mentioned here https://www.breakthroughbasketball.com/drills/3on2on1-stevenash.html. The players love this drill! They get an excellent opportunity to work on fundamentals AND condition at the same time. In fact, they would do this drill forever if we would let them.

Based on my experience and more importantly, player feedback, I absolutely agree conditioning is best combined with basketball skills during practice.

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Michael says:
1/25/2015 at 6:02:41 PM

I have coached 6th grade boys for the past three years. This year, I moved to 8th grade girls.

The new varsity girl's coach is really concentrating on reestablishing our feeder system.

It was outstanding when she played. My wife played during that time as well. We've gotten away from it the past ten years or so and it shows.

With that in mind, I play everyone. Time is not equal by any means. I stress quality over quantity.

Our seventh grade coach scripts his time. I thought about doing so, but my team is just comprised differently.

It's doesn't work for me. Two of my four subs did not play last year and it shows. So, I need to get them in at the right time and situation.

It's to protect them and help with their success, as much as it is to help win.

Our numbers are down at the HS level...22 kids between Varsity, JV and C team. Some of the kids not in my main rotation (or the other middle school's rotation) may make the HS team.

They need to learn the system now, too. and they learn by playing.

Not talking tactics or negatives immediately after is a wise choice.

Our second game of the year, we were playing a 9-1 team and we are coming off a blowout loss back on the first game.

We hadn't played for a month, to the day, due to Christmas break and some cancellations. Our practice time had been spotty, as well.

Up by 4 with ten seconds to go and we had the ball in our front court.

I had a girl pull up and take a 15 footer. The ball got kicked around, we got called for a foul.

They hit the first FT, missed the second intentionally and kicked it out for a three at the buzzer. We lost in OT.

I saw she was going to shoot it, but was out of TOs. I' was yelling no shot, but she obviously didn't hear me.

I didn't mention the play until the next day, instead, concentrating on the good play that got us there,

I pulled her aside at practice and got about 4 words out, before she said "I know...."

She knew what she did wrong. It also gave me a chance to explain that I pulled her aside. because I didn't want to look like I was blaming her for the loss.

We missed three layups in the first. We committed a foul on the rebound. We didn't rebound the free throw, even though we knew a miss was coming. We didn't take care of the ball in OT after that same girl, my PG, fouled out.

Any one of those things could have locked up the win.

By waiting and doing it privately, you earn a lot of respect from players. Players who respect you, want to play for you and believe me....kids who want to play for you will win games against better teams, who don't feel the same about their coach.

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Joe Haefner says:
1/26/2015 at 8:46:42 AM

Thanks for sharing that story with us, Michael! That's an example that all coaches should follow.

Better to make these mistakes in 7th grade and learn from it.

It reminds me of this story:

http://www.breakthroughbasketball.com/coaching/need-you-most.html

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Frank says:
10/14/2008 at 10:46:18 PM

Somtimes when a timeout is called,the kids are expecting some great things for me to tell them.When I tell them some basic things some kids listen while others don't.I have two questions for timeouts and pregame talks.During a timeout should I have a lot of plays to run or should I just try to tell them to either be more agressive or hustle back on defense?Second what do you like to tell kids before they go onto the court to get them "pumped up "a bit?My personality as a coach is that I am soft spoken but have knowledge.I don't ramble on and on but maybe I end up not telling them enough.

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Joe Haefner says:
10/15/2008 at 7:45:37 AM

Hi Frank,

These are just my thoughts..

1. Plays - If you feel it is an opportune time to run a play, you could run one out of your playbook. I like to have a card or playbook with me to remember the play. You could go through the play step-by-step on a clipboard. Remember, make sure to only use plays that you have practiced before. Otherwise, your success rate will be much lower. I would avoid covering multiple plays. It probably would just create more confusion.

2. If you try to get your players fired up and it feels unnatural, the kids will usually see through it and it won't work. I would just advise to stay calm and assertive. Usually, kids are fired up enough.

3. You say that you may not tell them enough. Sometimes, I feel that when you tell them a bunch of things, it confuses them and they don't take in anything. I like to pick one thing and focus on that during the timeout.

As a player, I liked the calm and assertive coaches anyways.

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Mike says:
11/15/2008 at 6:00:26 AM

Frank,

Its always frustrating to call time out, go thru some key point and then see the exact situation come up when the game starts again but not have the kids execute what you went over. It is often at a time in the game that might make a difference as well.

I advise practicing time outs. Near the end of practice when all are a little tired, call time out. Show the kids where you want them to sit, stand, water, towel etc... Then call a play- inbounds plays are pretty easy, you probably have a couple different ones. Send them out on the floor and watch. If they do it, great, praise them and repeat. If not do it again. You can call time outs until they execute properly 5 in a row, or run a lap with an error or what ever you feel will motivate them to come to a central focus, listen, then execute. It will be time well spent.

As a coach it always feels very rewarding to insert some strategy at a time out and then see it pay off.

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bryan cox says:
12/6/2008 at 4:59:25 PM

At the 7th grade middle school program, do you believe the goal of the program should be developing players for high school or only about winning? If you have 8-9 players of comparative ability should you pick the best five and only play them in the close games or develop a substitution pattern where they all play?

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Joe Haefner says:
12/7/2008 at 12:21:26 PM

Hi Bryan,

This is my personal philosophy. I say play everybody in different situations. I am competitive and do want to win, but it's far more important to play everybody at this age.

Who knows who is going to be a late bloomer. Who knows who is going to quit the team. Who knows who is going to work their butts off in the offseason.

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SportNut says:
12/24/2008 at 9:59:11 PM

I absolutely agree with point #14 and #15. Don't talk tactics after the game and keep everything positive.

So many coaches want to immediately after the game analyze it for their players. Trust me, the players don't care, they just want to get on with their next activity.

I personally found that the best approach for my team was to highlight 1 or 2 positive aspects of the game (especially if they executed a skill we worked on in a recent practice) and then hop on the bus back to school.

At the next practice, I will pull the team together into a circle, have them mention 2 or 3 opportunities for improvement and 2 or 3 aspects of excellence from the last game.

Guess what, I already new what the 2 or 3 opportunities for improvement were, but by having the players articulate them, they became motivated to work hard on them during this practice.

Brian
http://basketball.youth-athlete.org

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smitty says:
3/4/2009 at 2:00:48 PM

Id have to agree about developing players for a higher level. Sometimes during the draft i look at more inexperienced players first, Giving myself a chance to feel succesful when i see 3 on the court as starters 5 years later in highschool. BTW i love your site

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