Community | 3 contra 2

The point guard who can only pass. The center who can only post up. The shooting guard who can only score. These specialists are increasingly obsolete. Modern basketball rewards players who can do multiple things, defend multiple positions, and fit into various lineup configurations.

The Death of Traditional Positions

Why positions are changing:

Switching defence: When teams switch all screens, every player guards every position.

Spacing demands: Five shooters on the floor requires shooting from everyone.

Playmaking: Ball handling and passing from all positions creates offensive advantages.

Matchup hunting: Versatile players can exploit whatever advantage presents itself.

Skills Every Player Needs

Regardless of size or position:

Ball handling: Every player should be able to dribble under pressure.

Shooting: Three-point range, at minimum catch and shoot, ideally off the dribble.

Passing: Court vision and the ability to make the right pass.

Defence: Ability to guard on the perimeter and in the post.

Basketball IQ: Understanding spacing, timing, and team concepts.

Developing Bigs

Traditional big man skills aren't enough:

Perimeter shooting: Stretch fours and fives who can shoot threes.

Ball handling: Attacking closeouts, making plays in short roll situations.

Passing: Playmaking from the post or high post.

Perimeter defence: Ability to switch onto guards and close out on shooters.

Developing Guards

Small players need post skills too:

Post defence: Technique to compete against bigger players when switched.

Rebounding: Boxing out and pursuing despite size disadvantage.

Post offense: Taking advantage of smaller defenders.

Physicality: Strength to absorb contact at both ends.

Youth Development Implications

How this affects coaching young players:

Don't specialize early: Let kids play multiple positions.

Skill development for all: Every player works on handles, shooting, and passing.

Size doesn't determine role: Tall kids need guard skills. Small kids need post skills.

Movement over size: Athletic, mobile players are more valuable than just big players.

Team Implications

Lineup flexibility: Versatile rosters can adjust to any matchup.

Defensive switching: Everyone can guard everyone without exploitable weak links.

Offensive flow: Any player can make plays, creating unpredictability.

Key Coaching Points

  • Traditional positions are increasingly obsolete
  • All players need ball handling, shooting, passing, and defensive versatility
  • Bigs must develop perimeter skills; guards must develop post skills
  • Youth development should avoid early position specialization
  • Versatile rosters create strategic flexibility

Drills for Versatile Development

VIEW ALL BASKETBALL DRILLS

JOIN SPORTPLAN FOR FREE

  • search our library of 650+ basketball drills
  • create your own professional coaching plans
  • or access our tried and tested plans
Antonio Rodrigues Coach, Cape Verde

DESCRIPTION

Estamos numa situação de contra-ataque. A primeira coisa que o jogador com bola deve fazer é girar a cabeça e olhar à volta. Deve conduzir a bola pelo meio para verificar se vêm outros jogadores de ambos os lados para conseguirem fazer 3 contra 2. Ao chegar no ponto assinalado tem que fazer o passe para um dos extremos para tornar o contra-ataque em 2 contra 1 contra o defesa posicionado mais abaixo da tabela. Os extremos devem temporizar o contra-ataque com o driblador, começando a entrarem para a tabela apenas quando estiverem na extensão da linha de lance livre e ao mesmo tempo que o driblador estiver no topo da linha de 3 pontos. Após um dos extremos receber a bola, deve fazer com que o defesa reaja. A maneira ideal é atacar a tabela para finalizar com lay up se o defesa não se compremeter com ele. Se o defesa comprometer-se com ele deve então fazer o passe para o outro extremo para este finalizar com lay up. O passe deve ser feito assim que o defesa mais recuado mexer um músculo, evitando efetuá-lo sob pressão. O defesa mais recuado deve atacar o primeiro passe e o mais adiantado deve atacar o segundo passe e assim sucessivamente. Os dois têm que estar alinhados em paralelo para defenderem o 3 contra 2. Ambos devem tentar impedir o lay up e conceder apenas o lançamento, que é a última opção disponível no contra-ataque. Conceito: early help - early pass; late help - late pass Fonte: FIBA drills – Coach Brendan Joyce – Simple drills for developing juniors - minuto 8

COACHING POINTS

Quem concretizar ou falhar o lançamento vai para a defesa. A defesa passa para o ataque. Apenas são permitidos no máximo 3 passes no exercício. O exercício pode ser adaptado para os jogadores fazerem o exercício de 8, mas com 5 jogadores, e o jogador que efetuar o passe e o que concretizar ou finalizar o lançamento devem recuar rapidamente para a defesa para defenderem o 3 contra 2. Não é necessário repôr a bola desde fora no caso de finalização com sucesso.

This practice has no coaching points

PROGRESSION

This practice has no progressions

READ MORE
READ LESS

JOIN SPORTPLAN FOR FREE

  • search our library of 650+ Basketball drills
  • create your own professional coaching plans
  • or access our tried and tested plans

JOIN SPORTPLAN FOR FREE

  • search our library of 650+ basketball drills
  • create your own professional coaching plans
  • or access our tried and tested plans
;

Sportplan App

Give it a try - it's better in the app

X
YOUR SESSION IS STARTING SOON... Join the growing community of basketball coaches plus 650+ drills and pro tools to make coaching easy.
LET'S DO IT