A Ball, a Court, a Medicine Ball and a Plan
My coaching colleague challenged me to develop an off-season conditioning program for his team using nothing but a basketball court, balls and medicine balls, as this is all his club has available to him. As a youth, I basically had access to the same amenities, but never knew what to do.
So, the following are exercises to combine into a total body
workout for a basketball player using only a basketball, a court and a medicine ball (which you can purchase by following this
link). Developing a program using several of these exercises and moving in a circuit is a quick way to move through the
workout and create an element of aerobic training; I suggest doing each exercise for thirty second to a minute and moving quickly between exercises.
RUNNING Basketball is an anaerobic sport. Therefore, running anything more than a 400m is not sport specific. Every player needs a base of fitness, but interval training is a better way to acquire this fitness than long, slow distance training. Additionally, running with the basketball increases the specificity of the training. Rip Hamilton Drill Sprint from free throw line to free throw line dribbling the ball as few times as possible and shoot pull-up jump shots. Make as many as possible in 1:00. Full Court Lay-ups Sprint from end to end shooting lay-ups with weak hand. Make as many as possible in 1:00. 17s Sprint sideline to sideline. Complete seventeen trips in 1:00.
LOWER BODY Body Weight Squats Put hands on your head and keep back flat. Push back with hips and do a slow, full squat. Jump Squats Squat down. Push up explosively and jump as high as possible. Backboard Touches Stand under the backboard. Jump and touch the backboard as many times as possible in 1:00. Medicine Ball Jump Squats and Slide Stand on one side of the rim under the basket and start with medicine ball under the chin. Jump as high as possible and extend the medicine ball as high as possible. Land softly, with ball back to the chin, and push with outside foot to execute one slide to the other side of the rim. Jump and extend with the ball again. Land and push with the outside foot to return to the other side of the basket. Continue. Lunge and Press Stand with medicine ball under one’s chin. Step out with one foot to lunge and push the medicine ball directly over head. Push back to original stance and repeat with other leg. Hamstring Pulls Lay on stomach and bend knees ninety degrees. Partner stands over the athlete and pushes on the heels, trying to push the feet to the ground. Athlete resists the pushing and keeps feet off the ground. Side Kicks Stand with arms outstretched against a wall. Kick legs in and out (abduction and adduction). Stand on right foot and kick left foot out as high as possible (abduction) and then kick across in front of the body and across her right foot (adduction).
UPPER BODY Medicine Ball Overhead Throw Bend at the knees and hips, bring the medicine ball down between one’s legs. In one motion, push up with the legs and throw the ball overhead as high as possible. Side Throws Reach with the medicine ball all the way to the right as far as one can twist and then throw to partner to one’s left. Work both sides. Straight Arm Throw-in Keep elbows almost locked. Bend torso back and throw the ball as hard as possible with upper body. Chest Throws Place hands on the ball like one is setting a volleyball: two hands even pressure on the ball. Tuck elbows close to the body and push ball to teammate. Push-ups
AGILITY Two-ball T-Drill Start with two balls on the baseline in the middle of the key. Sprint and dribble to the free throw line. Slide to one elbow and then to the other elbow and back to the middle. Back pedal to the baseline. Lane Line Slides Start on one lane line. Shuffle from lane line to the other lane line and back. Carioca Step-overs (half-carioca) Just like carioca, but the trailing foot steps in-front; never behind. Box Drill Start on the baseline at the corner of one lane-line. Shuffle to the other lane line. Back pedal to the elbow. Shuffle to the other elbow. Sprint to the starting spot.
A good Shooting Coach, Skills Trainer and/or Performance Coach is like a golf pro or a pitching coach. These coaches are experts, understand teaching methodology and, most importantly, can answer "Why?" with a legitimate answer.
Basketball is more than a straight-ahead race; it is a dynamic sport, requiring an array of movement skills, as it is played quickly with numerous stops, starts and changes of direction. Pre-season training must incorporate multi-directional movement.
Before I knew Grabow, I knew "Grabow's Drills" as some are included in every coach's pack I've received. The Big Man Drills, around forty total, are conditioning, agility and post-specific drills that can be tweaked for the needs of an individual player.
We have a narrow view of youth basketball. When a businessman starts a fast food company, he studies McDonald's and replicates its model. When a businessman starts a youth basketball company, he copies the most profitable entities.
A few brief ideas on ways to help prepare young freshmen basketball players for the high school program.
Young athletes, especially young female athletes who play sports which require quick changes of directions and landing from explosive jumps (soccer, basketball and volleyball), must train to prevent injury first, and build to improving one's performance.
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