The team with the most runs wins. To play this game, all the players must spread out on a line on the court baseline, sideline, three-point line, etc. One or two players will be the designated taggers.
Players who are not taggers will each have a basketball. Each player has to remain on a line at all times throughout the game as the taggers attempt to tag the other players who are not "it.
If a player who is not "it" gets touched by a tagger, steps off of a line or losses control of their ball, they are "out" until the next game. The last person who has not yet been tagged is the winner and the game restarts with the last one or two players to be tagged starting as the taggers. How low can you go while dribbling a basketball? For this game, two players hold a long stick or pole while the rest of the players form a single file line behind them. Players take turns dribbling under the limbo pole, holding their bodies lower and lower every time.
The pole should start out at shoulder height and move down with each round, after every player has had a chance to go through. If a player can't control the ball and make it under the pole, they're out of the game. The player who is able to go the lowest wins. Divide your group into two or more even teams.
Line up the players at a point just beyond their shooting comfort zone. This could be at the three-point line or half court. Set the clock for 10 seconds, and see how many baskets each player can make before the next player moves into position for their 10 seconds on the clock.
The player with the most baskets wins. Divide your group into two or more teams and have each group form a single file line behind the baseline.
Each team will have one ball, and the first player in line will dribble as fast as they can, while controlling the ball, to the opposite baseline or half-court line and back. They will then hand the ball off to the next player in line on their team who will in turn run their leg of the race. The first team to complete the race and get back to the baseline wins.
More Basketball Articles. Look for this banner for recommended activities. Cancel Yes. Join Active or Sign In. The most important thing you can do as a coach is to choose to be deliberate and intentional with each single decision you make in practice and in games. Structure is necessary whenever you are trying to corral children into learning a new sport.
You want these athletes to get better and to see improvement in ALL of your drills. This will go a long way towards setting your athletes up for success. Positive reinforcement try using positive affirmations for your players too is a big piece of the puzzle, particularly at the youth levels of this sport.
The odds are pretty good that later down the line they are going to get quite a bit of negative reinforcement as they move through their basketball lives. By all means correct what needs to be corrected with your young athletes. But try to do so in as positive and as encouraging a way as possible. Let them learn the hard lessons through losses that are inevitable rather than adding more to their plate and potentially discouraging them from the game of basketball altogether. They did all of this just to get incrementally better than they already were.
At the same time, all of these legends of the game and the coaches they had at the highest levels continue to drill down on the fundamentals for a reason. The basic elements of the game and the mechanics necessary to make shots from anywhere on the floor with confidence are what separates good players from great players. Kobe is famous for getting to the gym way before anyone else sometimes staying up late at night to put up shots or more because he understood how important it was to continue knocking down shots every chance he got.
He wanted to keep ingraining the muscle memory of those fundamentals. A little bit of one-on-one at every level is always going to be competitive, fun, and energetic. At the whistle, the objective for the minnow is to dribble from one baseline to the next without ever having their ball knocked away or stolen from them. As soon as they get down the court and back they are to shoot a basket from anywhere on the floor until it goes in.
Each player will be given a basketball and will be challenged to dribble from one baseline to the next with one hand dominant or offhand. Players will then race back and forth with one another while trying to steal the basketball from the other player. Have each player face one another without being able to change positions as they go up and down the court. This will force one player to always be moving backwards and another to be dribbling towards them. If both players are able to successfully complete a lap to both baselines they then have breakout to half-court as quick as they can.
This drill basically mimics the exact same pregame warm-up drill used by legendary three point sharpshooter and NBA Hall of Famer Ray Allen. Begin by having the shooter take a shot from underneath the basket just to the left of it while the other player tries to defend that Shoppe. Move out from underneath the basket in five incremental stations only after a basket is sunk all the way until you hit the three point line.
Make sure that there is always a defender trying to block the shot. After the shot at the three point line has been made start back underneath the basket on the opposite side. Then start running through the same five incremental stations with the defender trying to block shots every time all over again. This is maybe the most basic of all basketball games designed to help players hone their shot.
Players are going to learn how to move quickly, shoot under duress, and shoot from awkward angles. Break the teams into two different groups. One at a time, students will pick a spot and attempt to make a shot. If the shot is made, they can take that poly spot back to their team. The game ends when all poly spots are taken. The team with the most spots will win the game.
Different Variation: For younger students use coated-foam balls instead of basketballs. Your email address will not be published. Sign up to receive the latest physical education resources, activities, and more from educational professionals like you straight to your inbox! Holiday Police: Stop the Grinch! Climbing Can be FUN! ROCK in ! What is Physical Education? Valeri Cheseldine. She is passionate about promoting health and wellness, promoting school-wide engagement, and encouraging the community to participate in school-wide events.
In being proactive with her passions she hopes to inspire others to lead a healthy and physically active lifestyle. Leave a Reply Cancel reply Your email address will not be published.
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