In class we have been working on setting screens and discussing reading the defense in our 3 on 3 unit. Please watch the video below and answer the following questions. Each question is worth 2 points. Please make sure to write your name on your Blog.
1. When you set a screen, do you set the screen on a person or an area?
2. What are 3 things the offensive player can do when they are being screened?
3. When should you curl off of a screen?
4. What is the most important thing to do when coming off a screen?
5. How frequently is your team using screens during your game play? Have they been effective for your team?
20 comments:
1. When you set a screen, do you set the screen on a person or an area?
an area
2. What are 3 things the offensive player can do when they are being screened?
-back door
-curl hard
-bump
3. When should you curl off of a screen?
when you want the defender to follow you and leave the screener open
4. What is the most important thing to do when coming off a screen?
grab the screener so the defender can't cut through
5. How frequently is your team using screens during your game play? Have they been effective for your team?
not very often. They haven't been that effective.
Ann Li
Ben Blutstein
1.area
2.back door, curl, bump
3.when your defender follows you into the pick
4.grab the player who is setting the pick's hip
5.We use picks a couple times a game, and it usually results in a layup or an open three point shot.
1. You set a screen on an area
2. The offensive player can go back door, run a curl, or run a bump.
3. You should curl off of a screen when you grab the screener's hip to not let the defender through, but let the defender follow him. (pin the defender)
4. The most important thing to do when coming off of a screen is to read the defense.
Michael Tran
1. An area
2. Go back door, curl and run a bump
3. When the defender follows you
4. Reading the defense
5. We barely run screens because we are very fast paced.
Malcolm Amobi
1: Area
2: back door, curl, and a bump
3: when you want to pin a defender, and post up
4: reading the defense
5: not very often, but if we did, then they would be very effective
-Niko
1). An area
2). Back door, curl, & bump
3). When the defender follows
4). Open the shoulder that the cutter came off of
5). My team probably has done it both successfully and unsuccessfully, but I have not kept an eye out for this move before because I didn't know what it was.
Spencer Tritto
1.Area
2.Back Door, Curl, and Bump
3.when the defender follows you around the screen
4.read the defense
5.We have not been using screens, but we should try using them in the upcoming games
Justin Nguyen
Chris Vondas
1. You set the screen on an area.
2. Back door cut, curl, bump
3. When the defender follows you
4. Read the defense
5. My team doesn't set many screens, but they work when we do set them.
1. You set a screen on an area
3. Back door, curl and bump
4. If the defender follows you into the pick
5. My team doesn't really set a lot of screens, but when we do it usually crates a layup opportunity or an open jump shot
-Noelly Miller
1. You set a screen on an area
2. Back door cut; changing directions and make a layup, curl and bump
3. When the defender keeps following you, setting a screen is a good time.
4. The offensive player coming off the screen reads the defender
5. We don't set a lot of screens but yea
Angel, AP
1. Area
2. Back door, curl, bump
3. If the defender follows you
4. Grab the screener's hip
5. We set screens occasionally, both successfully and unsuccessfully
Mandla Johnson
1. An Area
2. Back door, Curl, and a bump
3. When you want to pin a defender, and post up
4. Reading the Defense
5. Not too often, but if we did, then they would be effective
-Krishn Sharma
1. we set screens on an area
2. Back door cut, hard curl, and bump.
3. you curl if the defender follows you even after the screen is set
4. it is important to read the defense when coming off the screen
5. we don't set too many picks, but when we do, we are able to get open for a shot.
Holly Hennessy
Jason Li
1. area
2. curl bump backdoor
3. defender follows
4. read defense
5. we do not use screens because my team is mostly guards and we can get away with catch and shoot
Sophie Lu
1. an area
2. back door, curl and bump
3. when the defender follows the player
4. read the defense
5. our team does not use screens very often, but they can be very effective during games
1. the area
2. back door, curl, or bump
3. when the defender follows you
4. read the defense
5. my team only setsbscreens so they have started to become very effective.
-Kamaal Kusow
1) area
2) backdoor, curl, bump
3) when the defender follows you
4) read the defense and curl on screens
5) only when we can't get open shots on our own. They're effective for us
Adrian guerra
area
backdoor curl and bump
when the player caomes to you
read the defense
we have done it 2 time and it is effective
eyob abeselom girma
1. Screen the area
2. Backdoor, curl, bump
3. If the defender follows you
4. Read the defender
5. We don't use them because we always find a cutter to the basket
1. When you set a screen, do you set the screen on a person or an area?
an area
2. What are 3 things the offensive player can do when they are being screened?
-back door
-curl hard
-bump
3. When should you curl off of a screen?
when you want the defender to follow you and leave the screener open
4. What is the most important thing to do when coming off a screen?
grab the screener so the defender can't cut through
5. How frequently is your team using screens during your game play? Have they been effective for your team?
No, they haven't really
Isaac Reich
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