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Why the USA has Fallen Behind in
Basketball Supremacy
By Coach Randy Brown
The comment I hear all of the time is "what
happened to the USA in basketball." Even the uninterested basketball fan
knows that America has slipped quickly in the world basketball race.
Why is a good question because most people just don't get it.
The answer is simple, yet I could write about this topic for days. The
plain truth is that the European coaches are doing a better job than our
coaches. When I say our coaches, I include myself in that group. We have
been out-coached in a vital area of the game.
Fundamentals! These fundamental skills of passing, catching, shooting,
rebounding and playing together as a team came from the early days of
James Naismith and the peach basket. Ok, so what's the problem, you say.
The problem is that the Europeans NEVER got ahead of themselves and NEVER
put an individual above the team. They stayed committed to fundamental
skills and drills. They call it training sessions while we call it
practice. Our misfortune is that we often "practice" parts of the game
that require mastery of the games' fundamentals. We go too fast and
attempt to teach "the whole game", as we fail to adequately develop player
skill and knowledge along the way.
When 4th graders cannot pass from point A to point B successfully, the
needed skills of timing, passing, and catching have not yet developed.
This is natural for 4th graders. The mistake lies in coaches that do not
spend the needed time to develop these simple skills. The inpatient coach
spends time on fundamental skills BUT does not commit to the mastery of
each skill. What happens next is a simple check next to passing and
catching on the practice plan. "Well let's see, we've been in this drill
for 5 minutes, let's move on to something else. Let's work on our diamond
press or amoeba defense." Too often the coach is anxious to put in plays,
schemes, and presses. Are you kidding me?
During the 1990-91 season, I saw the Detroit Pistons practice under the
direction of Chuck Daly. What I witnessed the day amazed me, but left me
with a powerful lesson. This championship caliber team spent an hour on
pass, catching and layups! Can you imagine Joe Dumars, Isaiah Thomas,
Dennis Rodman, Vinnie Johnson and Bill Laimbeer passing and catching for
an hour straight. "Ok guys, now work on the bounce pass!" Well they did
and I was there to witness it. I wrote down on a piece of paper, "Never
sacrifice the fundamentals of the game," as I visited briefly with the
legendary coach after practice. By the way, that team was 50-32 during the
regular season and lost to the Chigao Bulls in the Eastern conference
finals.
Here's the ULTIMATE test: Would you turn your teenage son or daughter
loose on the open highway before learning the "fundamentals" of driving?
Would you sacrifice knowledge and application of vision, pedal control,
steering, speed, familiarity with the road for some fancy 2-wheel turns or
a Starsky/Hutch power brake move? The answer to both questions is no! Then
tell me why we disregard the necessary fundamentals in our game of
basketball for the sake of advanced skills and tactics. Coaches, we are
slowly ruining the game we know and love as the European coaches have a
lock on teaching the game.
I'm not sure about you, but this makes me furious. How about you? We can
talk about the Olympics and the USA head coach or player selection all we
want. These things won't make the difference. The difference maker is a
no-brainer. A serious, renewed commitment to teaching the game the right
way, one skill at a time.
I commit to do my part from this moment forward and I hope you'll join me.
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