bearister said:
"….. the coach and his staff are trying to teach it to kids who have not concentrated on defense while growing up."
SFCB, the next thing you are going to tell me is that the AAU system doesn't fine tune fundamentals like defense and passing. Have you no common decency, Sir?
Under the Allocco Regime at DLS, he focused so much on defense that they kept opposing teams under 50 points frequently (and yes, playing the Princeton Offense was part of it).
The kids in the program spent so much time in the defensive position under his tutelage (including as boys in his summer Greenline program) that many came out of the system with blown up hips and knees (think Theo Robertson and Beau Levesque).
I should have been more clear. When wrote about kids "growing up", I was referring to the years prior to high school, from 1st grade through 8th grade. When I played those years, in the 1950s, there was some organized basketball for the Catholic kids with school teams and CYO teams (which also included some non-Catholics). The City Parks and Recreation Dept had playground summer leagues for kids. The Boys' Clubs had 4 branches, and a league for kids. The public junior high schools all had teams, and they played in a league for them. All these teams had "coaches" (probably a parent who volunteered), and junior high school league was probably the only place where a kid might get some coaching. Except for the Catholic players, we all arrived in high school with out knowing much of anything about playing defense, or team play on offense. The Catholic kids, by virtue of playing 8 years of organized ball, under some form of coaching, some better than others, arrived in high school already knowing some defensive fundamentals, and they shared the ball on offense more readily than the rest of us.
Today, there is theoretically, at least, better coaching at the grade school level than when I was learning to play. You know much more about AAU than I do, I'm sure, but it comes with a price tag. I have cousins whose children participated in soccer and track and field, and were very good athletes. They traveled to many other states to play games or have track meets. They all had coaches, whose profession was to teach kids to play sports. They were on a track to become good enough to have a chance to be offered a scholarship to play in college. This required making recruiting videos, and often a professional was hired to do this. All of this came with a hefty price tag, which was paid by parents. This means the kids from affluent families had an edge over the poorer kids. Are there scholarships available to the poorer families for their kids to play AAU ball?
As I said, I don't know much about these leagues for young kids. I've never been to a game. The first time I see a Cal recruit is when he plays in a game at Cal. I've said this many times before, but I see lots of recruits who don't play with discipline, who don't have some basic fundamental skills, so something must be lacking, if they are getting all this experience and coaching prior to arriving in college. I played in high school, and we had good defensive teams when we had a good coach, and not very good defensive teams when we had a lousy coach. The good coach drilled us continually on defense. When I used to watch the Bears at practices in 1959, every practice contained a slide step drill. Players formed two or three rows, and had an assistant coach, who was like a drill instructor. The defensive stance was a crouch, weight on the balls of your feet, back straight, head up looking straight ahead, arms away from the body, one hand up, the other hand down. Then players were told to take slide steps to the right as a group. Then the coach called out to take slide steps to the left, as they moved left, they were told to switch arms, with left hand up, and right hand down. Then he said to take steps forward, then take steps backward. Then they repeated the whole sequence. The coach would call out any player who was raising up out of the crouch, or any player who lowered either of his hands. If a player made many repeated mistakes, he might be sent off to run up to Grizzly Peak and back. The whole drill would last 20 minutes, and sometimes 40 minutes. The players were exhausted after these drills. They hated them. They played man-to-man defense, never zone. They were the best defensive team in the country.
All that may not be applicable today, where all defense is help defense, and it has to be, because of rule changes now favoring the offensive players, trying to stimulate scoring. But when I see kids arriving at Cal, who look like they have never heard of proper defensive stance, or slide steps, and many of them have had the opportunity to get coaching at grade school level and high school, I wonder why that is.
You know more about today's youth basketball programs, so why do you think they don't seem to have or use basic skills?
SFCityBear