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The Five Steps to Becoming a Great Basketball Shooter

Tuesday, April 1, 2008 by Alan son

Shooting a basketball, like any other skill can be learned and improved with practice. No one is born as a great shooter, all of the great shooters have put in hours and hours of correct practice. It does not do very much good to practice the wrong way. Additionally, mental toughness is essential to being a great shooter. Developing mental toughness is discussed in another section of our site. I believe that there are five stages to becoming a great shooter. In this article, I will mention all five stages of the shooting progression, but only expand on the first stage. Stages 2-5 will be covered in subsequent articles.
1. The first stage is learning the correct fundamentals of holding the ball, and then delivering the shot. Your shooting hand should be set across the seams of the basketball. The index finger of your shooting hand should be placed in the middle of the ball--you should use the air valve as a guide. Your guide hand should be placed on the side of the ball. Point all ten of your toes to the rim-with your shooting foot pointed at the center of the basket and your other foot slightly off center. When you jump, push toward the basket. You should land six inches closer to the basket with your toes still pointing to the rim and your feet in the same position and the same distance apart as when you started. When you release the ball, the ball should spin or rotate backwards off your fingers and that backspin rotation should continue as the ball is in the air toward the goals. The guide hand does not move on its own and only opens up slightly as the ball is pushed to the basket by the shooting hand. After you release the ball, hold a high goose neck follow through as if you were putting your hand in basket with ball. Your eyes should be focused on the nearest eyelet on the basket and your eyes should stay on that eyelet target. You should not watch the flight of the ball! The best drills to practice these fundamentals are shooting on a line and rim flips.
In shooting on a line, you line yourself up on one of the lines on the basketball court. Shoot the ball as if you were shooting at the basket and allow it to land. If the ball lands on the line, mission accomplished! Now do it again and again until you know that you are shooting the ball straight. When doing the rim flips drill, Stand an arms length directly in front of the rim. Set the ball for the normal shot and then take the balance hand away. The entire focus of the drill is on correct shooting fundamentals. Shooting with one hand helps to work on shooting the ball straight and concentrating on the backspin rotation of the ball. This drill is to work on technique, foot position, and body alignment and not to simulate anything close to game speed. Rim flips are solely for refining and maintaining technique and form. Go, SLOW. SLOW. SLOW!! The initial stage of the drill does not involve jumping. Think of it as a short free throw--with one hand. After making 10 in a row without hitting the rim, the shooter moves back two steps. After moving back two steps, place the guide hand on the ball, but use the exact same technique as before with the shooting hand. Once you can make 10 in a row, move back another two steps and work to make another 10 in a row.
Eventually, you will jump toward the basket and land six inches closer just like you were taking a shot in a game. Work on the landing in all three phases of the rim flips drill. For more information on foot positioning and landing, go to our correct shooting fundamentals page.
2. Stage Number 2 is repetition shots with no pressure and no movement. Concentrate on the fundamentals from stage one. Clap and ready hands to catch the ball. These shots should be 12-15 feet or whatever distance is a comfortable distance for you. In this stage you will combine proper mechanics from stage #1 above with getting the ball straight. Your aim if you do miss is to never miss to the right, to the left, or short. Get the ball straight and up over the front of the rim and if you have to miss, miss on the back of the rim. The shooting on a line drill helps you to work on getting the ball straight.
3. The third part in the progression is moving at a game pace in ways that occur in a 5/5 game to get a shot. The most effective way to master stage #3 is by having an organized individual development workout plan that is designed for the areas you want to improve--and then you must have the dedication to stick to your plan. The most important time to be dedicated is when you don't want to be.
4. Stage #4 Shooting with pressure produced by time, performance goals, or one defender.
5. Stage #5 Being able to make shots in a 5/5 scrimmage. You must shoot the shots that you have been practicing in your individual development workouts and plan your workouts so that you are practicing the shots that you get in games.
There it is. Details of the first step in the five step shooting progression . Be sure to watch for the articles that cover steps 2-5. While you are waiting, whether you are a player, or a coach, get to work on rim flips!
The Coaching Toolbox http://www.coachingtoolbox.net is a resource site for basketball coaches and players of all levels. Brian Williams is a former high school coach with over 20 years of experience at various levels. The site is just getting our site off the ground, so we hope that you will visit us and continue to stay and grow with us as well!
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