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[Music Playing]
Now we will take this to a group setting for a team, every shooter will have a partner. We are going to work the regular V’s which it should be both sides of the lane and we will also going to work flat V’s which it should be both sides of the base line. Let us go ahead and start on that. The partners that are not shooting will be watching their team mates pivot foot, to make sure that they are pivoting on the correct foot, now, also counter scores for them.
So, once each player is made his five or ten shots, the nail will rotate and their teammate will start to shoot. Let us switch up, everybody rotates, the next partner shoots. Now in addition to the regular V and the flat V, you can also shoot a straight V which is up to the foul line, up to the top of the key right there on the middle. So we have three angles that we can work from, a flat V, a regular V and a straight V.
What we have found is that, players would not shoot 30% more in practice by using this shooting principle. I spend less time dribbling, work time concentrating in everything I do is a game situation. We are doing jump stops, we are doing pivots, and they are learning to follow their shot all in one simple drill. The final point about this drill is, it is very good because it allows you to keep the concentration and focus of a large group of young players because they have partners, they have to watch, and they have an activity that keeps them busy and that they enjoy doing it.
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