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Gap Man-To-Man Defense: Installation Plan & Competitive Teaching Drills

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James Jones, Yale University Head Men's Coach;
2019 Ben Jobe Award (most-outstanding D-I minority Head Coach);
2016 Hugh Durham Award (most-outstanding D-I Mid-Major Head Coach);
3x Ivy League Coach of the Year (2015, 2016, 2020);
5x Ivy League Champions;
2x Ivy League Tournament Champions;
winningest Yale basketball coach ever;
Over 365 career coaching wins;
Member of the 2007 USA Basketball Men's Pan American Games Coaching Staff;

Utilizing a ‘Gap Man-to-Man’ system of defense is a tactic that has become very popular in today’s game. The ability to prevent offenses from getting into the paint and force them toward the baseline is one way to keep your team in a game when your roster is not as athletic or skilled as your opponents.

Yale’s James Jones is a coach who has had lots of success playing this style of defense. 

Coach Jones believes that having his players fly around the court, while still maintaining the ability to stay in help-defense position when they are not on the ball, has allowed his Yale squads to stay in games when they’re matched up against higher-ranking opponents. 

In this highly valuable instructional video that features on-the-court demonstrations, you will learn the secrets to Coach Jones’ ‘Gap Man-to-Man Defense’ and how it’s been so successful over the past few seasons. 

Gap Man-To-Man Philosophy and Teaching Drills

Coach Jones begins by describing the effective ways in which using Gap Defense prevents opposing teams from staying ‘in your house’ and protects the paint. 

Additionally, Coach Jones explains how this style of defense teaches your defenders to force offensive players toward the baseline and sideline, while also learning how to be in a help-side defensive position while not guarding the ball. Jones outlines that other benefits also include helping your team stay in games against more athletic teams who try to continuously attack the paint and that it allows your team to stay competitive with your ability to stunt gaps and close out on the ball.

Next, Coach Jones begins a valuable segment of his presentation by including highly effective drills that teach players the Gap Man-To-Man system.

Beginning with a drill designed on teaching defensive closeouts, Coach Jones demonstrates how the purpose of drill is to teach defensive players how to closeout on ball handlers while keeping their body positioned so that their inside shoulder is facing the offensive player’s inside shoulder, which forces ball handlers to go from the sideline toward the baseline.  

In a drill called the ‘Gap-Help Drill,’ Jones shows how players start by closing-out continuously while simultaneously working on stunting into gaps from the help side. He explains how this is a great drill for players to learn how to stunt and recover, while still feeling confident that their teammates will be in a position to provide help defense. 

Coach Jones then showcases the ‘1-on-1 Approach Drill,’ in which players are focused on forcing offensive players toward the sideline and baseline, while keeping ball handlers on one side of the floor – adding that this also a great build-up drill for your players to work on their closeouts and defensive slide technique. 

In the ‘3-on-4 Scramble Drill,’ players are taught to work on their ability to stunt into gaps. This is a highly competitive drill with the goal of getting defensive players to get five consecutive stops to win the drill. It’s also an excellent drill that combines all aspects of this Gap Man to Man!

Gap Shell Drill, Ball-Screen Coverage

Placing your players in the right positions within your half-court defense builds their confidence and trust in teammates. Coach Jones shows off a terrific ‘Gap Shell Drill,’ that teaches your players how to defend different drives from around the perimeter and show how your players can fly around to be in gaps – creating the illusion that there is a wall set up around the paint and forces offensive opponents into thinking that their only option is to shoot a contested two-point jump shot.

Coach Jones showcases the most effective strategies for teaching ball-screen coverage. Using a 5-on-5 setup, players are taught how to stay positioned in gaps and loaded to the ball side, while a ball screen is taking place.  Jones explains that he teaches on-the-ball defenders how to force ball handlers to use the ball screen in a way that forces them over the top, thereby blowing up the whole set play and not allowing opponents to turn the corner in an attempt to attack the paint.  

Note: If you prefer a more protective style of ball screen coverage, Coach Jones shows how to use a switching man to man defense; this is great if your program and teams have very similar players of athletic build and skill.  It will keep players in their gaps and allow you to protect the paint against the more athletic teams!

Proper ‘Gap Man-to-Man Defense’ is a style of play that frustrates opponents by keeping them out of the middle of the floor and keeps them shooting contested 2-point shots with great closeouts. This style of play has made Coach Jones’-coached teams consistently successful throughout his career.  

This is one video that all coaches should add to their defensive collection!

Customer Review: 5 Out of 5 Stars.‘Great video! It shows how to teach Gap Man-To-Man defense and provides the build-up drills as a perfect fit for helping to teach it, while keeping everything still very game-like!’

77 minutes. 2023.


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