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Orijinalini görmek için tıklayınız : 2-2-1 Full Court Zone Press/Çizimli-İngilizce


Ahmet Dedeoğlu
05-18-2008, 03:39 AM
passing lanes (see Diagram C).
Allow a backward, retreating pass, as the 10-second rule is in your favor. If the ball moves to the opposite side, the traps and zones are set on that side the same as described above, only with the opposite defenders positioned as above. The defenders should never let the ball get ahead of them on the court. If that happens, they must sprint down-court quickly to recover. Once the press is broken, or the offense crosses mid-court, all defenders not on the ball should sprint back to the paint to protect basket (unless there is an easy trap in the sideline, mid-court line corner). The on-ball defender should stay on the ball and stop dribble penetration.
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There are variations and adjustments to this basic zone, depending on how the offense uses their point guard... i.e. whether he/she tries to receive the in-bounds pass, or make the in-bounds pass and then receive the ball right back.



2-2-1 Zone Press Adjustments

Here are a couple of variations on the 2-2-1 zone press.
2-Up Zone Press

The "2-up" zone press is used against teams who have their best ball-handler make the in-bounds pass, and then step in-bounds and receive the pass right back. We want to keep the ball out of the hands of the best ball-handler, and have someone bring it up who is not comfortable in that role, thereby increasing the chance of a turnover.
See Diagram A. In this case, the X2 defender will deny the pass back to the in-bounder, and will play him/her man-to-man, in full denial. The other four defenders essentially play a zone.
X3 will prevent the sideline pass, and X4 prevents the middle pass.
The weak side of the court is open and X5 might be able to anticipate a long cross-court pass there, or a long down-court pass. Long passes are often thrown out-of-bounds, or are intercepted. But again remember, all zone presses have an element of risk, and are a gamble.
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2-2-1 "Deny" Defense

With this full-court press, we try to deny the in-bounds pass and get the 5-second call. This can be used against a team that tries to make the in-bounds pass to their best ball-handler. See Diagram B.
In this defense, don't guard the passer. Instead, place your X5 back in "prevent", to protect against the long pass and lay-up. The other four defenders match up with the other four offensive players and play full denial, trying to prevent the in-bounds pass. Until the ball is passed in-bounds, you have a 5 on 4 situation, with five defenders and only four offensive receivers.
The offense may try to screen to get a man open. Be ready for the quick switch, or fight through.
The offense may try to run their O4 and O5 toward the passer for a quick pass. Defenders X3 and X4 must stay between them and the passer to deny this pass. Often defenders X3 and X4 are worried about getting beat by the long pass over their heads, but defender X5 should be back to cover the long pass. This is the advantage of not guarding the passer, but rather having X5 protect against the long pass.
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