2023 Big Ten Regular Season Champions;
2023 Big Ten Conference Tournament Champions;
2023 AP Co-Big Ten Coach Of The Year;
2019 NABC National Coach of the Year;
2019 Elite Eight;
4x Big Ten Coach of the Year (2008, 2010, 2011, 2019);
4x Big 10 Conference Regular Season Champions (2010, 2017, 2019, 2023);
2009 Big Ten Conference Tournament Champions;
2009 US U19 National Team Assistant Coach (Gold medal)Purdue’s Matt Painter has had a run of coaching success few have ever attained. With five Big Ten ‘Coach of the Year’ honors in 13 years, Painter has gotten a well-earned reputation for having some of the most-balanced, complete squads in the country in all areas of the game – offensively and defensively.It's on defense, however, where Painter’s teams have been consistently stellar and it’s credited with his attention to detail both from an individual and team defense standpoint, as well as how he teaches and implements his defense. Ball screens have become an increasingly popular way for offenses to attack defense. With many ways to guard a ball screen, Coach Painter tackles this subject in a highly informative, instructional coaching video.Painter covers all the details and takes you through the different ways that you can teach how to defend and attack ball screens in a manner that neutralizes them.
Teaching Ball Screen Defense
According to Coach Painter, in every game, defensive responsibility begins after your offense takes a shot. On the shot, every player must be looking to sprint back on defense and prepare to defend.
Painter covers valuable defensive concepts including ‘Center Safeties’ and ‘Define the Side’ with his transition defense developed in a manner that is designed to stymie the other team’s transition attack, including ways that your opponent will try to incorporate ball screens.
Coach Painter discusses how to counter ‘open-court, ball screens’ that your opponent may employ during transition. In these situations, Painter explains why it is important for defenders to ‘stay in line with the basketball’ as well as covering other defensive concepts such as a rule of going under on any open-court ball screen that takes place well out of the shooting range of your opponent’s point guard.
On all ball screens, defensive communication is important. While the same types of things can be said between your players in different ways, Painter covers why it is important for the defense to avoid breakdowns by being ‘Early, Loud, and Continuous’ (which he calls ‘ELC’) when calling out ball screens.
Ball Screen Coverages
Out of a 5-on-5 look, Coach Painter covers the different ways to defend the ball screen. The purpose behind this teaching concept is to cover what must take place simultaneously in three defensive areas, 1) on the ball, 2) one pass away from the ball, and 3) with the help-side defense.
Painter discusses what he calls ‘Red Coverage,’ which details the tactic of high hedging on ball screens defensively. He stresses that when the ball is dribbled, the screener’s defender must pick up and force him or her away from the basket. As this happens, the on-the-ball defender recovers by going under – to pick up the dribbler – while the screener’s defender recovers.
Next, Painter covers what to do when the ball-side corner is filled when a ball screen is set. In this situation, when the ball screen is set on the side with the corner occupied, it is important for the defender to not flatten on any bump on the roller. Coach Painter also covers the topic of help defense with an emphasis on all of your defenders knowing where the help is coming from.
General Concepts for Defense
Out of his man-to-man defense, Coach Painter has some hard and fast rules for how to defend certain types of ball screens. He mentions that some rules can vary based on a variety of factors. Painter covers general rules instructing defenders to force an opponent to the weak hand on a flat ball screen and to go ‘under’ on ball screens that take place further away from the basket.
Coach Painter also provides strategic info on several specific defensive coverage scenarios, such as ‘Red Coverage’ – which may become impractical, when the screener’s defender is late arriving, the option to switch is the more effective tactic to use. These types of defensive exceptions on coverages provide flexibility and an escape plan to any situation where a defender is unable to get to the ball screen and execute the designed coverage that’s called.
Other key ball screen defensive tactics are discussed, such as the importance of staying flat when defending on a one-man side; Painter explains that when a situation like this occurs, the defender must stay flat to avoid giving up an open 3-point shot or a backdoor layup.
With ball screens becoming the most-relied upon offensive tactic in the game today, regardless of offense or in-game situation, this highly detailed, informative video with Purdue’s Matt Painter examining ball screen defense is a must-watch defensive video, regardless of the level of basketball you coach!
66 minutes. 2023.