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The Unpredictable 1-2-2 Match-Up Zone: Unleashing a Match-Up Zone (with Man-To-Man Principles) On Your Opponents

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with Scott Pera, Rice University Head Men's Basketball Coach,
2022 College Basketball Invitational (CBI);
Rice University Assistant Coach from 2014 to 2107;
Penn Assistant Coach from 2012 to 2014;
Arizona State Assistant Coach from 2006 to 2012 (with Herb Sendek);
Artesia High School (CA) Head Coach from 2006 to 2012 (High school coach of James Harden)

Matchup Zones can be tough for opposing offenses to figure out. Whether an offense tries to run man-to-man offense or their preferred zone offense, a good match-up zone is going to possess the ability to handle either style of play.

Scott Pera has earned a reputation for being a match-up zone defensive specialist – as the 1-2-2 matchup zone he has developed over the past 10 years has helped his teams become a thorn in the side of many opposing offenses. 

In this highly informative video, Pera pulls back the curtain and shines the coaching spotlight on his matchup zone defense. 

Alignment, Concepts and Terminology

Beginning with a simple 1-2-2 alignment, Pera discusses the responsibilities each defensive player has on the floor. Starting with declaring who has the ball and influencing it to one side, the matchup zone is designed, by its very nature, to keep defender responsibilities simple. Using man-to-man principles, the Rice University head coach demonstrates guarding responsibilities. Each player must guard someone. If a defender finds him or herself guarding no one, then they are doing something wrong.

Viewers are shown the reasons behind why communication is such a key component to making the matchup zone tick. The matchup zone thrives when team communication is at a high level, as the defenders work in unison to keep opponents out of the sweet spot or high-post area.  

Pera shows off two major defender actions that defensive players will need to know while playing this defense: ‘Dribble Up,’ which tells defensive players to switch as a player dribbles from the corner to the wing and ‘Dribble Over,’ which features players switching and communicating when a player dribbles from the wing, to the top of the key. Viewers are taught to understand the concept of teaching players when they are supposed to hold and trade – or switch when it comes to offensive movement. 

Defending Actions

As with any good zone defense, defender’s playing within a match-up zone must possess the ability to defend specific offensive actions. Against a ‘ball-screen action,’ Pera goes through how defenders can protect the paint or high post area. While against ‘Cutters,’ viewers are shown how this zone will work – whether it means ‘trading players’ defensively or using ‘drop-and-trade actions’ as offensive players cut through the zone. 

Best of all, viewers are shown how all this occurs while keeping tried-and-true, man-to-man principles of ‘no face-cuts,’ top of mind. In ‘Horns action,’ Pera also shows how guards can work together on trading players similar to how they defend cutting actions. 

This matchup zone is great to use against any opponent – and this video shows exactly how and why it creates so many problems for an offense. 

Pera has tinkered and worked on the details of this match-up zone for the past 10 years and he has created a successful defensive alignment that is helping his program become one of the better defensive teams in the country. This highly valuable video opens the door to Scott Pera’s match-up zone defensive vault!

71 minutes. 2022.


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