...and I'm just posting this as a follow-up to my New Year thread.
While most here seemed to get the point, I continue to be puzzled that some Carolina folk still don't embrace the importance of the Secondary to what we do. And as the GIF below shows, it doesn't even hafta be a textbook iteration.
Wacth below --- early in the Wake game we come down in Secondary (albeit in imperfect lanes). Mando correctly has run the sprint lane shaded to ball-side. McKoy, initially in the right side perimeter lane sees that both Caleb and Leaky have assumed perimeter lanes on the other side. Remembering that he's playing the 4, he correctly assumes RJ will push sidleine to initiate a post-entry angle, and thus clears to the opposite "trail" position in case of a reversal.
Since the entry is indeed made, as he prepares to dive backside, you see McKoy giving the classic Carolina Freelance fist signal to Leaky that a down-screen is coming for an interchange. Here's the effectivenss of the Secondary personified, in that both of the backside Wake defenders get drawn in by the entry to Mando, and aren't sure who to pick up, so Leaky doesn't even need the screen to pop to a wide-open spot. Note that RJ almost drifts too far up, but sees Leaky in time to stay outta his way, so... kick-out from Mando... open 3 look... easy-peezy.
https://i.makeagif.com/media/1-06-2023/wtJMoG.gif
Anyway, the beauty of Dean's Secondary Break is not just the geometry, but that it rewrote the "conventional wisdom" (for most of basketball hsitory to that point) that you don't push the ball against a defense unless you have a numerical advantage. Fact is, Dean knew that a retreating defense is vulnerable, even 5-on-5, and that especially the quick post entry causes a chain reaction and often confusion that we easily exploited here.
Moreover, think of how hard we normally hafta work to get that sort of look against a set defense (especially not having a legit PG). That's why the Secondary is more important for us now than ever, whether utilizing sophisticated called variations off it (like Roy did) or just into Freelance. In that little 11-second span we saw our keys to success --- transition and inside-out ball --- emodied in one possession.
While most here seemed to get the point, I continue to be puzzled that some Carolina folk still don't embrace the importance of the Secondary to what we do. And as the GIF below shows, it doesn't even hafta be a textbook iteration.
Wacth below --- early in the Wake game we come down in Secondary (albeit in imperfect lanes). Mando correctly has run the sprint lane shaded to ball-side. McKoy, initially in the right side perimeter lane sees that both Caleb and Leaky have assumed perimeter lanes on the other side. Remembering that he's playing the 4, he correctly assumes RJ will push sidleine to initiate a post-entry angle, and thus clears to the opposite "trail" position in case of a reversal.
Since the entry is indeed made, as he prepares to dive backside, you see McKoy giving the classic Carolina Freelance fist signal to Leaky that a down-screen is coming for an interchange. Here's the effectivenss of the Secondary personified, in that both of the backside Wake defenders get drawn in by the entry to Mando, and aren't sure who to pick up, so Leaky doesn't even need the screen to pop to a wide-open spot. Note that RJ almost drifts too far up, but sees Leaky in time to stay outta his way, so... kick-out from Mando... open 3 look... easy-peezy.
https://i.makeagif.com/media/1-06-2023/wtJMoG.gif
Anyway, the beauty of Dean's Secondary Break is not just the geometry, but that it rewrote the "conventional wisdom" (for most of basketball hsitory to that point) that you don't push the ball against a defense unless you have a numerical advantage. Fact is, Dean knew that a retreating defense is vulnerable, even 5-on-5, and that especially the quick post entry causes a chain reaction and often confusion that we easily exploited here.
Moreover, think of how hard we normally hafta work to get that sort of look against a set defense (especially not having a legit PG). That's why the Secondary is more important for us now than ever, whether utilizing sophisticated called variations off it (like Roy did) or just into Freelance. In that little 11-second span we saw our keys to success --- transition and inside-out ball --- emodied in one possession.
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