The words dribble drive motion gets thrown around every year. The fact is, we really haven't seen the dribble drive since Cal has been here at Kentucky. He has used it a few times, but as a coach myself, I noticed he usually runs an "elbow/horns" type of set, that usually leads to pick n roll or one guy coming off a screen (into a dribble handoff).
I ran across this video of Cal's practice at Memphis and it reminds me of the way Villanova runs their 4 out 1 in motion offense:
Villanova gives the players the freedom to make the decisions (back cut, drive, handoff, shoot, screen away) using principals of the motion. It seems like Calipari has adopted more of a set play type of coach over the years.
After looking over it, I am surprised how Cal has gone away from recruiting players that fit into this mold and a lot of focus on bigs. Maybe it's the youth in the teams now and not trusting their decision making process, but I thought it was interesting to see Jay Wright use this approach and molding a very succesful offense with it.
Just an observation.
I ran across this video of Cal's practice at Memphis and it reminds me of the way Villanova runs their 4 out 1 in motion offense:
Villanova gives the players the freedom to make the decisions (back cut, drive, handoff, shoot, screen away) using principals of the motion. It seems like Calipari has adopted more of a set play type of coach over the years.
After looking over it, I am surprised how Cal has gone away from recruiting players that fit into this mold and a lot of focus on bigs. Maybe it's the youth in the teams now and not trusting their decision making process, but I thought it was interesting to see Jay Wright use this approach and molding a very succesful offense with it.
Just an observation.