What part of the hand do we use?
How high do we dribble the ball?
Each student has a ball in an area defined by cones or lines. Students will dribble the ball in different ways to see which is best for basketball. The students will start off by patting the ball with the palm of their hand, use their elbow, push the ball into the ground with their knuckles, use the underneath of their hand and finally push the ball down using their fingertips. The coach can ask the students if they noticed a difference and which technique is best. (The correct technique is to push the ball to the ground using your fingertips as you have the most control over the ball.) The next step is to decide how high we need to be dribbling the ball; as high as their knees, their nose and then finally their waist. Again, ask the students which one is the best. (The correct technique is waist height). The students practice dribbling the ball with their fingertips, at waist height and then repeat with non-dominant hand. Add in extra variations of dribbling; switching from hand to hand, dribbling behind their back, between their legs etc.
Players each have a basketball and dribble it inside a given area. The aim of the game is to protect their own basketball, while trying to knock other players basketballs away from them. Each player starts with 10 points. Players will lose points if another player knocks their basketball away, or if players lose control and their basketball bounces beyond the playing boundary. If a student knocks another students basketball away, they will gain a 1 point. The winner is the player left with the most points.
To make this activity harder for students, the coach can minimise the space this activity is played in, reduce the amount of points given at the start of each round (e.g. 5, 3) or can have a knockout round where players only start with 1 point, as soon as this point is lost they have been eliminated from the game (can no longer gain a point for knocking other players basketball). The player left at the end (last student standing) will be the winner.
Time limit, bigger/smaller area
Set up a square (approx 20m/20m) with a goal at each end. .
Split the group into two teams, each starting at a goal.
Each goal starts full of basketballs. On the whistle, players must dribble the ball from their goal to the opposite goal. Once a player has travelled with a ball to the other end, they must place it on the ground (make sure it is still), and run back to their goal and do so repeatedly until whistle is blown.
Aim of the game is to have the lowest amount of balls in the goal at the end of the game.
Note:
- each player can only move one ball at a time.
- have to control the ball the whole time, using correct dribbling technique. (if ball is uncontrolled or isn't still on the goal-line, coaches can take that ball away).