Highlights
- » The definitive video on playing inside, Better Post Play is the most comprehensive and detailed collection of post techniques ever assembled
- » You'll not only get the fundamentals of playing inside, but also four chapters on scoring, the mentality of a great post player, even two chapters devoted to just getting open
- » Then, 61 minutes from NBA All-Star Jermaine O'Neal. Intelligent, a great speaker, and a student of the game, Jermaine dives into incredible detail on playing inside, and also explains his off season training secrets, how he dominates the defensive end and the boards, and much more!
- » Then, 37 minutes from the leading vote getter for the 2006 WNBA All-Star game, Tamika Catchings. She discusses playing inside, her three favorite moves, dealing with the stresses of professional basketball, even what it takes to make the pros!
Basics
- » 2 hours, 41 minutes in length
- » Better Post Play explains all the fundamentals and basics of post play, and then dives into unmatched advanced detail
- » The video contains 10 chapters, plus the sections by Jermaine and Tamika. There is a summary of each chapter below
- » The pictures below are still frames from the video. The text to the right of each picture explains the still
- » Thanks to eye popping graphics, demonstrations by over 30 players, and footage from five different locations, the video is not just a great improvement tool, it's fun to watch
- » This DVD is the new standard for what a sports improvement video can be
- » Like all the Better Basketball videos, Better Post Play was written, filmed, and edited over nearly a year with the goal of helping players who have a true desire to do whatever it takes to take their game to the next level
THE INTRODUCTION
Better Post Play begins with an inspiring introduction that also explains how the video is organized and how a player should use the video to develop his or her post game.
4 minutes, 59 seconds
Here, Coach Torbett explains that the video is built in the same progression that he builds a successful post player. This progression starts with a basic philosophy and the fundamentals of post play. Next, coach teaches a player how to get open. And finally, he teaches the actual moves used to score.
Chapter 1: POST PHILOSOPHY
Before you learn precise techniques to get open and score, you must develop the heart and the mindset of a winning post player. Post Philosophy gives thoughts and principles to help you develop the intangibles that successful post players possess.
Perhaps the most important of the seven principles in Post Philosophy is titled Keep It Simple. Better Post Play contains dozens of moves, not to mention their countermoves. But you don't need to master every single move in the video to be successful. You just need to determine what's going to best fit you and your team's style of play, and work on that.
3 minutes, 14 seconds
Jermaine O'Neal and Tamiks Catchings appear throughout Better Post Play to help expand or illustrate Coach Torbett's points. Here, Jermaine and Coach Torbett discuss the need to love contact when playing inside.
The goal of the Better Basketball videos is more than just to make individuals better. We want to make you better within your team's system of play, so that your team gets more wins. Here, coach explains that you must develop your post game, in part, based on what your coach wants from his or her post players. He states, "know what's expected of you. If you don't know, ask!"
Chapter 2: FUNDAMENTALS
Most of chapter two is geared toward younger players still
learning the post game's basic fundamentals. For example,
younger players must learn to go up strong and seek contact. They must learn the power shot, and how to shoot with the non-contact
arm. They must consistently win both the arm battle and the foot
battle not only to get open, but to look open, and then they must be able
to hold that seal. Finally, they must be able to receive the
ball with either one hand or two hands, chin it, and read the situation. These techniques (and more) are the Fundamentals of post play,
But the chapter also gets extremely advanced a few times. For example, Coach
Torbett explains how to win the arm battle by controlling your defender’s arm with a
bicep clamp, a powerful move that many officials will let you get away
with.
9 minutes, 36 seconds
A large portion of Better Post Play is shown in a format similar to this - Coach Torbett explains a technique on one section of your TV screen, and players demonstrates the skill on another part of the screen. By putting coach and a player on the screen at the same time, the advanced techniques on the Better Basketball videos become very easy to understand.
The Better Basketball DVDs use whatever graphics are needed to best help you learn. Here, we see a yellow bar highlighting the offensive player's forearm. It's a foul to knock down a defender's arm, but it's legal place a forearm in the bend of his elbow to control his arm and keep it out of the passing lane.
By the way, six movements are demonstrated to help you win the arm battle. And coach even explains what arm movements will result in a foul.
Chapter 3: GETTING OPEN VS ZONES
If you can't get open, all your moves to score WITH the ball are useless. So chapters 3 and 4 dive into getting open against zone defenses and man to man defenses, respectively.
Sections in chapter 3 include Screen the Center, Work the Seams, Attack from Behind, and Cut Early or Cut Late.
By the way, the Better Basketball videos are not only great fundamental improvement tools, they're also fun to watch. So we asked some of the best ballers in Atlanta, on Atlanta's premier streetball court, to demonstrate techniques for Better Basketball. And nope, you're not hallucinating, the guys played some zone defense, and they played it well!
3 minutes, 53 seconds
Here, we see a player on the left block looking to center screen. To get open successfully with this move, he's got to move at an exact time, before the zone shifts. Later in the video, Coach Torbett will teach the actual footwork used to seal the defender once contact is made.
Playground basketball under the lights... A post player hunts the horizontal seam in this 1-2-2 zone. Coach Torbett explains that one of the best methods to get open vs zones is to hunt the seams. Where are the seams? When is it best to search for them? What move should you use once you get the ball? Click here and buy the video, and find out!
Chapter 4: GETTING OPEN VS MAN TO MAN
Chapter 4 contains techniques that all post players must master, movements that you must be able to use instinctively when the defense plays you a specific way. A few examples are the Cheat Step, the Swim, the Reverse Pivot, and the Leg Whip.
The moves used to get open in this chapter are based on combinations of the following:
(1) Where you want to receive the ball,
(2) Where you're located in relationship to the ball,
(3) The position of your defender.
The combinations in this chapter alone account for 22 moves to get open! And by the way, these moves are not counted in Chapter 10, which runs through only the moves to score (not to get open)!
9 minutes, 16 seconds
Better Basketball uses whatever graphics it takes to best explain a technique. For example, this completely animated segment features movement of the ball, the players, even the text on the screen. By the way, this still frame came from a section on the Duck-In.
We all know the importance of footwork in post play. And coach devoted a large portion of Better Post Play to the details of footwork that make the difference, including specifics on the cheat step. Sometimes, failing to take a cheat step can allow your defender to keep an arm in the passing lane, rendering the move useless.
Chapter 5: SCORING BEFORE YOU GET THE BALL
Coach Torbett states at the very beginning of the chapter, "When watching the pros on TV, many times the post player simply catches and dunks, and most spectators think, 'nice dunk, but he didn't do anything special.'
Coach continues... 'Sometimes that's the case, but usually it's not. A lot of good basketball went on before the pass was made. In other words, the post player's MOVES WERE MADE BEFORE he got the ball."
Chapter 5 contains these hidden moves - The battle that most spectators miss, but the fraternity of great post players know all too well. In fact, the defender's own position is often used to beat him.
5 minutes, 49 second
Here, the ball has yet to be passed inside, yet we see two collegiate centers battling fiercely for position. The offensive player is using the Pressure Principle, perhaps the most common way to score in this manner.
By the way, Scoring Before You Get The Ball is a method Jermaine O'Neal has mastered, and he explained the technique in detail during his bonus chapter on this DVD.
We've all seen players get called for pushing off when receiving lobs because they put their forearm in their defender's back. The solution is to keep your hands up. But Coach Torbett goes a step further, even explaining how you can place your arm on the defender, keeping him pinned down and unable to deflect the lob!
Chapter 6: THE AIRTIME ADVANTAGE
Chapter six contains a series of moves that revolve around drop stepping while the ball is in the air.
You'll use these moves when a defender plays you to one side or the other. The chapter goes into great detail on what is
basically one nearly unstoppable move. This detail includes the move's footwork,
counter-moves, even using the move from different spots on the court.
Also included in this chapter is a step-by-step breakdown of how to execute the Up and Under, a favorite counter-move for many tough post players.
5 minutes, 10 seconds
Telling the passer when and where to pass is an important part of post play. You can do this with your feet, your voice, your body, and your hands. These methods are taught throughout the video, to help ensure you actually get the ball after you work to get open.
Here, graphics show how much ground the player covered with each step. Better Basketball doesn't just teach fundamentals, the videos teach fundamentals that actually work in real games. And for a post player, covering the right amount of space for each situation is essential to making the move work.
Chapter 7: BACK TO THE BASKET
Back to the basket moves are often considered the most traditional form of post play, but scoring with your back to the basket may be the toughest way to put up points because you don't start with any real advantage on your defender. So Coach Torbett explains a number of effective moves and counter moves, and goes into great detail on each of them.
The chapter is basically divided into four sections - the Spin n Go, the Step-Pound-Hop, the Step-Pound Pivot, and the Front Pivot.
The key to many of these moves is to be able to read your defender. And if he stops your initial move, you must have a counter. Most of the counters to Back to the Basket moves have been taught already at various points in the video, such as the Up and Under in chapter 6 and the Baby Hook in chapter 2.
7 minutes, 9 seconds
To begin the chapter, coach encourages you to post far enough above the block that a baseline pivot won't leave you shooting at an impossible angle. Graphics and a freeze frame are used to show exactly where the player started and ended.
The Step-Pound-Hop may be the most underused dominant move in post play today. It's a quick and powerful move that can be used in a variety of places. Here, we see the results.
Coach Torbett also explains the Step-Pound-Pivot, used instead of the Step-Pound-Hop for situations in which you don't need to cover as much ground.
Chapter 8: THE PRO STANCE
In the pros, many players have mastered the moves in chapters 5 and 6. So defenders simply stay behind the post player and focus on pushing them as far away from the basket as possible. That's why you see this type of play so often in the pros, and it's why we therefore call it the Pro Stance.
In this entertaining chapter, Coach Torbett first explains why learning the pro stance is so advantageous. He then details how to receive the ball along with other Pro Stance fundamentals.
Finally, the chapter shows 16 pro stance moves and countermoves. These are based not only on your defender's position but also on the help defense. After all, you might have to beat a helping defender in addition to your own, and Better Basketball wants to prepare you for ALL situations!
4 minutes, 17 seconds
Tamika Catchings, an Olympic Gold Medallist and the leading vote getter in the 2006 WNBA All-Star Game, demonstrates a number of techniques and moves throughout the video. Here, she receives the ball in the pro stance while being defended by another record setting college player.
Chapter 9: THE EXTREMES: SHORT CORNER AND HIGH POST
In this unique chapter, we focus on two areas that require slightly different reads and moves than normal post play, the Short Corner and the High Post.
You're most likely to get the ball in the short corner when a player penetrates and dishes to you, or when you're attacking a zone from behind. And of course there are a number of times when you'll attack from the high post; it may even be a set in your coach's offensive system. The bottom line is that best players can make a play from any position, and that's what Better Basketball will help you become - the best player you can be!
4 minutes, 23 seconds
Here, we see a player receiving the ball in the short corner. The video goes into great detail to explain how to receive the ball in this awkward spot, and all of your scoring options from it.
Chapter 10: JUST THE MOVES, ONE AFTER ANOTHER
The video's last chapter contains no speaking, just music by the Hutton Experience and every scoring move in the video (so not the moves from chapters 3 and 4 to get open, and not all the fundamentals in chapter 2). It's a fun chapter to watch, and imagine your scoring repertoire if you master all 66 post moves!
3 minutes, 57 seconds
BONUS SECTIONS: JERMAINE O'NEAL & TAMIKA CATCHINGS
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CONCLUSION, & FINAL THOUGHTS
In addition to the video's ten chapters and the sections by Jermaine O'Neal and Tamika Catchings, the tape ends with a short and motivating section called Wrapping It Up. The total running time of Better Post Play is an incredible 2 hours, 41 minutes, making it a video that you'll study for years.
This video demands a new level for what a sports instructional video should be. The DVD is incredibly detailed, professionally made, features over 2 and a half hours of techniques without wasting any time, and is packed with so much content that players will watch it over and over. It furthers the proud tradition set by Better Basketball's first four videos: Better Shooting, Better Ball Handling, Better 1 on 1 Defense, and Better Passing, and set a mark surpassed only by Better Basketball's two newest videos, Better 1 on 1 Offense and Scoring Without the Ball!


































