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Rapid-Fire Basketball Drills to Build Better Ball Screen and Pick n’ Roll Players

Learn rapid-fire drills to teach ball screens, dribble handoffs, and finishing under pressure — perfect for building smarter youth and middle school basketball players.

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Introduction

If you want players who actually know how to use ball screens and dribble handoffs — not just go through the motions — you need to rep it.
A lot.

But reps don’t have to be boring.
In fact, if you do it right, you can teach ball screens, handoffs, and finishing with energy and decision-making built into every rep.

In this breakdown, we’ll cover a series of simple, rapid-fire drills you can run every day in practice.
(And yes — even first graders can start learning these concepts.)

👉 Watch the full drill breakdown here

Ball Screen Rapid Fire

This is one of the fastest — and most important — daily drills you can add to practice.

Setup:

  • 1 hoop, 3 basketballs (or 6 balls/2 hoops if you have two coaches)
  • Players line up at the wing, ready to attack off a simulated ball screen

How It Works:

  1. Player 1 dribbles down, gets underneath the coach’s ball screen setup.
  2. Player 1 comes off tight, shoulder-to-shoulder.
  3. Player 1 turns the corner and attacks the rim for a skilled finish.
  4. As soon as the layup goes up, next player is rolling.

Cues to Emphasize:

  • “Get under the screen.”
  • “Come off tight.”
  • “Turn the corner and go.”

Variations (Loads):

  • Use a player instead of a coach as the screener (teaching screener habits like wide feet, strong stance, good angle).
  • Vary the screen location — not everything happens at the wing. Use corners, top, etc.
  • Add a half-speed on-ball defender to make dribblers read coverage.
  • Add a rim protector to challenge layups.

Pick and Roll Layups

A natural progression from Rapid Fire — now adding more decision-making and movement.

Setup:

  • Two lines:
    • One at the free throw line (with ball)
    • One at the wing (without ball)

How It Works:

  1. Player 1 at the free throw line snap-passes to the wing.
  2. After passing, Player 1 immediately steps over and sets a strong ball screen (wide feet, strong stance, angled body).
  3. Ball handler comes off tight, turns the corner, and attacks.
  4. Play finishes with a layup or finishing move.

Key Coaching Points:

  • Teach screeners to set a real screen, not just stand there.
  • Reinforce finishing strong through traffic, not wide-open air.

Variations (Loads):

  • Vary the pick and roll angle.
  • Add half-speed defense on the ball or screener.
  • Add a rim defender (even dummy defense is better than none).

HoopsGeek Play Creator: Our Favorite Tool

Drawing up drills like these doesn’t have to be complicated (or ugly).
We highly recommend using the HoopsGeek Play Creator.

It’s the fastest, cleanest tool we’ve found for designing animated drills, plays, and games — whether you’re coaching 3rd graders or varsity players.

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Dribble Handoff Rapid Fire

Just like ball screen rapid fire — but now the player gets into a tight dribble handoff.

Setup:

  • 1 coach or 1 player at the free throw line
  • Line of players with basketballs at the wing

How It Works:

  1. Player 1 fires a snap pass to the coach/player.
  2. Player 1 immediately cuts under and takes a tight handoff.
  3. Player 1 turns the corner and attacks the rim hard.
  4. Next player starts immediately — rapid fire.

Key Teaching Points:

  • Make sure players cut under the handoff, not looping wide.
  • Encourage tight, game-like handoffs — ball protected, fake action encouraged.
  • Screeners (if players) should sell the handoff — don’t just stick the ball out and wait.

Variations (Loads):

  • Rotate players in as the passer/screener.
  • Vary angles (handoffs from different floor spots).
  • Add half-speed defenders to make players read and react.
  • Always add a rim defender if possible — no free layups.

Dribble Handoff Layups

Next progression:
Instead of using a coach, players work together to execute the handoff under light pressure.

Setup:

  • Players with ball above the three-point line
  • Players without ball in the corner

How It Works:

  1. Player 1 (with ball) snap-passes to Player 2.
  2. Player 1 cuts underneath for a tight handoff.
  3. Player 2 sells the handoff, protecting the ball.
  4. Handoff happens — Player 1 attacks and finishes.

Cues for Players:

  • Scorer: “Get under. Come off tight. Turn the corner.”
  • Passer: “Strong stance. Tight ball. Fake if needed.”

Loads to Progress:

  • Add light defense on handoff or rim.
  • Vary floor spots for handoff action.
  • Change finishing skills every few reps (reverse layups, floaters, strong-side finishes).

Why These Drills Matter

Ball screens and dribble handoffs aren’t just for college teams.
If you teach them early — teach them right — you build smarter players who can play in any system later.

And by running these drills rapid fire, you:

  • Maximize reps
  • Keep practices moving
  • Build decision-making under pressure

No standing around. No slow-motion teaching.
Just real basketball habits being built every single day.

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