Basketball Shooting Drills for Kids

Basketball Shooting Drills for Kids
Photo Credit take the shot image by Keith Frith from Fotolia.com

Shooting drills are an effective way to keep kids shooting the basketball without just standing around. Incorporate shooting drills into practice to get kids comfortable shooting the basketball from different spots on the court and in different situations. Shooting drills are possible in both team and individual settings, so kids should continue practicing on their own.

Ten a Day

Ten a day is a repetitive shooting drill kids should practice daily. Shoot 10 times from three different areas and repeat on opposite sides of the court. Shoot 10 times from the baseline first, 10 times from the elbow of the free-throw line, and 10 times inside the lane. Repeat shooting from theses spots on the opposite side. BasketballCoach.com recommends practicing this drill for five weeks.

Shooter-Rebounder-Runner

This drill incorporates three aspects of basketball and simulates shooting free throws while fatigued, according to coachesclipboard.net. One player shoots two free throws while another player rebounds. While shooting free throws, a third player sprints around half court. The shooter becomes the rebounder after two free throws, the rebounder becomes the sprinter, and the sprinter becomes the shooter.

Two Bounce

Two players practice shooting in this drill. One player shoots a three-pointer, and the second player waits until the ball bounces twice before catching and shooting from that spot. Once a player makes a shot, he or she shoots free throws. If the player makes three free throws, re-start from the three-point line. Points are the same as a basketball game, and two bounce is played to 21 points, according to BasketballCoach.com.

Golf

Place cones at different spots on the court. Set a par for the number of shots it should take for each player to make a basket from each spot. Players have to start from the spot and continue shooting from wherever their ball lands until their shot is made. Shoot once at every spot on the floor. Keep track of your score, and the player with the lowest score wins.

References

Article reviewed by Bill C. Last updated on: Jun 4, 2010

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