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Breaking a 3-2 zone by pulling the low defender to the short corner.
A zone-overload sequence against a 3-2 defense that shifts the ball side, tests the short-corner feed, then reverses into a weak-side attack.
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Breaking a 3-2 zone by pulling the low defender to the short corner.
Use after the zone has settled and quick top-side passes are no longer enough.
Make the zone guard two spots with one defender before reversing.
Clear half-court diagrams explain what each player does, with movement, screens, and ball position labelled.
1 passes to 2. 4 cuts to the high post, forcing his defender to follow and shift.
5 pops out to catch the pass from 2. 2 cuts to the basket while 1 fills his spot on the ball-side wing.
If X5 closes out, 2 is open in the paint. Otherwise, 5 reverses the ball back to 1.
5 screens X5 so 2 can cut back to the ball-side corner. Then 5 tries to seal under the basket, leaving either 5 in the paint or 2 in the corner.
If 1 cannot pass to either option, he passes to 4, who swings it to 3 on the weak side. The reversal forces the zone to shift and X3 to recover.
4 screens on X1's inside shoulder so 3 can attack X2 with a dribble. 5 screens X5 to keep him from helping on 2 in the corner. Now 3 can pass to 1, who can shoot or pass on to 2.
The possession ends with 1 catching on the wing, 2 lifted in the corner, and 3 occupying the shifted top defender.
Use these notes to decide when to call the play, how to teach it, and how to adjust when the defense changes coverage.
Diamond Overload 3-2 is built for attacking a 3-2 zone by forcing the top line and wing defender to cover more space than they want. The diamond starting shape hides the overload until the ball moves, then the offense places players in the corner, short corner, and high post. The goal is not only a quick shot, but a clear two-on-one on the side of the zone.
Call this play when a 3-2 zone is taking away the top pass and baiting rushed threes. The overload stretches the side defender vertically, making them choose between the corner and short corner. It is also useful after the defense has stopped respecting your high-post flash, because the same flash becomes a passing hub instead of only a scoring spot.
The best group has a calm high-post passer, one corner shooter, and a short-corner finisher who can catch in traffic. The top guard must be willing to reverse the ball instead of settling for the first open look. Because the play asks the defense to rotate, your weak-side player should be ready for a skip pass if the bottom defender overhelps.
The ball handler first reads the top defender. If the top defender stays high, the pass goes to the wing or high post. Once the ball reaches the side, the key read is the zone wing's body. If they step to the corner, hit the short corner. If they sink to the short corner, throw to the corner. If the bottom defender rotates up, the high post looks weak side.
Teach the offense to move the zone before attacking it. The first pass should shift the top line, the flash should pin the middle, and the corner fill should stretch the wing defender. Players often want to stand in soft spots too early, but early spacing lets the zone match up. Timing the arrivals is what creates the overload.
The common error is flattening the overload into three players on the same sideline. If the high post is too low and the short corner is too high, one defender can see both. Another error is passing slowly around the outside. The 3-2 zone wants the ball to stay on the perimeter; the offense must touch the middle or short corner to bend it.
Start with four offensive players against three zone defenders on one side. The offense scores only from corner, short corner, or high-post touches. Add the weak-side defender once the side overload is clear. In five-on-five, give the offense a point for every paint touch or short-corner catch before the shot, so players learn to shift the zone before shooting.
Use this section before practice so every player knows the job attached to their number.
Move the ball to the wing, fill behind the cut, and reverse before the zone gets set again.
Cut behind the closeout and become either the paint target or the corner spacer.
Stay wide until reversal, then attack the shifting top defender.
Flash to the nail, receive under control, and swing quickly to the weak side.
Show at the short corner, screen the low defender, then seal under the rim.
More half-court actions and out-of-bounds sets you can fork into your playbook.