One-on-one situation decision-making according to equipment in youth basketball

The goal was to verify with which ball participants improved the attackers' decisions in one-on-one game situations during youth basketball. Participants were 88 9- to 11-year-old boys from eight teams. We organized a three-day tournament consisting of 12 games, in which four games were played with each ball among all the teams. The balls differed only in their weight (440g, 485g, 540g). The videos filmed were observed by two observers trained. The dependent variables were number of decisions, appropriate decisions, inappropriate decisions and ratio of correct to incorrect decisions, in the one-on-one situation. Participants made more decisions, and more correct (but not incorrect) decisions, when using the 440-g rather than the regulation and 540-g ball. This view requires that youth coaches act as a facilitator of learning, designing practice context according the objective evidence. ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR
© Copyright 2018 International Journal of Sports Science & Coaching. SAGE Publications. Published by SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:training science sport games junior sports
Published in:International Journal of Sports Science & Coaching
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications 2018
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1747954117746494
Volume:13
Issue:1
Pages:72-77
Document types:article
Level:advanced