2-1-3 offense john m. kenney jm [email protected]

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2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney www.lacrossecoach.org jm[email protected]

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Page 1: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

2-1-3 Offense

John M. Kenney www.lacrossecoach.org

[email protected]

Page 2: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

10 Reasons• Motion• Dodging• Set plays• Pick Plays ( allows for Canadian style)• Short Passes• Stops fast breaks• Reduces attack carries• Assures Shot coverage• Easy to sub for LP• Can hide a midfielder or attack or both!

Page 3: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Practice- we are talkin practice

• Dots (Flat bases) not cones• Part to whole• Drills – complement the offense – especially

shooting drills ( and not just the shooting spots – feed at game speed and simulate offensive shots off the offense)

• Cage shooting – caught shooting underhand… “punish” with supervised after practice shooting {100 shots}-

Page 4: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Initial Set Up

M2 – 5 yards above restraining line

M1 – 12 yards above crease – no wider than 15 yards from midline

A1- GLE – Max 3-5 yards away from crease

A2-

A3-GLE – max 3-5 yards away from crease

M3 – 12 yards above crease – no wider than 15 yards from midline

Page 5: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Key Areas

Dodger/Feeder

A2-

Dodger /Feeder

Dodge PointDodge Point

Page 6: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

M2

A2

M3M1

A3A1

Motion Scramble – Phase 1; Work the ball around – when ball Reaches M3 – M3 passes to A3 who breaks out at a 45 degree angle – but no further than 10-12 yards from crease ; A1 anticipates A 3 receiving ball and begins to move to X behind ; after M3 passes to A3 – M3 cuts inside for a give-n-go ; then M3 cuts over A2 to backside pipe.

Page 7: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

M2

A2M3

M1

A3

A1

Scramble – Phase 2; A3 attempts to dodge his defender; keeping his head up A 3 also anticipates a cut by M2 off a high post by A2; m1 rotates to M2’s spot; M3 fills for M1; M2 if no feed received – bellies out to M3’s original spot; A2 cuts backside pipe

Page 8: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

M2

A2

M3M1

A3

A1

Scramble – Phase 3; A3 passes to A1; A 1 carries ball to 12-15 yards wide of crease; M3 cuts over A2 and the offense mirrors the original side

Page 9: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Dodging Plays – Wing dodge (Phase 1)

M1 receives pass from M2M1 prepares to dodgeM2 finds blindside of the defender, step cut, and runs awayM3 finds blindside of defender, step cut, and then c-cut to topA1 moves low and away;

A3

M3M1

M2

A1

A2

M1 dodges, either shoots, or:A2 holds pipe, if his defender slides, gets pass, ride ponyA2 holds pipe till M1 gets in trouble – cuts out on 45 for helpA1 step cut in and the c cuts highM2 makes (short flash)A3 covers shot

M3

A1

A3

M1

A2

Dodging Plays – Wing dodge (Phase 2)

M2

Page 10: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Dodging Plays – attack dodge (Phase 1)

A2 prepares to dodgeM1 and M2 Replace finds blindside of the M3 finds blindside of defender, step cut, and then c-cut to topA1 moves high and away; C Cuts

A3

M3M1

M2

A1

A2

M3A1

A3

M1

A2

Dodging Plays – attack dodge (Phase 2)

M2

Page 11: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Pass and Cut (Phase 1)

All players pizza cut to receive passM3 passes to A3

A3

M3M1

M2

A1

A2

As A3 looks to pass to A2...A1 sets a pick for M3. M3 c-cuts towards A2 off A1’s pick.A1 either pick and rolls, or pick and follows (he always turns into the ball)If open, A2 passes to M3 or A1

M2

A1

A3

M1 M3

A2

Follow

Roll

Pass and Cut (Phase 2)

Page 12: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

M2

A2

M3

M1

A3

A1

Over two- over One (Phase 1) A1 receives ball from M1; as he does M3 and A2 cut to A1; A3 V cuts to X behind; A passes to A3;

Page 13: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

M2

A2M3

M1

A3A1

Over two- over One (Phase 2) A3 dodges; As he dodges, M2 sets a Pick for M1 , who cuts toward A3; A3 should have a clear look at the cage as well as an opportunity to feed M1;

Page 14: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Picks

A2-

Up Pick

Page 15: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Zone: EMO

A2-

EMO

Page 16: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Zone: Roll the crease (spike back in)

A2-

Page 17: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Settled play

M3 after making the pass sets a pick for M1 who cuts towards A2 looking for the feed and a chance to shoot

A3

M2M3

M1

A1

M2 looks to dodge.

M1 should try to get on the blindside of the defender and cut away

M3 does the same. M1 and M3 swap places.

M1

A1

A3

M2

A2A2

Settled play

M3

Page 18: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Shooting Drill 1

Drawn as one side – mirror the other; Backdoor or flash

Page 19: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Shooting Drill 2

Have two sides going – more reps

Page 20: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Shooting Drill 3

Have two sides going – more reps

Page 21: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

6 on 5 full field (Favorite) 1. Offense: must have 5

(five) passes before initiate offense

2. Alternate offense on each possession: Motion/Dodge/Pick/ Spike

3. Work on box- have a manager or injured player monitor box subs

1. Defense: Go man to man and be forced to cover crease

2. Go Zone and work on MDD

Page 22: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com

Final Thoughts1.Mentor another coach2.Decide to utilize your assistant coach more3.Decide one thing to improve in each area of the game: i.e.- Goal a game riding4.Do not appoint someone captain in the hope that they will develop leadership; it doesn’t seem to work – regardless of the sport.5."Shout praise and whisper criticism." -- Don Meyer

Page 23: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com
Page 24: 2-1-3 Offense John M. Kenney   jm klax@aol.com