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TRANSITION OFFENSE PLAYBOOK

Score before the defense sets — the principles behind fast breaks, secondary breaks, and early offense.

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TACTICAL OVERVIEW

Transition offense is the most efficient scoring opportunity in basketball because it catches the defense disorganized, outnumbered, or retreating. But running effectively requires more than athleticism — it requires lane assignments, decision-making protocols, and a secondary break system that converts when the numbers advantage disappears. This playbook covers the numbered fast break, outlet pass mechanics, secondary break sets, and the decision rules that prevent turnovers in transition.

Core Coaching Principles

1

Push the ball on every made basket, every steal, and every defensive rebound — never wait to set up the offense

2

The point guard runs the middle lane; wings sprint the sideline lanes; the trailing big fills the trailer spot

3

Rim runners go first — if there is an advantage, attack the rim; shooters fill wide only when the rim is covered

4

Decision rule in transition: 2-on-1 → layup; 3-on-2 → skip to shooter; defense retreated → attack before they set

5

Secondary break triggers when the advantage is gone — immediately enter a quick-hitter set without calling timeout

TACTICAL DIAGRAMS

1Ball Handler (Middle)2Left Lane3Right LaneX1Retreating 1X2Retreating 2PG attacks gap2 trails rim run3 trails rim runDribbleCut

3-on-2 Fast Break — Numbered Lanes

Three offensive players vs. two retreating defenders. PG pushes the middle, wings sprint the sidelines. PG reads the defenders and either attacks or skips.

Diagram 1

3-on-2 Fast Break — Numbered Lanes

Three offensive players vs. two retreating defenders. PG pushes the middle, wings sprint the sidelines. PG reads the defenders and either attacks or skips.

OffenseDefenseMovement
1Ball Handler2Left Wing3Right Wing4Left Corner5Rim Runner → Block5 catches on blockQuick P&R entryCutPassScreen

Secondary Break — Early Offense Entry

Fast break advantage is gone. PG enters secondary break. 5 sprints to the block for a post touch or screen. Shooter fills corner. Early P&R or quick-hitter begins.

Diagram 2

Secondary Break — Early Offense Entry

Fast break advantage is gone. PG enters secondary break. 5 sprints to the block for a post touch or screen. Shooter fills corner. Early P&R or quick-hitter begins.

OffenseDefenseMovement

CORE CONCEPTS

Fast Break Principles

Push every rebound and turnover

The fastest teams in the NBA (Warriors, Celtics in their championship runs) built scoring advantages not through individual athleticism but through universal habits: everyone pushes simultaneously, the ball advances to the middle lane as fast as possible, and the decision to go or slow down is made by the ball handler within three seconds of the outlet. The "go or no-go" decision: if there is a numbers advantage (more attackers than retreating defenders), always go. If the numbers are even, go only if there is a significant speed advantage.

Outlet Pass and Rebound

Transition starts at the defensive rebound

Most transition opportunities are lost at the outlet, not at the other end. Rebounders should outlet immediately: pivot, find the point guard before landing, and throw a strong chest or overhead pass to the middle. The point guard should be sprinting to the free-throw line extended on the opposite side of where the rebound is secured. Once caught in the middle, the PG pushes without dribbling for two to three seconds to read whether the advantage is real.

Early Offense Sets

When the fast break advantage is gone, transition immediatel

Elite offenses never stop. When the retreat defense is up but still organizing, immediately running a quick P&R or a specific BLOB/SLOB action catches late-rotating defenders in transitional positions. Teams like the Golden State Warriors practice this secondary break with the same rigor as half-court sets: the 5 sets a ball screen at the top as the 1 crosses half-court, and the 2 and 3 fill to corners. This single action scores 12-18 points per game for elite transition teams.

EXPLORE CONCEPT HUBS

COACHING FAQS

QHow do you teach lane discipline in transition?

Drill it with three-man fast break repetitions where each player must be in their assigned lane (middle, left sideline, right sideline) before the possession is counted as correct. Most youth transition breakdowns are players chasing the ball to the middle instead of staying wide. Wide spacing forces two defenders to cover three lanes, creating a decision problem.

QWhen should a team choose not to push in transition?

When the rebounder cannot outlet cleanly and would risk a turnover in the backcourt, when the team is up late in a game and a turnover would be catastrophic, and when the defense has fully retreated with numbers advantage reversed. Even then, a slow push (controlled transition rather than walking it up) is usually better than waiting to set a half-court offense.

QWhat is early offense and how does it differ from secondary break?

Secondary break refers to the first quick action attempted as the team crosses half-court with the defense still organizing — usually a quick P&R or sprint to the block. Early offense refers to the first half-court set initiated before the defense has fully set — typically a quick hitter, a quick screen-away, or a dribble hand-off sequence. Secondary break is faster and more opportunistic; early offense is more structured.

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