7 Simple Youth Basketball Plays (With Diagrams)
The seven simplest youth basketball plays that actually work are the give-and-go, the backdoor cut, the pick-and-roll, the pin-down screen, the UCLA cut, 5-out motion, and a box inbounds play. Each one teaches a core skill (spacing, screening, cutting, or reading the defense), takes about ten minutes to install, and is diagrammed below so you can teach it at your next practice.
New coaches often make offense too complicated. At ages 7 to 13, players win games by moving without the ball, spacing the floor, and making one good pass. Run two or three of these well and you will out-execute most teams at this level.
The Give-and-Go
The give-and-go is the first play every young team should learn. The point guard passes to a teammate, then cuts hard to the basket for a return pass and a layup. It rewards the habit you want most at this age: pass the ball, then keep moving. If the defender turns to watch the ball, the cutter is open every time.
The Backdoor Cut
When a defender plays tight and tries to deny a pass to the wing, the answer is the backdoor cut. The wing fakes coming to the ball, then cuts hard behind the defender to the basket for an easy bucket. It is the simplest way to punish an overplaying defense, and once you score on it twice, opponents stop pressuring your passing lanes.
The Pick-and-Roll
The pick-and-roll is the most useful two-player action in basketball, and a simplified version works great for youth teams. A big sets a screen for the ball handler, the guard dribbles off the screen, and the screener rolls to the rim. It forces two defenders to guard one ball and creates either a driving lane for the guard or an open roll for the big.
Walking these actions through on a board first is the fastest way to get them right. Our Custom Pro Basketball Whiteboard has the full court on one side and the half court on the other, so you can diagram any of these at practice or in a timeout.
The Pin-Down Screen
A pin-down (or down screen) gets your best shooter an open look. A player near the baseline screens down for a teammate, who curls up to the wing or elbow to catch and shoot. It is the cleanest introduction to off-ball screening, and it teaches shooters to come off a screen shoulder-to-shoulder and ready to score.
The UCLA Cut
The UCLA cut is a famous, simple action that produces an easy basket and great spacing. The point guard passes to a wing, then cuts off a screen set by the high-post player and goes straight to the block. It is named for the John Wooden teams that ran it for decades, and it remains one of the easiest set actions to teach a young team.
5-Out Motion (Your Base Offense)
Not every possession needs a set play. A 5-out motion offense puts all five players around the three-point line, which keeps the lane open and gives every player room to drive, pass, and cut. The simple rule is pass and cut: after you pass, you cut to the basket, then fill the empty spot. It teaches decision-making instead of memorization, which is exactly what young players need.
The Box Inbounds Play
Every youth team needs one reliable baseline out-of-bounds play, and the box set is the classic. Four players line up in a box, and on the slap of the ball one player screens for another to free up a layup or an open inbounds pass. Having a called play here turns a chaotic moment into an easy two points, or at least a safe inbound.
Which Play, and What It Teaches
For most beginner teams, start with the give-and-go and 5-out motion, then add one set play at a time.
A Four-Step Process That Sticks
Most youth teams can install one new play per practice if you keep it to four steps and do not move on until the spacing looks right.
Quick Answers for Youth Coaches
The give-and-go. The player with the ball passes to a teammate and immediately cuts to the basket for a return pass. It uses only two players and reinforces the most important youth habit: pass the ball, then keep moving instead of standing still.
Two to four plays plus one base offense like 5-out motion. At ages 7 to 13, players execute a few plays well far better than they remember a large playbook.
A 5-out motion offense. All five players space around the three-point line, which keeps the lane open and gives everyone room to pass, cut, and drive. The pass-and-cut rule teaches decisions rather than memorized patterns.
Introduce simple actions like the give-and-go and backdoor cut as early as ages 7 to 8. Set plays with screens, such as the pick-and-roll and UCLA cut, fit best from about age 10 and up.
The ball reversal inside 5-out and the box inbounds play work well against zones. The UCLA cut and pin-down are primarily man-to-man actions, so keep one zone-friendly option in your pocket.
A dry-erase basketball coaching board with the court pre-printed on it. A two-sided board shows the full court on one side and the half court on the other, so you can diagram plays in practice and in timeouts, then wipe it clean.
Teach Every Play on Your Own Board
These plays work, and they work even better when your players can see them drawn out in a timeout. The HoopsKing Custom Pro Whiteboard is two-sided and wipe-clean, customized with your team name, and built for exactly this moment.
