Triangle offense

The triangle offense is an offensive strategy used in basketball. Its basic ideas were initially established by Hall of Fame coach Sam Barry at the University of Southern California.[1] His system was further developed by former Houston Rockets and Kansas State University basketball head coach Tex Winter, who played for Barry in the late 1940s. Winter later served as an assistant coach for the Chicago Bulls in the 1980s and 1990s and for the Los Angeles Lakers in the 2000s, mostly under head coach Phil Jackson.

The system's most important feature is the sideline triangle created by the center, who stands at the low post, the forward at the wing, and the guard at the corner. The team's other guard stands at the top of the key and the weak-side forward is on the weak-side high post—together forming the "two-man game". The goal of the offense is to fill those five spots, which creates good spacing between players and allows each one to pass to four teammates. Every pass and cut has a purpose and everything is dictated by the defense.

It has been claimed that the triangle offense is the optimal way for five players to space the floor on the basketball court.[2]

  1. ^ Barry, Dan (June 28, 2017) "The Triangle Offense, a Simple Yet Perplexing System, Dies." Archived 2020-11-18 at the Wayback Machine New York Times. (Retrieved October 11, 2018.)
  2. ^ "Basketball – A Game of Geometry". Relativity Digest. 2016-11-12. Archived from the original on 2020-11-18. Retrieved 2018-02-10.

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