Matt Jones on Building Better Shooters, Coaching Voice, and Re-Triggers in Conceptual Offense {International Pro Coach} cover art

Matt Jones on Building Better Shooters, Coaching Voice, and Re-Triggers in Conceptual Offense {International Pro Coach}

Matt Jones on Building Better Shooters, Coaching Voice, and Re-Triggers in Conceptual Offense {International Pro Coach}

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This week on the Slappin’ Glass Podcast, Dan and Pat are joined by International Pro Head Coach and player development specialist Matt Jones for a deep dive into shooting development, coaching communication, and building conceptual offense.

The conversation opens with Jones’ approach to evaluating shooters, beginning with one of his core beliefs: watch the player first. Before over-coaching or over-correcting, Jones discusses the value of being a “quiet eye,” identifying inefficiencies, and helping players simplify their shooting movement. From there, he gets into the details of clean catches, loaded wrists, open palms, shot preparation, and how small mechanical improvements can create real gains at higher levels.

Jones also shares how he uses player feedback, feel-based cues, and individualized terminology to help shooters self-correct. Rather than flooding players with technical language, he explains how the best cues often come from what the player physically feels, giving coaches a more useful way to teach shooting under pressure.

In the show’s Start, Sub, or Sit segment, the conversation shifts to finding your coaching voice as an introvert, where Jones breaks down the importance of preparation, listening, terminology, and getting enough coaching reps to build confidence. The episode closes with a thoughtful discussion on conceptual offense, including re-triggers, offensive talk, cutting rules, late-clock structure, and how to help players find the next action without becoming robotic.

What You’ll Learn

  • How Matt Jones evaluates shooters before making mechanical corrections
  • Why simplifying a player’s shot can improve repeatability and efficiency
  • The importance of clean catches, open palms, loaded wrists, and eliminating wasted movement
  • How to introduce variability into shooting workouts without overwhelming the player
  • Why feel-based cues can be more effective than over-teaching technique
  • How analytics can help shape shooting development without damaging a player’s confidence
  • Why free throws can be used as a powerful form-shot reset inside a workout
  • How introverted coaches can develop their voice through preparation, terminology, and coaching reps
  • Why “your terminology is your culture” when communicating with players
  • How conceptual offense depends on cutting rules, spacing, re-triggers, and offensive talk
  • Why the player with the ball must think like the point guard in read-based offense
  • How random practice environments can help players learn to self-organize late in possessions

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