Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

15
Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08

Transcript of Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Page 1: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Wheelchair Basketball

Jenn Huff

PESS 430

10/16/08

Page 2: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

History

Developed by WWII vets in the USA in 1945 By 1948 there were 6 teams, all members of

Paralyzed Veterans of America Introduced to Paralympics program in 1960 in

Rome One of the most popular Paralympic sports Designed for athletes with physical

disabilities that prevents running, jumping, & pivoting

Page 3: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

U.S. Classification Class I: Complete motor loss at T-7 or above

or comparable disability Class II: Complete motor loss starting at T-8

and descending through and including L-2 Class III: All other physical disabilities as

related to lower extremity paralysis originating at or below L-3

12 points total allowed on the floor

Page 4: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

International Classification Eight classifications based on functional ability (1.0

– 4.5) Higher classification numbers represent greater

basketball skills Athletes are classified at their first international

competition Have to file an appeal to change classification

14 points total allowed on the floor Classification based on shooting, passing,

rebounding, pushing, & dribbling

Page 5: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Wheelchair

Part of the player Three or four wheels Height of seat can’t exceed 21” from the floor Height of foot platform can be no more than 4

7/8” from the floor Seat cushions are allowed A heel strap must be attached to foot platform

Page 6: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Rules & Regulations

4 seconds in the lane Can’t push more than twice without dribbling Same rules of contact in regular basketball Lose the ball if you make physical contact

with the floor Out of bounds – any part of the chair or body

goes out of the boundaries Falling – suspend play if chance of danger to

player

Page 7: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Rules & Regulations cont’d

Same court dimensions as regular basketball Every team has five players and seven

substitutes Four periods of ten minutes Same scoring as regular basketball, wheels

need to behind 3-point arc before the ball is released

24 second shot clock

Page 8: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Basketball Court

Page 9: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Important Skills

Handling the chair Endurance Ball-handling skills Shooting Passing Back-picking

Page 10: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Pictures

Page 11: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Adaptations/Modifications

Longer time limit in lane Allow more pushes between dribbles Eliminate shot clock Lower basketball hoop Change court size Shorter quarters

Page 12: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Coaching Techniques

Athletes first Positive environment Set achievable goals for each athlete Demonstrate Progression of skills Involve all athletes Develop team spirit

Page 13: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Contraindicators

Allow water breaks to keep athletes from overheating

Crashing or falling out of chairs Detached retinas Atlantoaxial instability Pushing wheelchair Finger jams

Page 14: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

Video Clips

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=myDYE49KPlQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yt_L_P0YXrw

Page 15: Wheelchair Basketball Jenn Huff PESS 430 10/16/08.

References

http://en.paralympic.beijing2008.cn/sports/wheelchairbasketball/index.shtml

http://www.iwbf.org http://www.paralympic.org/release/

Summer_Sports/Wheelchair_Basketball/ www.nwba.com