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  2. Basketball playbook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basketball_playbook

    A basketball playbook, like any sports playbook, involves compilation of strategies the team would like to use during games. The playbook starts as a canvas picture of the basketball court with all its boundaries and lines. On top of that, the playmaker can draw O's for players on offense, and X's for players on defense. Specifically however ...

  3. Line defense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_Defense

    Three players at the front of the defense (at the half-court center line) and two players behind (between the center line and the team's own key). The line was the first zone concept to be used in basketball. [4] The line defense was developed to counter the fast break plays that were being developed, and adopted, at the time. The line defense ...

  4. Defense (sports) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defense_(sports)

    In bat-and-ball sports, the defending team is in the field, while the offensive team sends only a few players into the field to try to score at a time. These sports generally involve a member of the defense throwing the ball to a member of the offensive team, who then tries to hit it and run to various safe areas of the field to score points.

  5. Defenceman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defenceman

    Defence or defense (in American English) in ice hockey is a player position that is primarily responsible for preventing the opposing team from scoring. They are often referred to as defencemen , D , D-men or blueliners (the latter a reference to the blue line in ice hockey which represents the boundary of the offensive zone; defencemen ...

  6. Man-to-man defense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man-to-man_defense

    The main reasons a team would want to play man-to-man are: More aggressive than the zone defense. It also allows a team's best defender to stay on a player who has to be guarded at all times. In special cases teams can play a Box-and-one defense which is specifically designed to deny one specific enemy player by having a defender never leave their side so that th

  7. 4–3 defense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4–3_defense

    Early in the history of the National Football League, teams stacked the defensive line of scrimmage with seven linemen, typically using a 7-diamond or the 7-box. [1] With the liberalization of the forward passing rules in 1933, the defenses began to evolve along with the offensive changes, and by the later 1930s, the standard defense in the NFL and college was the 6–2.

  8. 5–2 defense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5–2_defense

    Paul Brown describes the defense as having a tight five man line, and linebackers who were to jam offensive ends as they came off the line. [3] Brown goes on to say that the use of four defensive backs was innovative at the time. By 1950, the base defense of NFL teams were five man line defenses, either the 5–2 Eagle or the 5–3–3. [4]

  9. Prevent defense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prevent_defense

    The prevent defense is a defensive alignment in American football that seeks to prevent the offense from completing a long pass or scoring a touchdown in a single play and seeks to run out the clock, at the expense of allowing short-yardage gains. It is used by a defense that is winning by more than a touchdown, late in the fourth quarter, or ...