The best youth basketball shooting drills should do more than keep players busy. They should create game-like movement, force players to focus and give coaches a clear way to track progress.
Good shooting drills usually include three things: lots of reps, some level of competition and shots that connect to what a team actually runs in games. A player standing still with the ball already in their hands might get shots up, but that doesn’t always match what happens on the floor.
These drills can work for youth, middle school, high school or advanced teams with a few simple adjustments. Coaches can change the distance, scoring, time limit or pressure level based on age and skill.
3-2-1 partner shooting drill
The 3-2-1 drill is a simple partner shooting drill that gives players movement, scoring and repetition.
Here’s how it works:
- The shooter starts without the ball.
- A partner passes to the shooter for a 3-point attempt.
- After the shot, the shooter moves inside the arc but stays out of the lane for a 2-point jumper.
- After that shot, the shooter cuts for a layup.
- The partner rebounds each shot and keeps the drill moving.
The scoring is easy. A made 3-pointer is worth three points, a made mid-range shot is worth two points and a made layup is worth one point.
Coaches can run this drill for one or two minutes, then have partners switch roles. Teams can also track scores over time to build competition and show improvement.
A good variation is to run 3-2-1 around five spots: both corners, both wings and the top of the key. Since each spot is worth six possible points, a perfect score across five spots is 30. This adds structure while keeping the pace high.
Two-in-a-row shooting drill
The two-in-a-row drill works well when players need focused reps from specific areas of the floor.
Pick a spot, such as the left wing, right corner or top of the key. The shooter must make two shots in a row before moving to another spot. Coaches can decide whether the next spot has to be across the court, one pass away or part of a set five-spot rotation.
This drill is especially useful for 3-point shooting because it makes players repeat the same shot until they show consistency. It also adds a little mental pressure. One make isn’t enough. Players have to stack makes before moving on.
For younger teams, coaches can move the spots closer. For advanced teams, the passes can come from different angles or after a cut, flare, lift or drift.
Five-spot team shooting drill
The five-spot team shooting drill brings competition, conditioning and pressure shooting together.
Split players into two teams, with each group working at opposite baskets. Pick five spots, such as short corner, elbow, free throw line, opposite elbow and opposite short corner. Coaches can also use five 3-point spots depending on the team’s age and skill level.
Each group must make a set number of shots at one spot before moving to the next. Three makes per spot is a good starting point because it keeps the drill moving without letting players get sloppy.
To add pressure, use free throw validation. After a team makes the required number of shots at a spot, one player must make a free throw before the group can advance. If the free throw is missed, the team completes a sprint, pushups or another quick consequence before continuing.
This setup gives coaches a lot in one drill. Players get shooting reps, communicate under pressure and learn to finish a segment with a free throw. Late in games, that matters.
Once a team completes all shooting spots, coaches can finish the drill by requiring the group to make a certain number of free throws in a row. Five in a row is a strong challenge, especially when players are tired.

Add up, add down shooting drill
Add up, add down is a competitive shooting drill that can be used with almost any age group.
Create two teams and place them on opposite sides of the floor. Each team takes the same type of shot from matching spots. For example, both groups might shoot from the elbows, wings or corners.
The score moves up or down based on makes. If Team A makes a shot and Team B misses, Team A goes up one. If Team B makes the next shot, the score moves back toward zero. The goal is to be up by three.
A coach can stand under the basket and track the score with fingers, which keeps the drill moving without stopping to explain the math. Once a team wins a spot, players rotate to a new location.
This drill works well because every shot affects the score. Players feel the pressure of making a shot while the other team is shooting at the same time. Coaches can use it from mid-range, the 3-point line or anywhere that fits the team’s skill level.
Why the best youth basketball shooting drills should match your offense
General shooting drills are helpful, but the best youth basketball shooting drills should look like the shots players take in games.
If a team runs a lot of flex action, shooting work should include cuts, screens and scoring chances that come from that offense. If a team uses ball screens, shooting drills should include lift shots, slot threes, rolls, pops and drift passes. If a team relies on drive-and-kick basketball, players should practice catching on the move and shooting off real spacing. The goal is to get the right shots up.
Players build better habits when the drill matches the offense. Footwork gets cleaner. Passing angles improve. Shooters learn where their looks will come from and rebounders learn where misses are likely to go.
Coaching points for better shooting drills
No matter which drill a team uses, the details matter. Players should start in an athletic stance, show their hands, step into the shot and hold their follow-through. Passers should deliver clean, catchable passes. Rebounders should chase misses and keep the pace sharp.
Coaches also need to watch for lazy reps. When shooting drills run too long, players can start cutting corners. Shorter segments often work better than long, dragged-out rounds. A focused three-minute drill usually beats a sloppy 10-minute drill.
Competition helps, but quality has to come first. Make sure players aren’t rushing so much that their footwork, balance and mechanics fall apart.
Final thoughts on the best youth basketball shooting drills
The best youth basketball shooting drills give players game-like reps, clear goals and enough pressure to keep everyone engaged.
Coaches can use these drills as they are, but the real value comes from adapting them to fit the team’s offense. When players practice the shots they’ll actually take, shooting work becomes more purposeful, more productive and a lot more game-ready.

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