To be a great player, you can’t have a ‘weak’ hand. You need to be able to effectively pass, dribble and finish around the basket with either hand. Dennis Stanton of Every Level Basketball demonstrates more of our favorite weak hand development drills for basketball players. .
SUBSCRIBE for NEW basketball performance videos every week:
Click here to access the Pure Sweat Training app (and follow the same program that several NBA players use):
Find Pure Sweat on these sites:
INSTAGRAM:
TWITTER:
FACEBOOK:
PODCAST: Coming Soon!
VISIT our site for information on clinics and events:
Pure Sweat is a basketball training company that offers a variety of products and services to players and coaches at every level. Drew Hanlen is the CEO of Pure Sweat and an NBA Strategic Skills Coach & Consultant that counts Bradley Beal (Washington Wizards), Andrew Wiggins (Minnesota Timberwolves), Dwight Howard (Houston Rockets), Jordan Clarkson (Los Angeles Lakers), Zach LaVine (Minnesota Timberwolves), David Lee (Boston Celtics) & countless other NBA stars as full-time clients.
Alan Stein is the owner of Stronger Team. Alan brings a wealth of valuable experience to his training arsenal from over a decade of extensive work with elite high school, college, and NBA players.
COMMENT below if you have any questions for us! We’ll get back to you ASAP!


Great video! I'm goin to try these tonight. Sweet sound track too!
very nice drills. i did these drills for about 2 months and i feel way more
confident dribbling with both hands. Thank u so much!
Thanks for this drills. I think it will improve my weak hand dribbling. 🙂
I hope more drills to come.
Can u bring the black guy back? I kind of liked him better, no offense
This video is great
i cant did a in n out with my leftie man ,anyway keep it up
this is nice video
Good stuff. I was just wondering why you guys recommend holding the ball
with only the weak hand instead of collecting it with both hands before
going up for a layup. I understand the goal of the drill is to get as much
work as possible with the weak hand, but it seems like you wouldn't want to
be getting into an unnecessarily vulnerable position where the ball could
be poked away pretty easily. Is there a reason you wouldn't go with a more
secure and game-like finish while still using the weak hand for the actual
release of the layup? (As a side note, is a finish using exclusively one
hand done more often in basketball than I realize?)
look like it's helpful
tryna be ready for basketball this school year??