Indoor Summer Basketball 'Fun'damentals For A Variety Of Ages
Indoor Summer Basketball âFunâdamentals For A Variety Of Ages
By Andy Hutchison
It may be summer, but thereâs no wrong season for basketball right? But weâre not just talking about shooting around at the playground, or a good old driveway game of Horse. Full-fledged instruction, drills, and games at a variety of indoor summer camps have been taking place in Newtown throughout the summer weeks.
The townâs school gymnasiums, as well as the courts at Newtown Youth Academy, have been home to the thumping of dribbled balls, the swoosh of balls flowing through nets, the voices of coaches and instructors, and the interaction of players â girls and boys alike â ranging in age from 5 to 15.
Competitions, contests, stations with drills to hone specific skills from ball-handling to shooting and defense, and scrimmages are all part of the excitement at camps in Newtown, including the Slamma Jamma Basketball Camp, Murphy Basketball Camp, and Lady Nighthawk Basketball Camp. The latter, as the name suggests, is offered specifically to girls.
âI wanted to provide opportunities for some of the younger girls and women in Newtown to have their own camp,â said Jeremy OâConnell, the campâs director, and girlsâ varsity coach at Newtown High.
OâConnell points out that there are plenty of boysâ and co-ed camps in the area, but that all-girls basketball camps are hard to find. He added that the point of the first-year camp â a weeklong session at NHS in late July â is to get the younger girls in town to play and compete together outside of winter ball, and get a feel for whatâs ahead as they get closer to high school.
âIt also helps with the fact we have the members of the varsity basketball team to model for them as well,â added OâConnell, referring to his NHS players who served as camp counselors.
OâConnell was a guest coach at the Murphy camp over at NYA, working with Matt Murphy, who runs the camp along with his brother Mike Murphy. âWe have the same philosophy and beliefs of what basketball should be like, and what camp should be like,â OâConnell said.
âOur philosophyâs always been to fun with the fundamentals. We want the kids to come to camp and have a good time and learn the game of basketball,â Matt Murphy added.
Murphy and OâConnell both got help from the NHS girlsâ team members and coaching staff, including alum/ Nighthawk assistant Meg Kelley. The Murphy camp is offered for students entering into grades five through nine each fall.
The Slamma Jamma camp held sessions for ages 5â8 as well as for 7â14-year-olds. Dave Pelletier directed the younger group at Hawley School in the mornings, and noted that the instruction was centered around basic skills, such as shooting, dribbling, and defending, with emphasis on sportsmanship. âIf thereâs no sportsmanship, then weâre not doing our job,â Pelletier said.
Dean Accetura directed the Slamma Jamma 7â14s, during one session at Newtown High and another at Reed Intermediate. âWe want the kids to come here and love the game of basketball, the skills required â ball-handling, passing, shooting, defense â and to learn it fundamentally, where they go home and practice on their own and become better basketball players,â Accetura said. âWe also want to make sure theyâre having fun, because if theyâre not having fun theyâre not going to want to play when they get home.â
In addition to the indoor camps is the annual Rising Star Summer Basketball League, a summerlong outdoor league directed by NHS boysâ coach John Quinn (look for coverage in upcoming issues of The Bee). The Murphy Basketball Camp will offer another session August 15â19.
For information visit murphy basketballcamp.com.