Slappin' Glass Podcast

Francesco Tabellini on Playing Relentless, Tagging Up Killers, and Attacking the Hedge & Plug

Slappin' Glass Season 1 Episode 272

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0:00 | 1:25:55

This week we’re joined in this SG Classics episode by International Head Coach Francesco Tabellini for a deep dive into the concepts behind his team’s relentless style of play.

Tabellini opens the conversation by unpacking the idea of “canceling the pauses” in the game — eliminating the dead space between offense and defense, defense and offense, and every small conversion moment in between. From there, he details how Nymburk builds pace through first-three-step urgency, no-catch zones, early outlets, transition cutting, and a constant pressure-on-the-rim mentality.

The conversation also explores offensive spacing and cutting principles, including baseline cuts on middle penetration, OKC cuts on baseline drives, shortening the pass, and why player confidence is central to shot selection. Tabellini explains how tagging up not only creates extra possessions, but also supports shooting freedom, transition defense, and full-court pressure.

Later, the discussion moves into the defensive side of the floor, including the details of teaching tagging up, evaluating effort, structuring practice to build habits, and using hedge-and-plug coverage as a temporary switch designed to disrupt rhythm, force decisions, and keep opponents uncomfortable.

What You’ll Learn

  •  How Tabellini defines “relentless basketball” and why it starts with removing the pauses between phases of the game 
  •  Why the first three steps in transition are a major teaching point for Nymburk 
  •  How “no-catch zones,” pitch-aheads, and 28-meter cuts create early dynamic advantages 
  •  Why aggressive cutting can solve spacing problems rather than create them 
  •  How tagging up can become both an offensive rebounding system and a transition defense tool 
  •  Why leaving the tag too early can kill the entire purpose of tagging up 
  •  How Nymburk structures practice to reinforce tagging up without overloading players 
  •  Why Tabellini views hedge-and-plug coverage as a temporary switch 
  •  How slips, flips, and re-screens stress aggressive ball screen coverages 
  •  Why activity, effort, and mistake-fixing are central to Tabellini’s coaching philosophy

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