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Late‑Game Situational Planner Season
Late‑Game Situational Planner Season 1) What it does This tool rapidly converts your opponent notes, player strengths, and clock/score scenarios into clear late‑game action plans. It saves time by eliminating manual scenario mapping and helps coaches win more tight games through crisp, pre‑built decision trees. 2) Examples Basketball Example Input notes:“Opponent switches 1–5 late; weak defensive rebounding; star lefty forces right-to-left drives; they foul poor FT shooters intentionally under 0:40.” Output highlights: - Best action when tied: Empty‑corner ghost into mismatch attack vs switches - Best action when down 1–3: Quick drag → Spain variation to force a rebounding scramble - Situational alert: Protect your weak FT shooters from being trapped on inbounds - Defensive plan: Shade star lefty to their weaker hand; crash 3 to punish poor rebounding Football Example Input: “Opponent blitzes heavy on 3rd‑and‑medium; corner depth soft in 2‑minute drill.”Output: Late‑game call sequences designed around quick‑hit beaters and boundary access. 3) 6‑Step Prompt 1. Task: Turn my notes into a simple, clear late‑game action plan for multiple score/clock situations. 2. Role: You serve as my situational‑strategy assistant. 3. Context: In‑season games where execution in the final minutes decides outcomes. 4. Specific Requirements: 5. Boundaries: No fictional tendencies or invented stats. 6. Reasoning: Short explanation showing why each option fits the described tendencies. One‑paragraph version:“Turn my notes into a streamlined late‑game plan with actions for different score/clock situations.”
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Play Call Optimizer
Play‑Call Optimizer 1) What it does This tool takes scouting notes, lineup strengths, and opponent tendencies and converts them into quick-hit, high‑efficiency play‑call options for different game states. It shortens prep time, sharpens decision‑making, and helps coaches consistently create better looks without sifting through pages of film or notes. 2) Examples Basketball Example Input notes:“Opponent switches 1–4, shows early gap help, weak rim protection, our best actions involve ghost screens and Spain variations.” Output: - Best calls vs switches: Ghost PNR + slip actions - Best calls vs gap help: Wide‑angle Spain to force confusion - Quick-hit options when needing a score: Early drag into Spain, empty‑corner ghost action Football Example Input: “Opponent slow to rotate safeties; overplays motion; weak edge contain.”Output: Suggested call tags for different down‑and‑distance situations. 3) 6‑Step Prompt 1. Task: Turn my scouting notes into a prioritized list of play‑call options for specific game situations. 2. Role: You act as my tactical assistant, recommending efficient, situation‑appropriate actions. 3. Context: In‑season basketball preparing for opponents with identifiable tendencies. 4. Specific Requirements: 5. Boundaries: No invented tendencies—everything must derive from my notes. 6. Reasoning: Brief explanation connecting the tendencies to the recommended calls. One‑paragraph version:“Convert my scouting notes into prioritized play‑call options for various game situations.”
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Defensive Coverage Troubleshooter
1) What it does This tool converts defensive mistakes—late tags, bad closeouts, ball‑screen miscues, poor rotations—into a diagnosed list of root causes with fast, targeted fixes. It trims film time, accelerates teaching, and helps teams eliminate repeated defensive breakdowns. 2) Examples Basketball Example Input notes:“Late weak‑side help. Bigs dropping too far. Guards going under when they shouldn’t. Closeouts inconsistent.” Output: - Problem Clusters: Late tags, poor coverage discipline, angled closeouts - Likely Causes: Slow initial positioning; misread screen direction; over‑drop by bigs - Fast Fixes: Pre‑load help early, flatten drops on shooters, use ‘choppy‑to‑high‑hand’ closeout standard - Focus Players: Guards responsible for top‑lock reads Hockey Example Input: “Slow weak‑side rotation; defense collapsing too deep.”Output: concise adjustment plan highlighting lane control and rotation speed. 3) 6‑Step Prompt 1. Task: Analyze my defensive notes and produce a clear diagnosis with tactical fixes. 2. Role: You are my defensive‑efficiency assistant focused on eliminating repeat errors. 3. Context: In‑season basketball needing rapid defensive improvement before the next game. 4. Specific Requirements: 5. Boundaries: No invented schemes—recommendations must be grounded in the provided notes. 6. Reasoning: Brief internal logic linking each fix to the diagnosed issue. One‑paragraph version:“Turn my defensive notes into root‑cause diagnoses with targeted fixes and a brief focus list.”
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AI Practice Prep Streamliner
1) What it does This tool converts scattered practice objectives, scouting notes, and yesterday’s teaching points into a streamlined, priority‑based practice plan. It trims wasted minutes, sharpens focus, and ensures each segment directly connects to upcoming opponents or recurring mistakes. Coaches save planning time while getting a more intentional practice flow. 2) Examples Basketball Example Input notes:“Poor weak‑side tags, need more early‑offense repetitions, rebounding slipped yesterday, prepping for heavy PnR opponent.” Output practice plan: - Segment 1: Early‑offense decision-making (advantage drills) - Segment 2: Weak‑side rotations vs PnR - Segment 3: Competitive rebounding series - Segment 4: Short scout‑specific PnR coverage reps - Coaching focus: Quick communication + tighter shell integrity Football Example Input: “Struggling with edge fits; need quicker perimeter screens; red‑zone timing off.”Output: consolidated practice script with priority corrections. 3) 6‑Step Prompt 1. Task: Turn my notes into a focused, efficient practice plan with prioritized segments. 2. Role: You are my practice‑design assistant optimizing time and emphasis. 3. Context: In‑season basketball preparing for an opponent with predictable tendencies. 4. Specific Requirements: 5. Boundaries: Do not add drills I did not reference—only organize what exists. 6. Reasoning: Brief internal explanation for why each segment is ordered as it is. One‑paragraph version:“Convert my notes into a prioritized practice plan with segments and brief coaching focuses.”
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AI Timeout Card BuilderSeason Tag: In‑Season
1) What it does This tool turns your in-game notes—run types, defensive coverages, matchups, shot trends, and momentum cues—into a 15–25 second timeout card. It saves time during live play, sharpens communication, and ensures every timeout has a clear objective instead of scattered talking points. 2) Examples Basketball Example Input notes:“Opp switching 1–4, we’re slow on slips, corner is open, need better weak‑side stunt discipline, PG attacking early but missing corner skip.” Output timeout card: - Offense: Slip vs switch; hit the corner early. - Defense: Weak‑side stunt earlier; no middle. - Emphasis: Better pace into actions; finish possessions. Soccer Example Input: “Opp fullbacks pushing high, space behind right side, slow transition tracking.”Output: - Attack: Target right-channel runs. - Defend: Sprint recover on transition. - Emphasis: First pass forward in build. - 3) 6‑Step Prompt 1. Task: Turn my live game notes into a one‑timeout card (offense, defense, emphasis). 2. Role: You are my in‑game clarity assistant, focused on fast adjustments. 3. Context: Varsity basketball, in‑season, needing concise messaging in timeouts. 4. Specific Requirements: 5. Boundaries: No new schemes; no adding actions/coverages not mentioned. 6. Reasoning: Brief internal reasoning about why each point is included. One‑paragraph version:“Convert my in‑game notes into a concise timeout card with offense, defense, and emphasis points.”
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