Pressure: Lady Pioneers smother opponents with their ‘Press Greene’
The West Greene girls’ basketball squad has been highly successful the last two winters, and one of the key elements to its success has been its relentless, full-court pressure defense.
The genesis of the Lady Pioneers’ press defense, or as they like to call it Press Greene, came from just down the road in Morgantown, West Virginia.
“We kind of got the Press Greene motto from WVU (menĢƵ basketball team) and their Press Virginia,” seventh-year coach Jordan Watson stated. “Justin Allen (assistant coach) and I are both huge fans of Bob Huggins and love WVU basketball.”
Watson, who graduated from WVU with a Physical Education and Health degree, knew he had the team to run a pressure defense a couple of years ago when a strong junior class (West Greene has no seniors on its roster) was in eighth grade.
“We knew when this group was in eighth grade that they were going to be able to press and play a more uptempo style of game,” Watson said. “We use a couple of different versions of the press from Huggins, but we’ve also got one version of the press from Rick Pitino (former menĢƵ coach at Louisville).
“Another version we got and tweaked is from our varsity boys’ coach (Jim Romanus) back when he coached the girls. A lot of our pressing concepts we have had for a long time, but our personnel dictates what we use. In 2012-14 we ran a lot more half-court traps and dropped back into a zone. We only jumped up into a full-court press off of foul shots. Now we get into the full-court press a lot more.”
There are several key characteristics that a team and a player must have in order to run a stingy press.
“There are so many presses out there,” Watson said. “Sometimes we go with a man-to-man or a run-and-jump press and other times we do a zone press. To be successful in a run-and-jump press, you must have great athletes with a high basketball IQ that understands when and why to jump off their man and trap the ball. Great instincts and an attacking mentality are a must.
“When we score, a playerĢƵ first instinct must be to go up and not back. We always want to make the opponent work for every inch of the court and never give them a mental break with just walking the ball up court. Our press helps dictate the tempo of the game and gets us into an up-and-down type game.”
West Greene has six of its top seven players back this season. Juniors McKenna Lampe (6.1), Madison Lampe (5.3) and Kaitlyn Rizor (3.2) led the Lady Pioneers in steals per game last year, while juniors Ashley Cumberledge, Bri Goodwin and Savannah Pettit have been strong inside players.
The press should be even better this year for West Greene, as the Lady Pioneers will have a lot more depth with 13 players on a roster that includes six talented freshmen.
“Every player on the court has an important role within our presses,” Watson said. “We are also adding some depth this year with a good incoming freshmen group that will improve the press. We hope to wear down the opponent with our depth and to put constant pressure on them for 32 minutes. We want to make the other team uncomfortable and never let them get into a rhythm on offense.”
One key aspect to any press at any level of basketball is communication on the floor.
“Communication is one aspect of the game that our juniors have dramatically improved upon since they were freshmen,” Watson said. “When face-guarding an opponent in a full-court press, communication is essential because everyone must know what side of the court the ball is on when inbounded, so we know who should jump and who should rotate.”
Despite the highly successful nature of the press, Watson knows that West GreeneĢƵ half-court defense is what is going to carry them to greater success in the playoffs against talented, guard-oriented squads.
“We need to be more disciplined in our half-court defense,” he said. “Sometimes we gamble for steals too often and get beat. In the press we can usually gamble for steals and have time to recover due to our girls’ athletic abilities. In the half-court setting, we still take too many low-percentage gambles and overplay too much. We must rely on our communication and trust our rotations.
“We must also get better at jumping ball side and jamming the cutters while playing half-court man. Our girls realize that in the playoffs we must be able to win possession-type games that come down to getting the key stop and key rebound. I like our offense and we can score with anybody. But if we want to make a deep playoff run and get to the finals, it will come down to defense and rebounding.”
Before kicking off its Section 2-A schedule against Jefferson-Morgan on Dec. 21, West Greene was 5-0 after playing against the likes of Waynesburg Central, McGuffey, Carmichaels, Washington and Clairton in non-section action.


