The biggest weakness of a box-and-one defense is its vulnerability to a pass to the middle of the "box". As there is no defensive player responsible for this area of the court, offensive teams are able to exploit the gap. A pass to the middle of the box or to the top of the box will generally yield a short-range shot from inside the key. Or, it will “collapse” the box, causing the four zone defenders to fall inside the key and, upon a second pass, yielding a wide open and uncontested look from the perimeter. It is for this reason that the box-and-one defense is not often seen in professional leagues. The defense was notably used in the
2019 NBA Finals between the
Toronto Raptors and
Golden State Warriors. The Raptors utilized a box-and-one defense with reserve shooting guard
Fred VanVleet late in Game 2 in order to shut down
Steph Curry as he was the lone offensive scoring threat once
Klay Thompson left with an injury and
Kevin Durant was ruled out. This tactic prevented the Golden State Warriors from scoring for over five minutes. The Raptors were narrowly defeated despite having given up an 18–0 run at the start of the third quarter. In Game 4, the Raptors once again employed the same defense in a 105–92 win to take a 3–1 series lead. After Thompson was injured in Game 6, the Raptors again employed the box-and-one with VanVleet against Curry and won the game to win the championship. The Raptors once again used this defense in the
2020 NBA Playoffs during the Eastern Conference semifinals against the
Boston Celtics. Throughout the series, the Raptors employed the defense again against
Jayson Tatum in Game 4 and
Kemba Walker in Game 6, winning both games. The box-and-one was used again in Game 7, but the Raptors ultimately lost the deciding game. == In lacrosse ==