Episodios

  • Ep 399 Is This the Right Coaching Bench, or Just the Next One?
    Apr 15 2026
    https://teachhoops.com/ Finding a coaching job is easy; finding the correct coaching job is one of the most difficult strategic maneuvers in a professional career. Too often, coaches "marry" the first program that says yes, only to realize six months later that they are misaligned with the administration, the community, or the resources available. To find the right fit, you must move from a "Desperation Mindset" to an "Architect Mindset." You aren't just looking for a whistle and a clipboard; you are looking for a foundation where your specific coaching philosophy can actually take root and grow. Before you sign that contract, you need to perform a "Program Audit" that looks far beyond the talent on the current roster. The most important relationship in your coaching life isn't with your point guard—it’s with your Athletic Director and Principal. During the interview process, you must "interview them" as much as they interview you. Do they view basketball as a "line item" to be managed or a "program" to be built? Are they going to shield you from "Parental Noise," or will they fold at the first sign of a disgruntled phone call? If you aren't philosophically aligned with the people signing your paycheck, you are coaching on borrowed time. Every coach wants to "play fast" and "pressure 94 feet," but does the job provide the tools to do so? You need to evaluate the Infrastructure of Success: Feeder Systems: Is there a youth program, or are you starting from scratch every freshman year? Facilities: Do you have dedicated gym time, or are you fighting the volleyball team for every hour of court space? Budget: Is there a "Booster Club" with teeth, or will you be selling candy bars just to get new jerseys? A "Gold Mine" job is rarely about the players currently in the gym; it’s about the pipeline of players who haven't arrived yet. You must understand the "Historical Gravity" of the position. Are you taking over a "sleeping giant" where the community is hungry for success, or are you walking into a "pressure cooker" where anything less than a state title is considered a failure? The correct job is one where the community’s expectations match the timeline of your building process. In your TeachHoops member calls, we often talk about "Year Zero"—the period where you stop the bleeding and set the standard. Make sure the school board has the stomach for "Year Zero" before you commit. Coaching is a "Family Sport." The correct job isn't just about the win-loss record; it’s about whether the environment supports your life outside the gym. Is the commute sustainable? Is the teaching load (if applicable) manageable? Does the community feel like a place where you want to build a legacy? A championship run is a marathon, not a sprint, and if your "home base" is stressed, your "bench performance" will eventually suffer. Basketball coaching jobs, finding a coaching position, coaching interview tips, high school basketball coaching, athletic director relations, coaching philosophy, program building, youth basketball feeder systems, basketball coaching career, team culture, coach development, athletic leadership, job search for coaches, coach unplugged, teach hoops, basketball success, leadership standards, coaching legacy. Show Notes1. Administrative Alignment: The "Shield" Factor2. The "Resource Reality" Check3. Culture vs. Expectations4. Lifestyle and LongevityThe Job Evaluation RubricCategoryGreen Flag (Good Fit)Red Flag (Walk Away)Administration"How can we support your vision?""We just need someone to keep the kids quiet."Youth ProgramActive, aligned middle school coaches.No contact with youth/AAU programs.FacilitiesPriority scheduling for basketball.Constant battles for gym space.Parental Culture"Standards-based" support.History of chasing off previous coaches.SEO Keywords Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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    25 m
  • Ep 398 Can You Lead With Class After a Heartbreaking Loss?
    Apr 8 2026
    https://teachhoops.com/ When losing hurts… what do your players learn from YOU? This episode breaks down leadership in three layers: Sportsmanship isn’t about being “nice.” It’s about having standards when your emotions are loud. A simple truth: if your postgame behavior is based on feelings, it will eventually break. That’s why great programs have a postgame routine that never changes — win or lose. The apology matters because it models something players rarely see: A leader saying, “I didn’t handle that the right way.” That’s not weakness. That’s accountability. And accountability is contagious. We turn this into something every coach can apply: Your 5-minute plan after a brutal loss What you do in the handshake line What you say to captains first How you get your team off the floor with class What NOT to do (no ref talk, no fan talk, no extra drama) Your 24-hour rule First day: breathe, protect the program, don’t rewrite history Next day: tip your hat, own what you control, build the fix You can be disappointed without being disrespectful Routines protect you when emotions spike Owning mistakes fast is leadership, not PR The way you lose becomes a permanent lesson for your players What does “class” look like when we’re hurting? What’s our standard in the handshake line? How do we respond when we feel we were wronged? What do we control after the final buzzer? “We hurt, but we have class.” “No extra drama. Represent us.” “We tip our hat, then we get better.” “We don’t blame. We build.” 1) The moment2) The response3) The culture toolTakeaways for CoachesQuestions to Discuss With Your TeamPractical Coaching Language You Can Steal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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    19 m
  • Ep 397 How Do You Build a Winning Program in the Off-Season?
    Apr 1 2026
    https://teachhoops.com/ In this episode, coming to you live from the 5th Quarter Studio in Madison, Wisconsin, we break down why winning programs are built long before the first game tips off. The off-season is where culture, standards, leadership, relationships, and daily habits get formed—and the truth is, it starts now. If you want a program that can handle graduation, injuries, adversity, and pressure, this is the work that matters most. We dive into the five key areas every coach should focus on in the off-season: building culture before the calendar, developing leaders before you need them, creating skill work with purpose, building relationships on purpose, and organizing the program so everyone knows the standard. This episode is about more than workouts—it’s about building a system that lasts. You’ll also walk away with a simple action plan for this week: evaluate last season honestly, identify the biggest areas for growth, meet with returning leaders, build an intentional off-season calendar, and define your program pillars. If you want help building your off-season plan, culture, and practice structure, head to TeachHoops.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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    19 m
  • Ep 396 How Can You Replicate the Intensity of a Post-Season Environment in Practice?
    Mar 25 2026
    https://teachhoops.com/ When the post-season arrives, the atmosphere changes: the crowds are louder, the scouting is deeper, and the "Margin for Error" shrinks to nearly zero. To prepare your players, you cannot simply "turn it on" during the first round of the playoffs; you must "Stress-Test" your program during the regular season. Replicating this environment requires more than just high-intensity drills; it requires Psychological Simulation. You must create scenarios where the consequences of a mistake are immediate and meaningful. If your team only plays "comfortable" basketball in practice, they will experience "Performance Paralysis" when the lights get brighter and the pressure mounts. One of the most effective ways to simulate post-season pressure is through "Special Situation Scripting." Dedicate at least 15 minutes of every practice to "Game Winners" or "Post-Season Scenarios." For example: "You are down 1, opponent is at the line for a 1-and-1, 8 seconds left, you have no timeouts." By forcing your players to make "Live-Action Decisions" in these micro-moments, you build Performance Poise. In the post-season, teams don't lose because they don't know the plays; they lose because they can't execute them under the "weight" of the moment. Use your TeachHoops member calls to audit your "Late-Game Menu"—do your players know exactly who is getting the ball when the season is on the line? Finally, you must clutter the environment. In a post-season game, communication is difficult because of the noise. Replicate this by blasting crowd noise over the gym speakers during your scrimmages. This forces your players to develop "Non-Verbal Synergy" and to over-communicate with their hands and eyes. Additionally, implement "Consequence-Based Drills" where the "stakes" are high—such as a "Perfect Minute" drill where the team must play a full minute of error-free defense or the clock resets. By making the "Standard of Excellence" harder than the game itself, you ensure that when the playoff tip-off happens, your team feels a sense of "Familiar Calm" rather than overwhelming anxiety. SEO Keywords Post-season basketball, playoff preparation, basketball pressure drills, coaching philosophy, performance poise, late-game situations, basketball IQ, high school basketball, youth basketball, coach development, team culture, basketball strategy, mental toughness, simulated pressure, basketball communication, game-speed practice, coach unplugged, teach hoops, basketball success, athletic leadership, program building. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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    19 m
  • Ep 395. What do you do to prevent Foul Trouble?
    Mar 18 2026
    https://teachhoops.com/ Foul trouble is the "silent assassin" of a game plan. When your primary rim protector or lead ball-handler picks up two quick fouls in the first quarter, it doesn't just change your rotation; it changes your team's aggressiveness and identity. Preventing foul trouble starts with teaching "Verticality and Hand Discipline." Most fouls at the youth and high school levels occur because defenders "reach" when they are beat or "bring their hands down" when contesting a shot. You must drill the habit of "showing your palms" to the official and jumping straight up and down. By maintaining a "vertical cylinder," your players can contest shots effectively without hearing the whistle. The second pillar of foul prevention is "Anticipation over Reaction." Foul trouble is often a symptom of poor positioning. When a defender is late to a rotation or "lazy" on a closeout, they are forced to "bail themselves out" with their hands. To fix this, you must implement "Early-Help" drills in practice. If your "Help-Side" defense is in the correct position before the drive even starts, they can "wall up" or take a charge rather than reaching across the driver's body. In the mid-season January grind, use film study to identify your "High-Frequency Foulers." Often, you'll find they are fouling because they are "chasing the game" instead of "dictating the game." Finally, you must master the "Strategic Substitution" and the "Foul Management Script." Every coach needs a "Foul Policy." For example: "Two fouls in the first half means you sit until the 2nd quarter or the 2nd half." However, you can also use "Tactical Protection"—switching your star player onto the opponent's least dangerous offensive threat to minimize their exposure to high-risk defensive situations. Utilize your TeachHoops member calls to "audit" your defensive system: are you over-extending your pressure in ways that lead to "cheap" fouls? By teaching your athletes to "defend with their feet and their brains" rather than their hands, you ensure your best talent stays on the hardwood when the game is on the line. Basketball foul trouble, defensive footwork, verticality in basketball, coaching defense, player management, basketball strategy, high school basketball, youth basketball, basketball IQ, coach development, team culture, basketball officiating, defensive rotations, taking a charge, hand discipline, basketball drills, game management, coach unplugged, teach hoops, basketball success, athletic leadership, mental toughness. SEO Keywords Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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    19 m
  • Ep 394 End of Game Situations
    Mar 11 2026
    Teachhoops.com⁠ ⁠https://forms.gle/kQ8zyxgfqwUA3ChU7⁠ ⁠Coach Collins Coaching Store⁠ Check out. [Teachhoops.com](⁠https://teachhoops.com/⁠) 14 day Free Trial Youth Basketball Coaches Podcast Apple link: ⁠https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/coaching-youth-hoops/id1619185302⁠ Spotify link: ⁠https://open.spotify.com/show/0g8yYhAfztndxT1FZ4OI3A⁠ ⁠Funnel Down Defense Podcast⁠ ⁠https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/funnel-down-defense/id1593734011⁠ Want More ⁠Funnel Down Defense⁠ ⁠https://coachcollins.podia.com/funnel-down-defense⁠ [Facebook Group . Basketball Coaches](⁠https://www.facebook.com/groups/basketballcoaches/)⁠ [Facebook Group . Basketball Drills](⁠https://www.facebook.com/groups/321590381624013/)⁠ Want to Get a Question Answered? [ Leave a Question here](⁠https://www.speakpipe.com/Teachhoops⁠) Check out our other podcast [High School Hoops ](⁠https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/high-school-hoops-coaching-high-school-basketball/id1441192866⁠) Check out our Sponsors [HERE](https://drdishbasketball.com/) Mention Coach Unplugged and get 350 dollars off your next purchase basketball resources free basketball resources Coach Unplugged Basketball drills, basketball coach, basketball workouts, basketball dribbling drills, ball handling drills, passing drills, shooting drills, basketball training equipment, basketball conditioning, fun basketball games, basketball jerseys, basketball shooting machine, basketball shot, basketball ball, basketball training, basketball camps, youth basketball, youth basketball leagues, basketball recruiting, basketball coaching jobs, basketball tryouts, basketball coach, youth basketball drills, The Basketball Podcast, How to Coach Basketball, Funnel Down Defense FDD Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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    10 m
  • Ep 393 Building a Program with Bob Hurley Sr
    Mar 4 2026
    Teachhoops.com⁠ ⁠CoachingYouthHoops.com⁠ ⁠https://forms.gle/kQ8zyxgfqwUA3ChU7⁠ ⁠Coach Collins Coaching Store⁠ Check out. [Teachhoops.com](⁠https://teachhoops.com/⁠) 14 day Free Trial Youth Basketball Coaches Podcast Apple link: ⁠https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/coaching-youth-hoops/id1619185302⁠ Spotify link: ⁠https://open.spotify.com/show/0g8yYhAfztndxT1FZ4OI3A⁠ ⁠Funnel Down Defense Podcast⁠ ⁠https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/funnel-down-defense/id1593734011⁠ Want More ⁠Funnel Down Defense⁠ ⁠https://coachcollins.podia.com/funnel-down-defense⁠ [Facebook Group . Basketball Coaches](⁠https://www.facebook.com/groups/basketballcoaches/)⁠ [Facebook Group . Basketball Drills](⁠https://www.facebook.com/groups/321590381624013/)⁠ Want to Get a Question Answered? [ Leave a Question here](⁠https://www.speakpipe.com/Teachhoops⁠) Check out our other podcast [High School Hoops ](⁠https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/high-school-hoops-coaching-high-school-basketball/id1441192866⁠) Check out our Sponsors [HERE](https://drdishbasketball.com/) Mention Coach Unplugged and get 350 dollars off your next purchase basketball resources free basketball resources Coach Unplugged Basketball drills, basketball coach, basketball workouts, basketball dribbling drills, ball handling drills, passing drills, shooting drills, basketball training equipment, basketball conditioning, fun basketball games, basketball jerseys, basketball shooting machine, basketball shot, basketball ball, basketball training, basketball camps, youth basketball, youth basketball leagues, basketball recruiting, basketball coaching jobs, basketball tryouts, basketball coach, youth basketball drills, The Basketball Podcast, How to Coach Basketball, Funnel Down Defense FDD Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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    56 m
  • Ep 392 How Can You Protect Your Athletes with Proactive Injury Prevention and Management?
    Feb 25 2026
    https://teachhoops.com/ Injury prevention is the "invisible" component of a championship season. While most coaches focus on tactical execution, the most successful programs are those that can keep their best players on the floor. Prevention starts with the RAMP Protocol (Raise, Activate, Mobilize, Potentiate) during every warm-up. Instead of static stretching—which can actually decrease power output—you should utilize dynamic movements that mimic the lateral slides, jumping, and sprinting required in a game. By preparing the nervous system and the joints for the specific stresses of basketball, you significantly reduce the risk of non-contact injuries like ankle sprains and ACL tears. Effective management also requires a sophisticated approach to Load Management. Modern sports science emphasizes the Acute:Chronic Workload Ratio (ACWR) to identify when a player is in the "danger zone" for overuse injuries. If you suddenly spike a player's minutes or intensity after a layoff, their risk of injury increases exponentially. Ideally, your acute workload (this week) should remain within a specific range of your chronic workload (the average of the last four weeks): Staying within this "sweet spot" ensures that athletes are building resilience without reaching a point of structural failure. Monitoring "Internal Load" through subjective measures like RPE (Rate of Perceived Exertion) can provide a low-tech way to track this in any gym setting. When an injury does occur, the focus must shift to immediate and evidence-based management. While the "RICE" method was the standard for decades, modern practitioners often favor the PEACE & LOVE protocol, which emphasizes long-term tissue healing over short-term inflammation suppression. Finally, a coach’s role in injury management is largely about Return-to-Play Communication. There is often a disconnect between a player’s desire to "play through the pain" and their actual physical readiness. Establishing a clear, objective criteria for return—such as "100% pain-free during lateral cutting"—removes the emotion from the decision. By working closely with athletic trainers and parents, you protect the athlete’s long-term health and your program's integrity, ensuring that when they return to the court, they are fully prepared to compete at their highest level. Basketball injury prevention, RAMP warm-up, load management basketball, ACWR, sports medicine for coaches, basketball recovery, PEACE and LOVE protocol, ankle sprain management, ACL prevention, youth sports safety, coach development, athletic training, basketball conditioning, player wellness, sports psychology recovery, return to play, high school basketball, team culture, coach unplugged, teach hoops, basketball success, athletic leadership. $$0.8 \le \frac{\text{Acute Workload}}{\text{Chronic Workload}} \le 1.3$$StageActionDescriptionPProtectAvoid activities that increase pain in the first 1-3 days.EElevateKeep the limb higher than the heart to promote fluid drainage.AAvoidAvoid anti-inflammatory meds (NSAIDs) which can slow long-term healing.CCompressUse tape or bandages to limit swelling.EEducateTeach the athlete about the recovery timeline and expectations.&------LLoadLet pain guide a gradual return to activity.OOptimismFoster a positive mindset to improve recovery outcomes.VVascularizationChoose pain-free aerobic activity to increase blood flow.EExerciseUse strength and balance drills to restore full function.SEO Keywords Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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