Basketball Body and Mind

Stan

"Basketball, Body and Mind" is a podcast that is dedicated to youth basketball players.  Each episode will provide  practical strategies for basketball skills, body and/or mind for performance on the court.

  1. JAN 26

    Vertical Jump vs. Dunking & How To Improve Both

    Ways of improving vertical jump performance for basketball players, emphasizing the importance of strength, coordination, timing, and technique. He outlines common mistakes athletes make in their training and provides tailored strategies for different age groups. The conversation also highlights the distinction between jumping and dunking as skills, and the necessity of smart training practices during the in-season and off-season. Takeaways 1) Vertical jump can be improved with proper technique. 2) Strength training is foundational for enhancing vertical jump. 3) Coordination and timing are crucial for effective jumping. 4) Dunking requires skill development beyond just jumping high. 5) Common mistakes include focusing too much on jumping without strength training. 6) Youth athletes should avoid high-intensity plyometric sessions. 7) In-season training should prioritize maintenance over intensity. 8) Different age groups require tailored training strategies. 9) Intent and effort significantly impact jump performance. 10) The ultimate goal is to enhance basketball performance, not just vertical jump height. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Vertical Jump Training 02:15 Key Factors Influencing Vertical Jump 15:23 Common Mistakes in Vertical Jump Training 25:04 Age-Specific Training Recommendations 38:45 In-Season vs Off-Season Training Strategies Download 1-page practical summary of this episode from here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1xxsNdWsyE9qccCjxNm4lGYFMilGUd3r1/view?usp=drive_link For more information check www.balticmove.net or connect with me on Instagram @Balticmove

    50 min
  2. JAN 19

    Sleep, Stress-Management and Relaxation - What To Do?

    This episode explains what sleep, rest, and recovery actually mean in youth basketball and why many players feel tired or stuck despite training hard. It breaks down common recovery misunderstandings, explains how sleep supports physical repair and skill learning, and shows how stress from school, travel, and competition affects performance. Practical guidance is given for late games, multi-day tournaments, and travel, helping players, parents, and coaches make calmer, long-term recovery decisions. Key takeaways “Recovery” is bigger than stretching, ice baths, and massage tools — it includes sleep, stress management, relaxation, nutrition, hydration, and load management.You can’t “stretch your way out” of poor sleep. If you’re consistently underslept, performance and adaptation drop.Recovery must match training load: if the load is too high (beyond what you can recover from), even “perfect recovery” won’t fix it.Poor recovery often shows up as: slower reactions, heavy legs, worse decisions late in games, and reduced shooting consistency.In practices, poor recovery looks like reduced focus, sloppy execution, and lower motivation.In the weight room, poor recovery can reduce strength, jumping/sprinting ability, and increase soreness.Sleep has different phases: earlier night tends to support more deep sleep (physical repair), later night tends to include more REM (skill learning and emotional regulation).Sleep quality basics: consistent routine, cooler room temperature (around 18°C/65°F), and a dark room (eye mask can help).Relaxation can be physical, social, mental, or “conscious” (breathing, mindfulness, meditation).Stress management is a trainable skill: control emotional reactions, focus on what you can control, and use tools like box breathing, walks without your phone, and journaling.Practical sleep targets mentioned:Ages ~12–14: ~10 hours in bedAges ~15–16: ~9 hours in bedAges ~17+: ~8.5 hours in bed (to net ~8 hours asleep)Naps can help, but avoid late naps (wake before ~3pm) so you don’t steal from night sleep.Late games: don’t force sleep if you’re wired—use calming routines off the bed first, dim lights, keep meals light, and avoid scrolling.Tournaments/hotels: control what you can—eye mask, earplugs, consistent routine, reduced screen time before bed.Travel/time zones: shift to destination time ASAP (sleep + meals), avoid long daytime naps after landing, and build fatigue so night sleep returns.Download 1-page practical summary of this episode from here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1otNNmkMrtRghBsWwDh_l-f2IMWj0_TZH/view?usp=drive_link  For more information check www.balticmove.net   or connect with me on Instagram @Balticmove

    51 min
  3. JAN 12

    Growth Spurts, Talent, and Long-Term Basketball Development

    This episode explores long-term athlete development in youth basketball, focusing on growth spurts, biological versus chronological age and why early performance does not reliably predict future success. It explains why coordination, shooting accuracy and confidence often drop during rapid growth, why this is a normal adaptation rather than regression, and how training, strength work, skill development, and mindset should be adjusted during these phases to support long-term development instead of short-term results. Key takeaways Early basketball dominance is often driven by early physical maturation, not superior skillBiological age can differ significantly from chronological age and strongly affects performancePerformance drops during growth spurts are normal and represent adaptation, not regressionCoordination temporarily decreases as limbs grow faster than the nervous system adaptsExtra conditioning cannot replace skill work during periods of rapid growthStrength training is safe during growth when done intelligently and supports injury reductionYouth athletes should not copy adult strength programs during growth spurtsMovement variety and technique should be prioritized over chasing strength numbersSpeed before puberty is mostly neurological; muscle-driven speed improves after pubertyLong-term success comes from patience, work ethic, and focusing on development, not comparison Link to 1-pager with practical advices: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1d0YQRjm1EbiFc78c4REJJ3lQAb-wdG-W/view?usp=sharing Link to episode for Vertical Jump: https://youtu.be/28-R19myrl4

    36 min

About

"Basketball, Body and Mind" is a podcast that is dedicated to youth basketball players.  Each episode will provide  practical strategies for basketball skills, body and/or mind for performance on the court.