Coaching Youth Hoops (Youth Basketball Coach)

Teachhoops.com

Check us out at www.coachingingyouthhoops.com Are you a new or experienced youth basketball coach looking to cut through the noise and have someone just tell you what works? It’s easy to waste time and money learning how to coach Kindergarten through 8th-grade basketball on your own. Join seasoned youth basketball coaches Bill and Steve as they give you the blueprint you need to succeed on and off the court. In each episode, you'll discover easy-to-implement tips and techniques that you can apply to your next practice. Will Launch Weekly on Tuesday Mornings

  1. 1d ago

    The Youth Grinnell System: A High-Octane "Fun Laboratory" or a Cultural Trap?

    https://teachhoops.com/ If you are unfamiliar with the Grinnell System, it is the most radical, statistically absurd style of basketball ever invented. Pioneered by Coach David Arseneault at Grinnell College, the math is simple: attempt 100 shots, take 50 three-pointers, force 32 turnovers, rebound at least one-third of your own misses, and substitute five players at a time every 45 to 60 seconds like a hockey line change. When coaches see the headlines about a Grinnell player scoring 138 points in a single game, their eyes light up—especially at the youth level. They think, "If I run this, every kid gets to play, we’ll shoot a ton of 3s, and we will out-fun everyone in our league." But running the Grinnell System with fifth graders carries a massive developmental warning label. If you aren't careful, you can accidentally build a culture of chaotic, low-IQ "chuckers" who don't know how to guard their own yard. This episode breaks down how to extract the gold from the Grinnell System for youth players while discarding the habits that destroy long-term basketball development. The Grinnell System is entirely driven by analytics. It seeks to maximize possessions and leverage the 1.5× value of the three-pointer to skyrocket the team's overall Effective Field Goal Percentage (eFG%). At the college level, where players have refined shooting mechanics, this math can work. At the youth level, however, the math breaks down due to three distinct physical limitations: The Range Tax: Most kids under 14 have to heave the ball from behind the arc. Forcing early, rapid-fire 3s lowers your youth team's actual eFG% into a deep abyss. The Rebounding Leak: Grinnell relies on sending 3 to 4 players violently to the offensive glass on every shot. Youth players often stand and watch long rebounds turn into uncontested layups for the opponent. The Fatigue Factor: The system requires massive depth. If you don't have 10 to 15 kids who can sprint at a Level 4 capacity without a drop-off, the style will exhaust your own roster before it breaks the opponent. To successfully run this high-octane style without ruining your players' foundational habits, you must install specific Constraints that promote Decision IQ: The "Paint Touch" Rule: Grinnell says shoot within 7 seconds. Your youth version should say: "We sprint the floor, but the ball must touch the paint via pass or drive before anyone pulls the trigger." This collapses the youth defense and turns low-percentage heaves into high-percentage looks. The 3-on-3 Press Transition: Instead of teaching a chaotic, trapping defense where kids just chase the ball like bees, use full-court presses to teach containment and pursuit angles. Force the opponent's ball-handler into a "Dead Corner" before applying the trap. The "Equal Opportunity" Line Change: The hockey-style substitution pattern is actually the greatest cultural tool in the system. By swapping five players at a time, you eliminate the parent drama over minutes, keep your Activity Density at an all-time high, and reward every "Energy Giver" on the roster with guaranteed floor time. Coach's Note: "The Grinnell System is a blast if you control the chaos. If you just let the kids show up and chuck the ball as fast as they can without holding them accountable to a standard of footwork and spacing, you aren't coaching a system—you're just hosting a recess. Keep the pace elite, but make the execution disciplined." Title Ideas: Should You Run the Grinnell Basketball System at the Youth Level? The Modified Grinnell System: High Pace for Youth Basketball How to Run a Fast Break Offense for Kids Without Losing Control Primary Keywords: Youth basketball offensive systems, Grinnell basketball system, fast break basketball drills, TeachHoops, Coach Collins, youth basketball coaching philosophy, small-sided games. Secondary Keywords: Basketball eFG% for youth, high-pace basketball coaching, hockey style substitutions basketball, basketball press defense, coaching masterclass, championship habits. Description Snippet: "Is the famous Grinnell System a shortcut to a fun season or a disaster for youth player development? In this video, we break down the analytics of the Grinnell style—100 shots, relentless pressing, and hockey-style line changes. We discuss how to adapt this high-octane offense for youth players by using 'paint-touch' constraints to protect their shooting efficiency and build real decision IQ. Stop boring your players and build a disciplined track meet." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    18 min
  2. 6d ago

    Is the Best Team Communication Tool Really… Just a Text?

    https://heysammi.com/coaches Is the Best Sports Management App No App at All? Coaches don’t lose parents because they “don’t care.” They lose them because families are drowning in platforms, notifications, and logins. This episode breaks down the real reason team apps stop working by mid-season—and why Sammi was built around the one thing parents always read: text messages. Sammi is designed to handle roster, schedules, payments, and parent communication entirely through SMS, with no downloads and no logins. You post the schedule… and still get “What time is practice?” You update the app… and end up texting anyway You request RSVPs… and they show up late or not at all Parents say “I didn’t see it” and they’re not lying—your message got buried This isn’t a “parent problem.” It’s an attention problem. Most sports families are managing multiple sports, multiple teams, plus league and tournament info across different platforms. Notifications get muted, apps get buried, and parents default to whatever is already open on their phone: text. Sammi’s entire “no app” idea is built around this reality: “parents do not want another app” and coaches end up texting anyway. Sammi isn’t a “better app.” It’s a team assistant by text. For coaches: Text Sammi what you need (schedule changes, reminders, RSVPs, payments) and she does the admin work. For parents: They receive a text, reply to a text, and their calendars stay synced (Google, Outlook, iCal). Key promise: “Coach more. Manage less. Download nothing.” Already required to use TeamSnap, SportsEngine, or something else? Sammi can work alongside your current platform and handle communication, calendars, and reminders automatically—so you get the upgrade without migrating everything. Fewer “Where do I find the schedule?” messages Less chasing payments and RSVPs manually Fewer late arrivals and fewer missed updates (because texts get read) More coaching energy—less admin exhaustion Sammi is launching Summer 2026, and coaches can join early to lock in founding coach pricing and get free during beta access. If you want better parent communication immediately: Time-sensitive info should be texted, not “posted” Send one clean weekly “Sunday night” message: schedule + changes + reminders When something changes, message it in one sentence: what / when / where If you want to see how it works for coaches and get early access:https://heysammi.com/coaches Show NotesEpisode SummaryThe Problem Coaches Recognize ImmediatelyWhy It HappensWhat Makes Sammi DifferentKeep Your Current Tools… or Use SammiWhat Changes for Your ProgramLaunch + Early AccessCoach Takeaways You Can Use Even Without SammiCall to Action Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    16 min
  3. May 26

    The Player-Led Laboratory: A "Fill-in-the-Blanks" Guide to Autonomy

    https://teachhoops.com/ If you want to build a team that can survive a late-game run, you have to stop being a "Joystick Coach." When you control every movement from the sideline, you are building a team that is (1)__________ rather than (2)__________. A championship program is built on the belief that the coach's job is to prepare the mind, while the player's job is to (3)__________ the moment. The "Zero-Second" Rule: Players should know their next move (4)__________ they catch the ball. This reduces mental (5)__________ and keeps the defense in a constant state of recovery. Constraints-Led Training: Instead of running "dry" 5-on-0 sets, use (6)__________ games to force players to solve problems in real-time. If you want them to make better decisions, you must increase the (7)__________ of those decisions in every practice. The "V" Word: To truly let players lead, a coach must practice (8)__________. This means allowing a turnover to happen in June so that the player has the (9)__________ to fix it in January. Next Play Speed: The most important decision a player makes is how they respond to a (10)__________. A player-led team has zero (11)__________ after a whistle. Dependent: If they always look at the bench for the play, they can't adapt to the flow of the game. Autonomous: You want "thinkers" who can solve puzzles without a timeout. Execute: The plan is yours; the execution is theirs. Before: This is the hallmark of high-IQ basketball. Friction: Indecision is the enemy of $eFG\%$. Small-Sided: 2v2 and 3v3 drills create more "touches" and "choices" per minute. Rep Density: Don't just count shots; count the number of decisions made. Vulnerability: You have to be okay with "ugly" practices where learning is actually happening. Experience: Knowledge is what you read; experience is what you do when things go wrong. Mistake: The "Next Play" is always the most important one. Hang-Time: Eliminate the emotional baggage that slows down transition. When you let players make decisions, you are moving from Transactional Coaching (do this to get that) to Transformational Coaching (becoming the type of person who knows what to do). The PhilosophyThe Worksheet for CoachesThe Coach's Master KeyWhy This MattersStageThe Coach's RoleThe Player's RolePreparationDesigns the "Constraints" and the "Standard."Studies the "Why" and masters the skill.Live ActionObserves and takes notes for the "Truth Room."Makes "Zero-Second" decisions based on the read.The DebriefAsks: "What did you see on that play?"Reflects on the "Probability" of that choice. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    12 min
  4. May 21

    Are coaches too reliant on outdated tools?

    https://teachhoops.com/ Are coaches too reliant on outdated tools? It’s easy to think juggling a dozen apps and spreadsheets is just “part of the job”—but what if it’s holding you back? In this episode, Bill Flitter and guest innovator Devansh Kaushik dig deep to challenge the status quo and show how modern, streamlined solutions can give coaches back their most precious asset: time. Are you running your team or is your tech running you? Tune in for: Ways to simplify communication and payment headaches. Fresh strategies to make team management seamless. How efficiency leads to happier coaches, players, and parents. More game-changing tips await—ready to level up? Let’s change the game together! If you enjoyed this episode, please leave us a 5-star review. Find Devansh Kaushik at https://www.waresport.com/ 💲Unlock More Revenue at your Tournament. Reward the Stands.https://sidelinesavings.com/ 👷🏼Build a season-long practice plan in 60 seconds: https://coachingyouthhoops.com/basketball-practice-plan/ ✅Download FREE Season Planning Checklist: https://coachingyouthhoops.com/season-checklist/ 📈 AI Game Analytics for Youth Teams: https://coachingyouthhoops.com/ai work ethic, youth sports, efficiency, time management, multi-sport athlete, cricket, tennis, chess, pickleball, startup, valedictorian, competitive nature, personal growth, consistency, process improvement, coaching, club management, sports technology, player development, parent communication, payment collection, scheduling, app design, relationships in sports, team leadership, athlete motivation, personalized development, sports infrastructure, parent involvement, sports administration Keywords Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    51 min
  5. May 19

    How can your club team keep players returning?

    https://teachhoops.com/ How can your club team keep players returning? Think keeping players is just about having a winning record? Most coaches assume talent loss is inevitable, but that's just bad coaching math. In this episode, Steve Collins and Bill Flitter, with over 50 years of wisdom and more than a few wild parent emails, unpack how communication, culture, and connection can skyrocket retention. Is your club a place kids want to stay? Tune in to learn: The secret sauce to parent relationships Why coaching coaches matters as much as coaching kids Building a culture players never want to leave Coaching gold awaits in this episode. Let's change the game together! If you enjoyed this episode, please leave us a 5-star review. 💲Unlock More Revenue at your Tournament. Reward the Stands.https://sideline.pro/ 👷🏼Build a season-long practice plan in 60 seconds: https://coachingyouthhoops.com/basketball-practice-plan/ ✅Download FREE Season Planning Checklist: https://coachingyouthhoops.com/season-checklist/ 📈 AI Game Analytics for Youth Teams: https://coachingyouthhoops.com/ai Keywordscoaching youth hoops, player retention, club team management, communication with parents, club culture, coaching retirement, teaching experience, virtual practice, club hopping, player development, open practices, parent relationships, fun in youth sports, coach training, hiring coaches, coaching skills, age-appropriate coaching, playing time concerns, coaching boundaries, club director responsibilities, youth basketball, tournament planning, coach-player-parent triangle, youth sports burnout, coaching experience, practice planning, youth team selection, coaching challenges, former college players coaching, coaching youth hoops website Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    15 min
  6. May 14

    Ep 335 Does delayed tech access benefit youth sports development?

    https://teachhoops.com/ Are you letting screens sideline your players’ social skills? Some believe kids can handle tech without much guidance, but that’s a risky bet. In this episode, Bill Flitter teams up with youth tech expert and Indiana high school hall of fame inductee Kate Doerksen to break down smart approaches to technology. Is your team building real-life skills beyond the court? Listen in to get: Practical ways to set boundaries with tech. Tools to grow kids’ confidence, not just their skills. Secrets for turning losses into lifelong lessons. Plenty more insights await. Let's change the game together! If you enjoyed this episode, please leave us a 5-star review. 💲Unlock More Revenue at your Tournament. Reward the Stands.https://sideline.pro/ 👷🏼Build a season-long practice plan in 60 seconds: https://coachingyouthhoops.com/basketball-practice-plan/ ✅Download FREE Season Planning Checklist: https://coachingyouthhoops.com/season-checklist/ 📈 AI Game Analytics for Youth Teams: https://coachingyouthhoops.com/ai Keywords technology access, social media, parenting boundaries, device supervision, Apple Watch parental controls, geo tracking, independent play, screen time limits, team communication apps, physical activity apps, social media addiction, tech moderation, healthy sleep, tech abstinence, childhood creativity, digital wellbeing, parent guilt, school phone policies, screen time impact on sleep, real-life connections, AI companions, TikTok usage, digital detox, sports and life skills, coaching confidence, earned confidence, focusing on strengths, learning to lose, online safety, Sage Haven app, parental control resources Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    25 min
4.9
out of 5
76 Ratings

About

Check us out at www.coachingingyouthhoops.com Are you a new or experienced youth basketball coach looking to cut through the noise and have someone just tell you what works? It’s easy to waste time and money learning how to coach Kindergarten through 8th-grade basketball on your own. Join seasoned youth basketball coaches Bill and Steve as they give you the blueprint you need to succeed on and off the court. In each episode, you'll discover easy-to-implement tips and techniques that you can apply to your next practice. Will Launch Weekly on Tuesday Mornings

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