THE BASIC PODCAST

Kevin Houston

Welcome to The Basic Podcast, where we dive deep into the multifaceted world of basketball, covering everything from grassroots to the pros. Join me as I explore the dynamic landscape of high school basketball, dissect the ins and outs of AAU travel basketball, analyze the exciting realm of college basketball, and connect with the key influencers and personalities shaping the sport. Through insightful discussions, expert analysis, and exclusive interviews with the who's who in the basketball community, we aim to provide listeners with a comprehensive understanding of the game while uncovering the stories and strategies that drive its evolution. Whether you're a die-hard fan, a budding player, or a curious observer, this podcast is your ultimate destination for all things basketball.

Episodes

  1. 10/01/2024

    Attitude is Everything: How to Make the Choice for Success

    Show Notes for The Basic Podcast: Episode "Attitude is Everything" Host: Kevin Houston (aka Mr. Basic) Episode Title: Attitude is Everything | Overcoming Setbacks & Building Resilience Overview: In this episode, Kevin Houston, aka Mr. Basic, dives into a fundamental aspect of success both in basketball and life: attitude. Kevin shares his personal journey of overcoming a career-threatening injury, the power of mindset, and how your attitude can be the key to turning setbacks into opportunities. Whether you're getting ready for basketball tryouts or facing challenges in other areas of life, this episode will inspire you to adopt a positive attitude and stay resilient. Key Topics: Introduction to the Topic: Attitude determines your altitude (0:00 - 2:30) Kevin’s Personal Story: Injury during senior year and missing the NBA draft (2:30 - 6:15) Overcoming Setbacks: Turning disappointment into a comeback (6:15 - 8:50) The Nature of Attitude: Why it matters and how to control it (8:50 - 12:00) Facing Challenges: Preparing for basketball tryouts with a positive mindset (12:00 - 14:00) Practical Tips: How to maintain a positive attitude and grow through adversity (14:00 - 18:00) Setting Goals and Action Steps: Daily practices to build a resilient mindset (18:00 - 20:30) Final Thoughts & Call to Action: Choose your attitude and embrace growth (20:30 - end) Key Takeaways: Attitude is a choice – Your mindset influences everything from your success in sports to how you navigate personal challenges. Setbacks are setups for comebacks – Every challenge is an opportunity to grow stronger. Actionable Steps to Improve Your Attitude: View challenges as growth opportunities Set small goals daily to build momentum Surround yourself with positive influences Practice self-talk that empowers you Mindset over outcome – It’s not always about whether you succeed right away; it’s about maintaining a growth-oriented attitude no matter the result. Memorable Quote: "Your attitude determines your altitude. It’s the key to turning setbacks into setups for a comeback." Actionable Tips: Start your day by setting a small, achievable goal (whether it’s basketball practice or schoolwork). Surround yourself with positive mentors and friends who uplift you. Use challenges as learning experiences to improve and refine your skills. Resources Mentioned: Personal story from Kevin’s basketball career at St. Bonaventure University Tips for shifting mindset during school or basketball tryouts Call to Action: Join Kevin and the Basic Podcast community in striving for improvement every day. Subscribe for more episodes that break down not just the fundamentals of basketball but life itself. Leave a comment on how you’re choosing to shift your attitude this week! Social Links: Instagram: @thebasketballfactoryinc Hashtags: #MrBasicTraining #BasketballMindset #AttitudeIsEverything #GrowthMindset Thanks for tuning in! Make sure to subscribe, and we’ll see you in the next episode of The Basic Podcast!

    11 min
  2. 05/03/2024

    Behind the Buzzer: Unveiling the Secrets of College Basketball's Live Period

    #Podcast Title: Behind the Buzzer: Unveiling the Secrets of College Basketball's Live Period #Podcast Description: Dive deep into the heart of college basketball with this exclusive look at the Live Period!** In this episode, we uncover the crucial details that every player and parent needs to know about the collegiate scouting season. Learn from interviews with top college coaches, get insider tips on standing out, and understand what scouts are really looking for. Whether you're aiming for a scholarship or just love the game, this is your all-access pass to mastering the college basketball Live Period. Here's what this episode covers: 00:00 Introduction 01:15 - What exactly is the College Basketball Live Period? 03:30 - How can players maximize their visibility to scouts? 05:50 - What do college coaches look for during the Live Period? 08:20 - Real stories from players who made it big in the Live Period 10:45 - Tips for parents supporting their athletes during scouting seasons 13:00 - How to prepare physically and mentally for this crucial time 15:30 - The dos and don'ts during the Live Period - Coaches Speak Out 18:50 - Closing thoughts: Key takeaways for players and parents [ RESOURCES ]  👉 Subscribe to get new episodes, free tips, and exclusive content directly in your inbox: [https://podopshost.com/65e8c3e0a2182] 👉 Listen to our special series on getting ready for college sports: [https://podopshost.com/65e8c3e0a2182] 👉 Want to learn more about college basketball planning?  [ WORK WITH US ]  🔥 Looking to elevate your game to the next level? Join Us! at: [https://thebasketballfactoryinc.com] 🔥 Discover more about our player development services: [https://thebasketballfactoryinc.com] 🔥 Interested in sponsoring this podcast? Reach out directly at: [khouston@thebasketballfactorynj.com] [ DISCLAIMERS ] The content shared in this podcast is based on personal experiences and interviews within the college basketball industry. We are not affiliated with any colleges or official scouting organizations. Please consult with a professional advisor for personal athletic career advice. #CollegeBasketball #BasketballRecruiting #SportsScholarship

    22 min
  3. 04/15/2024

    Maximizing Potential: The Impact of Coaches and Resources in Basketball

    Episode three let's do it Kev what's good brother not much just another week yes I mean let's get right into it man we wanted to talk about player resources right talk a little bit about uh really honestly not let just get started on talk about the resources you had as a basketball player coming up in New York uh maybe even give a little background of what your day-to-day was as a young Kevin Houston growing up in New York who you're were playing with how you trained how you got better maybe even a little back story to the path to the to the essentially the NBA the professional professional level and then we'll segue into the resources that are available now and how players could learn from this and say hey wow he did it with minimal resources I have all these resources available to me what can I do to essentially evolve my game and take my game to the next level let's get into it yeah uh the resources I had what resources first of all we didn't you know back in my day we didn't have a lot of resources uh you know we had to create a lot of our resources uh a lot of times uh when you're growing up I think you actually do better because you're almost in survival mode right you don't have a lot of resources so you kind of got to make things up as you go but our biggest resource I think when I grew up was our a coach uh Tippy who's still coaching nowadays in Brooklyn he's he's helped so many countless uh people uh reach the ultimate level I believe the last time I I checked on the website uh they he's putting through between him and Ziggy putting through aund you know 190 kits uh through division one colleges from the time that I was young to now even now they're still doing the same thing uh so our biggest resource was Tippy because without Tippy I don't think a lot of a lot of people wouldn't have made it uh he had a gym much like mine uh at the Y Brooklyn YMCA that he opened his doors to all the players like we can come work out whenever we wanted to and when when we came he actually had all the training equipment and stuff like that he would give anyone that came in a workout like take for me for instance like I wasn't I tell the kids here I wasn't very good when I first started at basketball uh it it was really you know people like Tippy helping me out understanding like hey this guy's got potential so let me let me train him like he is one of the top guys and that's you know half of my background of why I'm so holding the kids accountable here is because of my background how my a coach was with me he influenced me a lot because no matter whether you know you couldn't shoot you couldn't dribble you couldn't do anything he was the guy that treated you like like you're the star like you were the best on the team and and I think without him doing that a lot of kids wouldn't have made it but again he helped us learn how to work out like he would take us through dribbling drills uh with the heavy ball that's why I I like the heavy ball nowadays helping kids dribble um he like even now you don't see it a lot he actually implemented like a big ball which is Norm like twice the size or three times the size a regular ball is he would have like shooting equipment there that we could have on and really really he was the first I think that did all that everyone else was more like instruction based you do this you do that go right go left and he was more of a guy that he would train you but would have all these tools for you to help you get better well beyond I think it's worth clarifying what do you what do we mean essentially by player resources so clearly you mentioned your previous coach Tippy pause on how he you know was able to provide an open gym for you hold on his name is Tom murnin but we call him we call him Tippy that's his nickname so Tom MC Turnin MC Turner is his real name and he was a he was a Wall Street guy he he was on Wall Street for um I believe like 20 years and he was helping us out as well but I just wanted to clarify what his real name is yeah C that was a big pause was but uh it's it's worth uh clarifying for the listeners what exactly do you be my resources I know you talked about a coach uh your coach that meant a lot to you whether it be skill development simply just having a gym available for you to train in what other resources did did you have or are you just saying that's the only thing that was readily available to you what are some resources that you're able to translate to the listeners so they can understand yeah beyond my coach I also had X Y and Z and then we could transition into the resources that are present today uh like yeah I I think our resources was the coaches around us piece like because we didn't have a lot like I guess you would say another resource could be like the park that you that we would play in like each of us had something where we walk out of our apartment building and there was a court that was our biggest resource right other than that it was all selfmade like you had to go on the court you had to do the drills you had to make up what you need to work on no one back then it was going to tell you what to do it was more self-serving than anything how would you compare the resources you had then to what's available now I mean now there's trainers everywhere there's there clubs everywhere there's YouTube there's Tik Tok all these things that are now available to provide as a resource for players to get better how would you compare what's available now to what you had and can you say one is better than the other I know you had like a line earlier where you mentioned that you almost felt as if it worked to your benefit having limited resources expand on that uh it's a huge difference it's it's really it's really night and day I believe back in the day we had people are G to lie but we had DVDs they had DVDs like they would sell DVDs online so if you wanted to do something you had to actually go online go to whatever trainer that was selling this DVD and you'd have to purchase a DVD then you would have to P then you would have to wait two weeks you'd have to wait two weeks for their DVD to come then you you you have to watch it you know you have to watch it at home because there's no portable stuff you can't take this stuff to the gym and then pause it and stuff so you have to wash this at home right notes at home like what you saw on the DVD and then when you're in a gym you got to execute it no longer is it like that because every everything's on the phone right so a lot of times I feel like there's too much resources nowadays uh because you have you have every trainer that's online um whether it's digital stuff online training online courses uh uh you got all social media platforms they're on uh so and you got all these tools now you got all these tools that people are using um that the kids have I think an unlimited resource right they have unlimited they have access to gems they have access to tr like unlimited trainers which I just told you it was not a lot of trainers back in the day when I grew up it wasn't even heard of you go to a trainer it wasn't heard of like okay I'm going to go get this trainer and and work under him for you know two three years and develop my skills it was unheard of that someone did that it was more or less like your AE coach that knew so much about basketball he was the guy that was training you and he would do a workout for a group workout it wasn't a lot of individual workouts like there is now can you speak to what what you've noticed with a clubs in terms of how they Point their players in the right directions when it comes to providing the resources but Au teams High School coaches as well oh train here go there play for him do these drills do you have an opinion on what you've been seeing in essentially the aou realm or the high school realm if you can speak to that yes uh in in the a realm it it's hard to say it's hard to say because there's so many guys that either on their website or if you talk to them they're all about development but when you either hear someone talk about their program that you trust or you see them how they how their kids are in games because we get to go play against other teams so we get to see how other teams uh play you can and then you can you can Gauge by watching them play uh you know are they being trained the right way so me looking at that I know and there there I don't want to I don't want to I don't want to say that people are not there are uh a program that are right and some of them are my friends uh that are doing it the right way but I would say the majority is not doing it the right way it's what you said a few episodes a ago which is Cash in cash out I'm gonna have this kid in and you know I'm not gonna develop this kid I'm just gonna give him a bunch of games okay and call it development because that's what parents want to hear parents want to hear that you're developing their kid but in actuality you're really not because if you're not having to me if you're not having extra skill sessions if you're not having extra things for the kids and all you're doing is just a plain aou how are you developing off of one day a week you're not okay how are you developing off of two days a week if you're a true developer you're giving these kids a lot more you're there and what I mean by a lot more is they should be practicing more than they should be playing because if it's the opposite opposite way around and you're playing more than you're training then that's not development to me and put yourself under the fire what could you be doing better to help develop the kids in your program what have you done in the beginning when you first got started in a what have you learned through that process and developing players through the generations of kids and to now what you have set up currently yeah I I I've transformed my program in the beginning uh and I'm I'm very open about this in the be

    23 min
  4. 04/04/2024

    How to Develop Skill?

    All right, cool. Take two, I guess. So, kev, what's up, man? How we doing? Doing good, man. On this rainy day. It's crazy. I mean, let's really  get into it. Last, last week was player expectations.What that looks like in terms of how player can manage their, you know, their career cycle from a youth player all the way up to high school, potentially college.And now we want to roll into skill development.You know, the skills landscape, as we've talked about privately, has definitely been drastic through times.You see people, a lot of skill, no skill.How do you know, really walk our audience into, like, how does one acquire skill?What do you see in skill development that's missing in terms of training or it's mindset? And I know I got a couple of other series of questions I want to get your opinion on, but you could take the lead from here.Yeah.The first thing I want to discuss is about skill development and where we're at, you know, in the United States as far as, like, the skill acquirement.And I think we're at a crossroads.I think we're, you know, you have people that do it the right way of teaching kids, and then you have kids that you have trainers that do it the wrong way.And I think now more than ever, there needs not, that needs to be, like, one way of doing things, but there's a certain set of skills that everyone should have, I believe, and that comes down to what they're getting taught, what they're looking at online, because now we live in a digital world where now people are looking at their phones to get training advice, and now everyone, I'm not on social media a lot, but when I am on social media, it seems like a lot of guys have a lot of different opinions on the way they should be training.And it's everyone, to me, like, you don't have to be, to me, you don't have to be a player to teach someone.Right? But you do have to be knowledgeable about what you're teaching kids, because nowadays a kid looks online and they think, you know things about basketball that sometimes, clearly that person doesn't know the ins and out and what's going to work in a game and what's not going to work in a game.So I think as far as, like, skill development, it's at a crossroads.Like, if I'm a kid nowadays, what do I believe online is going to help me? Because there's so much stuff online that kids are looking at that I think it's confusing. Yeah. Like, with many things. I believe the term is like information overload. You don't know where to go, who to listen to.There's so much information out there that you almost don't know where to start. Should I work on combination moves? Should I work on finishing? How good should my handle be before I start practicing in game? Whatever. Right? You see all these different things on Instagram, TikTok, YouTube.But you mentioned earlier that you believe there's a good foundational core skills that you think players should have.What do you think those skills are?When do you think they should start building on those skills and really just talk about that dynamic? Yeah, I think the basic fundamental skills that everyone should have is, you know, your basic rip, left, right, your basic counter off of the rip.Okay, maybe fake to the left, go to, go to the right, and vice versa.Fake to the right, go to the left.I think those are simple enough skills in which they still work at an elite level.And I think these kids are not getting taught that. These kids are not getting taught triple threat yet.So many kids are good with the ball, but if you take them outside of taking away their strength with this, dribbling the ball and you say be, get it off of a triple threat, they don't know how to do it.First of all, they don't know they're left from the right. All right? A lot.I know a lot of kids, especially some of the kids that I've trained in the past, like, I got to teach them basic footwork, how to move, how to move your defender where you want them so you can blow by them.Right? And that's. That's about just basic footwork of moving your feet to where you want to beat your opponent.People don't know that because all you see online is dribble, dribble, dribble.And when you look at it on tv, when you look at it on tv, you see people doing simple moves.Take. Take foreigners. This week is going to be the final four.It's going to be final four for girls, going to be final four for men. Right? You look at some of these games and you cannot tell me, you. You don't see people doing simple things. You don't see people dribbling through their legs a thousand times. You don't see, of course, the stars. Okay, the stars are doing it, but that's one girl, that's one guy.So what are the other players are doing? Because that's gonna dictate on what you do as a player who wants to get at that level or want to be able to acquire some of the skills that they have, you're gonna have to follow the same suit.If they're doing simple moves on tv, that's telling you, well, I need to do simple moves.I need to master simple moves. So some of.Some of the things that I would teach, especially younger kids and older kids who want to be at that level, is your triple threat.Working out of a triple threat, how to get your defender off balance so you can beat them right away.Because at every level, quickness matters. The quickness of the move matters.You have an internal clock of two to 3 seconds that you have to make a move to get by the defender or the defense, the people in back of the main defender who's guarding you, then they're going to readjust.And that shot that you would have if you blow by your defender, you're not going to have, because now you have a defense behind you that he's going to contest your shot or negate you going to the basket.It's definitely also worth mentioning that even when you watch these players warm up or train, a lot of is very fundamental right form, shooting, footwork, you know, whatever.Whatever is within their arsenal at that certain position. I know privately you have a story. I don't know if you want to share.I mean, we could also cut this out if need be, but that when you were at U Miami, you were playing against Ray Allen and playing against, training with, and then you saw the attention to detail and the simple things he was doing.I don't know if you want to share that story. Yeah.When I was at the University of Miami, that was, I believe that was the lockout year of, I want to say 98, 99 was a lockout year.Don't hold me to that. But I think that was around that time, and a lot of.A lot of NBA players, they flocked to Miami because the lockout. Nice weather.So during that season, in that preseason, my first year at Miami, we got the play against every superstar that was in the NBA.You know, Tim Hardaway, Alonzo, the whole, pretty much the whole Heat players.And then Glenn Robinson came down, Ray Allen came down. Even Alex Rodriguez came down. Who I, by the way. By the way, he could hoop. Alex Rodriguez can hoop.Listen, I know he's a great baseball player, but you talk about basketball player like I didn't like.You look at him like, oh, he's got this guy, just a baseball player now. He can truly hoop. He could hit shots, he could dribble. His athleticism. Surprised me.But getting back to the story of Ray Allen, because they would come down there for the whole week.So we would play pretty much every day. We would work out and then play in the afternoon.So one day I, you know, I get to the gym pretty early every, pretty much every day, right? Just to work on my game.Because at that time, I still was a developing player, developing my shot, developing my ball handling.And every day I would see Ray before he beat everyone to the gym.And I had a chance to sit and watch.Like, I would sit and, like, I wouldn't bother him because I know how people are.I'm sitting in a corner just watching him. Literally, he would just take form shooting. He did form shooting for an hour. He didn't go. He didn't go further out. He didn't, you know, you would think he's a three point king.He's, you know, he pulls up and he does all this great stuff.All he did was just work and work and work.So at the end of the week, at the end of the week of watching this guy just shoot form, shooting over and over again, I asked, I finally worked up enough courage to go ask him, and I said, hey, ray, why?Why don't you shoot, like, threes? Why don't you shoot, like, pull ups and stuff

    26 min
  5. 03/28/2024

    Player Expectations

    Cool.  Spring AAU season's here. Kevin, tell the people, how you feeling about Rise as One, the Basketball Factory plans, expectations. I know that leans a little bit into the topic we're going to talk about. Introduce the audience to who you are and what has you excited for the spring? What I think just to piggyback on what you said about the spring obviously we do a year round program. Like most programs that come back in the spring. We go year round. Also, we've been prepping for this the whole year knowing that actually, Kev, before even getting into that, why don't you just introduce yourself first? I'm trippin Introduce yourself. Who are you for the people who are just listening out of the blue?  Yeah, for the new people that don't know me at all,  Kevin Houston played  10 years of professional basketball. The original one absolutely played at university of Miami. Even further than that, played at Seward County community college, transferred into the university of Miami, then transferred again to St. Bonaventure. Brooklyn kid went to John Jay high school in Brooklyn. Same, but a whole bunch of more famous guys than me that went to John Jay high school. I've come from a a great high school.  Great basketball background with a lot of my family members playing ball. Yeah, that's me in a nutshell I could sit here there and bless you all my awards But you know that would take a long time I want to just say people to trouble I was a great, you know I was a great player that I was a fortunate to be on great teams with great teammates. So  Yeah, that's I think  That's pretty much who I am.  All right. Now I'll get into it. Spring AAU, you're the director of RISE as one AAU club. Introduce RISE, talk about the Basketball Factory and let's get into it.  Yeah. AAU wise, like we've been going year round, so we, I have a program that we do AAU, but it's not your typical AAU, whether you meet once a year or twice a year, you I have kids that play, you go around from, fall to right now to, to the spring, summer winter. This is our Superbowl, we lead up, we try to prepare ourself as much as possible leading into the spring season and we don't have that much turnover. Although this year was an unusual year with.  having a ton of kids. I don't know where these kids came from but I'm glad that the program is growing to give you an indication piece of how many kids that came this spring or our AU program on a typical year on the probably let's go by my best year, but my best year my best year was, Back when I had two courts and the most I've ever had was 74.  So this year coming into this year I was expecting just to retain the kids that has always came to my program, but then we had an explosion, especially middle school of 97 middle schoolers, not your typical 74. So I think from that standpoint shows me we're on the right path of doing things because I'm pretty sure these kids wouldn't have came unless, and I don't do that much advertising. Okay. You don't mean I'm not a social media guy. I'm not on social media a lot. I send out, email campaigns to just my parents. So to have that many kids is really impressive, but I'm really happy because I feel like the kids that have been in my program the longest, I think they are getting new teammates that, you've seen it. They're more talented. They're more talented kids that are in the program and I'm excited to have them there and I'm excited to coach them and develop them over the next couple of years.  Definitely worth congratulating. Just seeing progression. Not only have I been a player, but not only helping you coach and train these kids, it's always nice to see your standard as for local basketball in the area to just exceed your expectations. But really just leaning into expectations. We wanted to hop on this podcast and talk about player expectations. Before we even dive into player expectations, do you have any expectations out of the spring leading into the summer, any goals, things you're looking forward to?  I have goals. I have expectations like anything. Just, I had a parent's meeting last week and we talked about a lot of this stuff. Last week, and I think  especially for me being in that area, because being in different areas, you should have different expectations, right? If you're in an area that is producing year after year, division one players, I can't have that same expectations on my kids that these other areas have on theirs because we frankly are not a basketball area. We've become a basketball area. Because the atmosphere we've created at Rises 1 but we're not necessarily per se, everyone thinks of, okay, Northern Jersey has as a hotbed for basketball, but I think we've created something. And so my, my, my expectations, especially with the kids with the coaches, with anything is let's have a standard, let's stand for something. And what that is, If you come to our program, you're going to work hard. You know that you're going to do a certain amount of work  to get you ready and prepared.  So for us, me, it's about setting a standard and holding the kids to the standard. And I think everyone who comes to my program realizes that, Hey he's going to, we're going to practice hard. We're going to practice the right way. We're going to practice like a college atmosphere where I have you on schedule and we're doing stuff as if we were a college now we're not. Okay. But my thing, my thinking is if we can get on a schedule of a college program, then we're setting these kids up for success. Okay. Also, a lot of my background is European. So a lot of my drills that I do is a lot of European stuff in which you're sharing a ball, you're moving the ball, balls, not sticky. So for my expectation this year really is just to develop the new kids, continue developing the kids that have been in my program and the parents have been in my program for, for the last three years. And basically get some of the newer kids on the same schedule as the kids who are in my program. And in doing this, I think you create a continuity that, it might pay off this year, but I think in the next few years, I think if you can get them on the same schedule, I think it will pay off. And in the long run, I think a lot of  AU stuff is short term. This it's like a microwave success. Okay, they come over to, they're supposed to win right away. They're supposed to do all this stuff right away. And then when it doesn't happen,  whether it be the director or the kid okay, I'm done. I'm going to go somewhere else and try it again, but it doesn't work that way. Especially for areas like ours, like I'm such a developer that I tell the parents like, Hey, especially the new players are coming in this year that it's going to take a while. It may take the whole season. It may take two, two more seasons.  It's no different than learning at school. It takes a while for the kids to understand what you want, what the expectation is, because a lot of these kids are coming from programs. That they have no expectations. Like no  cash or cash out cash in cash out, but here you have expectations because you cannot let your teammate down. I'm a big team guy and playing for one another. I, we got our hands full, but we got to this group. And I told you this when I put it together, this group of kids. They feel different. They're different than the last group. And I feel like they're more engaged in basketball. They're more eager than ever. We also have younger age groups. So I think that's gonna, that helps because we're having younger age groups comes at excitement for practice, come for that hunger for learning. Yeah, I'm very excited. I'm very excited. Having a lot of these new kids and seeing what they can do. And. And I'm a developer. So anytime I can sit there and develop talented kids, that's what I want to do.  Something I think that goes unnoticed, so to speak, and not just your club, or basketball and other sports is How set, how unique setting standard is relevant to how society portrays it and really what effects it has in long term success for these kids. The reality is what's the percentage one, two, 3 percent people actually get to play at the collegiate level, let alone division one or two. Instilling, these disciplines and behaviors and structures for these kids in these kinds of communal environments and sports right within your gym  is useful and necessary, right. To help introduce them to the real world, teamwork in the working environment when you get to the university level.  And again, player to coach in regards to my relationship with you in this professional realm. It's definitely something I've seen useful for myself and my peers, right? And other individuals that went on to play college basketball and seeing some of the kids we've coached, right? To see how it translates and how well prepared they are and seeing their outcomes. But yeah, shout out to you in that regard. But really, to get into it, man, player expectations. I know you briefly mentioned your expectations or goals, as you recall,  into what you're looking for this spring and this summer.  But I think something that needs to be vocalized or shared or discussed is player expectations. A lot of players have expectations, in different realms, right? We could talk about  skill expectations, right? They think they have a certain skill set and then when they go to these games and they're essentially failing, they think they've set such a high bar of expectation, how good they are, that they get disappointed due to the lack of influence from, rental input or, coaches that have, don't have their  well being and first thought, what are your thoughts on just that, that particular segment of player expectation, kids and their skill sets.  Yeah it's a different day and age. We've had numerous conversations about this where  kids expectations don't meet their

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Welcome to The Basic Podcast, where we dive deep into the multifaceted world of basketball, covering everything from grassroots to the pros. Join me as I explore the dynamic landscape of high school basketball, dissect the ins and outs of AAU travel basketball, analyze the exciting realm of college basketball, and connect with the key influencers and personalities shaping the sport. Through insightful discussions, expert analysis, and exclusive interviews with the who's who in the basketball community, we aim to provide listeners with a comprehensive understanding of the game while uncovering the stories and strategies that drive its evolution. Whether you're a die-hard fan, a budding player, or a curious observer, this podcast is your ultimate destination for all things basketball.