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The 5 Minute Basketball Coaching Podcast
Steve Collins (Teachhoops.com)
1266 episodes
1 day ago
The 5 Minute Basketball Coaching Podcast will share, tips, drills and much more Published Mon-Friday at 7:00 am
Show more...
Basketball
Education,
Sports
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All content for The 5 Minute Basketball Coaching Podcast is the property of Steve Collins (Teachhoops.com) and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The 5 Minute Basketball Coaching Podcast will share, tips, drills and much more Published Mon-Friday at 7:00 am
Show more...
Basketball
Education,
Sports
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts122/v4/30/6c/f7/306cf7c6-ab89-cd82-7926-49dc7a8e5ef0/mza_2911112878739115984.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Ep 1251 Is Your Team Getting Better, or Are They Slowly Falling Apart?
The 5 Minute Basketball Coaching Podcast
7 minutes
1 day ago
Ep 1251 Is Your Team Getting Better, or Are They Slowly Falling Apart?
https://teachhoops.com/ Why Is There No Such Thing as "Staying the Same" in Basketball? In the world of competitive sports, the concept of "maintaining" is a myth; you are either growing or you are dying. There is no neutral ground. A team that tries to "hold the line" and rely on past successes or current talent levels is already in decline because their competition is actively working to overtake them. "Dying" doesn't always look like a losing streak; often, it looks like complacency. It’s the silent belief that "we are good enough," which leads to a subtle drop in practice intensity, a lack of focus on details, and a resistance to new challenges. To grow, a coach must instill the mindset that today's success is just the baseline for tomorrow's effort, and that comfort is the enemy of progress. A "dying" team often displays symptoms long before they show up in the loss column. The most dangerous sign is artificial harmony—when players stop holding each other accountable because they don't want to deal with conflict. You will see players prioritizing personal stats over team success, eye-rolling when teammates make mistakes, and a locker room fractured into cliques. Communication becomes transactional rather than transformational; players talk at each other, not with each other. When the collective hunger to improve is replaced by a sense of entitlement or "just getting through" the season, the culture has begun to rot from the inside out. Conversely, a "growing" team embraces discomfort. These teams actively seek out their weaknesses so they can fix them. In a growing culture, conflict is welcomed because it shows players care enough to correct a standard that isn't being met. You see bench players just as engaged as starters, veterans mentoring rookies without being asked, and a collective resilience that views failure as data for improvement, not a reason to quit. Growth requires a daily recommitment to the process. It means the coach and the players are constantly asking, "How can we be 1% better than we were yesterday?" effectively engaging in a perpetual race against their own potential. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The 5 Minute Basketball Coaching Podcast
The 5 Minute Basketball Coaching Podcast will share, tips, drills and much more Published Mon-Friday at 7:00 am