Maybe you’ve heard them. Maybe not. Advice that works. Find some that will work for you.
1. Better shot selection is the quickest path to improvement. Showing grainy, black and white film, Coach Ellis Lane called them, "Sh*t shots." After a film session, players better take fewer the next game.
2. Better late than early off a screen - Say, “Wait, wait, wait.”
3. Big reasons why offenses fail is lack of urgent cutting. In a set play, you might not have much initial choice. Your effort is your choice.
4. Turnovers kill dreams. We learned, “The ball is gold.”
5. "Spacing is offense and offense is spacing." The three-point line is the spacing line. Bad high school teams often have bad spacing.
6. "Shout praise and whisper criticism." We choose whether to lose games and lose players who tune us out.
7. “The ball is a camera.” If it can’t see you, then it can’t find you. And if the ballhandler can't see you, your cut won't help.
8. The ball is the smartest thing on the court. It finds scorers, rebounders, assist guys, shot blockers, and defeat who get deflections and steals.
9. Find guys who prioritize the scoreboard over the scorebook.
10. Fouls negate hustle. Kevin Sivils preaches, “Foul for profit.”
11. “Think shot first.” - Don Kelbick The shooter is most open when she first catches the ball.
12. “What does it feel like to be coached by me?" Parents aren’t always wrong…if we "bury" a player in a doghouse, do we expect praise?
Lagniappe. Hall of Fame coach Chuck Daly said, "I'm a salesman." We sell every day at home, at school, at work, on the court, in print. If we don't add value, that's a hard sell...
Coaching Interview Strategies
— Coach Battenberg (@TerryBattenberg) July 10, 2026
1. Don’t mention your AAU or JV record; sell your philosophy.
2. Make "eye contact" with every single person in the room.
3. State realistic goals; promise improved play, not championships.










