Players need consistency and repetition. This is what we do and why. Go from John Wooden to Dean Smith to Gregg Popovich and the details change - pace, spacing, what’s in vogue. Core ideas stick.
A handful of truths keep showing up if you stay in the game long enough.
This isn’t a checklist. It’s actionable items for young players.
Start simple… then simplify again
Every coach says they want simplicity. Then the season starts and complexity creep happens.
The best teams don’t run less, they see the game better. Players know where, when, and why.
When breakdowns happen, it’s almost always because we added extra or too much. At the core of the Feynman Technique (teaching) is simplifying.
Footwork shows up everywhere
It shows up in warmups. It's evident in the first few minutes of a game and during crunch time. Bad feet turn good ideas into turnovers. Good feet create separation.
We talk offense, defense, schemes…but if a kid can’t pivot cleanly or loses balance, nothing else matters.
Coach Wooden said that Walton's greatness arose in never tiring of working on footwork.
Spacing fixes more than you think
A lot of problems we solve are spacing problems. When the floor is right, decisions get easier. Driving and passing lanes open. Help has farther to travel.
When it’s tight, everything feels rushed and players start forcing stuff in traffic. Execution suffers.
Chuck Daly advised, "Offense is spacing and spacing is offense."
The ball should do the work
When a team "dribbles the air out of the ball," the game slows, the defense loads up, and every possession suffers.
The ball moves quicker than anyone. It always has. "The ball has energy."
Players have to see it
Whiteboard genius is nice, but eventually the game gets played with its chaos and uncertainty. That’s the game.
The good teams aren’t just running plays. They read, decide, and execute. The best team feel the rhythm and logic of the hardwood.
Possessions add up
It’s not one play. The game sums individual possessions. Winning possessions win quarters. Winning quarters wins games.
Quiet stuff adds up:
- a careless turnover
- a failed box-out
- a rushed or ill-advised shot
Stack mistakes and the game tilts. Joe Mazzulla coaches with film the 10-15 possessions that need to be done better.
Defense is about being where you’re supposed to be
Effort matters but effort without discipline is messy. Good defensive teams talk, anticipate, and react. They don't chase plays, they sit on them. You feel the difference from the bench.
Contain the ball. Win in the paint. Contest shots without fouling. "Simple is never easy."
Fatigue changes how you think
"Fatigue makes cowards of us all." A step slow because of missed reads results in missed chances, late passes, fewer open shots.
When players tire, decision-making fails. Conditioning helps decisions and execution.
Roles matter more than people admit
Erik Spoelstra says "there is always a pecking order." Good teams understand roles. Not everyone inhabits the same job. They need to know and trust their roles.
Confusion shows...and it spreads.
Culture isn’t a speech
Culture shows up in performance. How do teams react to challenges?
Do they talk? Do they point fingers? Do they stay connected?
Timeouts don't build or fix culture. Build culture every day, whether you’re paying attention to it or not.
Where it always seems to land
Don't make the game harder than it is. What matters most?
- teamwork
- spacing
- footwork and passing
- decision-making (shot-selection, help and recover)
- competing
- relentless effort
And then repeating them again tomorrow.
The best coaches don’t pile things on. They rely on the same ideas until the players own them.
Lagniappe. You don’t need something new. Find players who:
- are balanced
- move the ball and themselves
- trust what they see and execute consistently
If they can do that, the game makes sense. And when seeing becomes believing, it gets a lot easier.
Lagniappe 2. Relationships reflect character. Execution is competence.
UConn running horns into a mid post and flare screen is absolutely sick. This is elite level stuff. pic.twitter.com/rG2r4m632E
— Steven Karr (@SKarrG0) April 7, 2026
Lagniappe 3. Want higher rated blogs. Go to Feedspot and grow the game. https://bloggers.feedspot.com/