Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- look at some one on one training through the winter and some of the lower AAU team to start.
Good luck!!
Where do you find one-on-one training?
We found my kid's first trainer by contacting HoopEd and asking for ideas. You can also ask around at camps and clinics. Also, a site like https://www.coachup.com/sports/silver-spring-md/basketball can provide some ideas.
Just don't be afraid to try several trainers and switch. My kid trained with 3 different trainers, and they were all good for different stuff. One, for example, was a great conditioning trainer, but his skills were bad and he shot worse than my kid.
One thing to be aware of: most trainers will train your kid to dribble and shoot, which is important, but you will have a hard time finding a trainer to teach your kid to dribble while being guarded aggressively, to finish through contact, to tip/steal the ball, to fall without hurting themselves when taking a charge or being fouled while making a layup. Those are super important things that most kids who don't grow up around super competitive basketball don't learn, and they make a big difference to how your kid comes across to other players and how much fun they have (i.e. do they look scared and seem like an easy kid to steal the ball from or do they seem like a kid that loves/looks for contact).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- look at some one on one training through the winter and some of the lower AAU team to start.
Good luck!!
Where do you find one-on-one training?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- look at some one on one training through the winter and some of the lower AAU team to start.
Good luck!!
Op here. This is so promising. We live by Tyson’s/McLean. I would love to sign him up for a lower AAU team and some skills clinics.
Can you recommend lower AAU teams?
I have no idea how to find them. We are new to basketball.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- look at some one on one training through the winter and some of the lower AAU team to start.
Good luck!!
This. My kid started one on one and small group training when he was the worst player on a bad rec team. After a couple of months with a really good trainer, he was playing up a year and starting on a not bad mid-tier AAU team. By high school, he was playing on a team with kids hoping to make the NBA.
It's important to recognize the levels in basketball and recognize that -- contrary to the conventional wisdom that basketball is all about athleticism and natural talent -- most kids move through lots of levels. Kids need a base level of athleticism, but beyond that, it's really about how good their coaches and trainers are and how willing the kid is to train hard and do what their trainers teach them (e.g. hundreds of hours of form shooting in the paint rather than going to the gym and missing threes, hours of exhausting ball handling drills rather than playing pickup with their buddies). To me, that's actually the rarest thing -- seeing a kid who knows how to train and is willing to do the work. It's really mentally hard, and most kids can't make themselves do the work, so they go to the gym and play around with their friends and call it training.
Anonymous wrote:OP- look at some one on one training through the winter and some of the lower AAU team to start.
Good luck!!
Anonymous wrote:OP- look at some one on one training through the winter and some of the lower AAU team to start.
Good luck!!
Anonymous wrote:OP- look at some one on one training through the winter and some of the lower AAU team to start.
Good luck!!