4 Player Development Concepts I've Been Using This Summer cover art

4 Player Development Concepts I've Been Using This Summer

4 Player Development Concepts I've Been Using This Summer

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In this solo episode, host Coleman Ayers takes listeners inside his summer training sessions, sharing four key concepts he has been refining on the court with a diverse group of players ranging from pre-draft prospects to youth athletes. Coleman frames the episode around the idea that coaching is itself a constraints-led process, as players are posed with problems, coaches are simultaneously solving their own. The result is a candid, real-time look at how practical coaching philosophy evolves through repetition, observation, and a willingness to question conventional wisdom.Coleman unpacks how fatigue changes shot mechanics at a biomechanical level and why the classic cue of "use your legs" can actually backfire. He introduces hybrid games as a solution for training groups with mixed positions, breaks down how individual constraints allow every player to work on their own specific problems within the same drill, and explores a nuanced middle ground between block and variable training — particularly useful for younger or less experienced players who need challenge without overwhelming complexity. Each concept is grounded in real examples from his sessions and connected back to broader principles of skill acquisition and the constraints-led approach.Timestamps00:00 — Welcome and summer training context 00:39 — Running sessions 4–5 hours a day and using them to experiment and problem-solve 01:34 — How coaching mirrors the constraints-led approach: finding solutions through live problems 02:34 — Fatigue shooting: preparing pre-draft players for NBA workout conditioning 03:14 — Observing how different player archetypes respond to fatigue 04:07 — Fatigue as an internal constraint that forces new technical solutions 04:56 — Tracking shot mechanics from fresh to fatigued and drawing correlations 05:57 — Why "use your legs" cue often leads to slower, less efficient shots 06:28 — Coaching cues that worked: plyometric ground contact, external focus, making the ball feel light 07:19 — Results: players adjusted technique in ways that produced more efficient power 08:02 — Using fatigue as a constraint in drills and small-sided games 08:56 — Rotation systems and movement patterns that naturally induce fatigue during shooting 09:15 — Having players get their own rebounds to keep fatigue levels up 10:00 — Hybrid games: training mixed-position groups with a 7-footer, a 16-year-old guard, and everyone in between 10:50 — How varied rosters pushed Coleman to design games that serve multiple positions simultaneously 11:42 — Ball screen games as a natural entry point for hybrid guard/big work 12:30 — Dump-off games and positioning concepts for guards and bigs 13:02 — Defining hybrid games: letting each position operate in their truest role 13:52 — When to rotate positions versus keeping players in their own role 14:20 — Credit to Thomas Iisalo's philosophy on early positional exploration 15:10 — Individual constraints: giving each player a different problem within the same game 15:47 — Half-advantage 1v1 template with three dribbles to the rim 16:21 — How individual constraints turn a shared drill into a personalized workout 17:00 — The biggest CLA growth: it's not just setting up the game, it's knowing your players 17:42 — Block vs. variable training: finding a hybrid approach for younger or newer players 18:28 — The 360-degree shooting drill as an example of a difficult-but-blocked constraint 19:11 — Why block training with high difficulty still produces variability at the micro level 20:12 — The difference between micro and macro problems in skill development 21:05 — Meeting players halfway: those who struggle to move away from block training 21:40 — Anchor shooting vs. exploration shooting and where this approach sits on that spectrum 22:18 — Examples of difficulty without full variability: quick hop-backs, decision-based footwork 22:59 — The block-to-variable spectrum and how to adjust based on athlete and context 23:31 — How all four concepts apply to younger players, not just college/pros 24:57 — Closing thoughts: try these lenses, share what you're working on, join the BAM Coaches platformResources & LinksFree Resources: https://byanymeanscoaches.com/resources BAM Coaches Platform: https://platform.byanymeanscoaches.com/#/platform Books: https://byanymeanscoaches.com/blueprint-bookKeep ListeningIf you enjoyed this episode, here are three more you'll want to check out:What Science Says About Shooting Through Fatigue The research-backed companion to this episode. Coleman digs into the biomechanics study behind why fatigue breaks down shooting mechanics — and what cues and constraints actually help players maintain their rhythm under pressure. 🔗 https://www.buzzsprout.com/1911095/episodes/19032348Individualizing Group Workouts A deeper dive into the individual constraints concept Coleman introduced here. He breaks ...
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