Basketball: fun

February 2026 Sportplan Coaching

Basketball history is full of talented teams that underperformed and less talented teams that overachieved. The difference often comes down to chemistry - how well players connect, communicate, and sacrifice for each other. Building this culture is as important as building skills.

What is Team Chemistry?

Chemistry includes several elements:

Trust: Confidence in teammates' abilities and intentions.

Communication: Constant, clear, and constructive dialogue.

Sacrifice: Willingness to put team success over individual statistics.

Accountability: Holding each other to standards without resentment.

Joy: Genuine enjoyment of playing together.

Building Trust

Trust develops through:

Time together: Chemistry doesn't happen instantly. Teams need shared experiences.

Consistency: Players who show up and perform build credibility.

Vulnerability: Admitting mistakes and weaknesses creates authentic connection.

Support: Picking up teammates during struggles demonstrates loyalty.

Establishing Standards

Culture requires clear expectations:

Non-negotiables: Behaviors that are required (effort, attitude, preparation).

Player-owned: Standards players create themselves are more meaningful than coach-imposed rules.

Consistent enforcement: Standards applied equally to everyone.

Positive framing: What we do, not just what we don't do.

Role Acceptance

Every team needs role players who embrace their roles:

Define roles clearly: Players need to know what's expected.

Value all roles: Celebrate defensive stoppers and screen setters, not just scorers.

Role can change: Roles evolve based on matchups and development.

Role-specific recognition: Acknowledge players for excelling in their roles.

Managing Conflict

Healthy teams handle conflict constructively:

Address issues directly: Problems left unspoken fester and grow.

Focus on behavior: Critique actions, not character.

Move forward: Resolution means moving on, not holding grudges.

Coach involvement: Sometimes mediation is needed, sometimes teams work it out.

Team Building Activities

Shared experiences: Activities outside of basketball build connections.

Service projects: Giving back together creates meaning and perspective.

Meals together: Simple time together strengthens relationships.

Individual connection: Coaches knowing players as people, not just players.

Key Coaching Points

  • Chemistry is as important as talent for team success
  • Trust develops through time, consistency, and shared vulnerability
  • Player-owned standards are more powerful than coach-imposed rules
  • Role acceptance requires clear definition and genuine appreciation
  • Healthy conflict resolution prevents team-destroying issues

Drills for Team Development

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agility drills

fun agility drills for kids using throw down spotso

chris bycroft Coach, England

GAME TAKTICS

Hello all, Great site... Have a question. We are playing every Sunday games against other companies, 5 on 5 full court. can somebody recommend some prepared actions for attacing and some sefense strategics which we could use? Thanks a lot, Emir

Archived User Coach

What are Zone drills for 8 & 9 year olds?

What are some defensive drills for zone to 8 and 9 year olds? What are some good drills for teaching players to play offense against a zone? Thanks, John

John Murphy Coach, United States of America

How to coach kids who don't speak english!

I am currently coaching chinese students at an average age of about 7. Its for a basketball camp so there are no competitions or games to prepare for, merely working on individual skills. The problem I have is mostly with the language. I am currently a student so I know some of the language but not enough to exlain how a drill will work. Anyone have experience with this or any advice otherwise? I am a just a basketball player turned coach so any advice no matter how simple would be appreciated.

Archived User Coach

Dribbling for very young kids?

Hi all, great website. Just wondering if anyone has any tips/drills on really drumming into the kids that as soon as they get passed the ball they must dribble/shoot/pass rather than just running (and travelling!) down the court! Bear in mind these are beginner little girls who have never played before!! I'm doing lots of dribbling drills but thought you might all have some tips. Thanks in advance :)

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Simple competive shooting

I need a competive shooting drill for women ages between 18 and 30 as thats the age group that im coaching. Nothing to complicated as they the league is not too serious but i want my team. To have the edge Asked using Sportplan Mobile App

kathleen Coach, England

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