Publisher's summary

This Podcast will discuss basketball coaching with Coach Steve Collins. Coach Collins will do this with interviews and on topic discussions. (Discussion will revolve around basketball topics such as: Offense, Defense, Motivation, Team Building, Youth Basketball, High School Basketball, college basketball and much more...) We will publish weekly shows at 6:00 am..... Please check out our site if you like our podcast. www.teachhoops.com.
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Episodes
  • Ep 2879 How Should a Coach Lead When the Season Comes to an End?
    Mar 24 2026
    https://teachhoops.com/ When the season ends, what should a great coach do next? In this episode, I talk about why the end of a season is one of the biggest leadership moments of the year. This is where coaches have to tell the truth, honor the journey, and learn from what the season was trying to teach them. I break down why you should not judge the whole season by the last game, how to reflect honestly on your own leadership, and why your impact on players continues long after the final buzzer. This episode is about turning endings into growth. For more coaching help, leadership tools, and resources to build your program, head over to TeachHoops.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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    9 mins
  • Ep 2878 How Can You Use the "20-40-60 Rule" to Build Sustainable Program Success?
    Mar 23 2026
    https://teachhoops.com/ The 20-40-60 Rule is a strategic framework designed to help coaches manage the "emotional math" of a long season. It breaks down your roster and your focus into three distinct categories to ensure you are maximizing both your current wins and your future potential. The Bottom 20% (The Culture Builders): These are the players who may not see the floor often in high-stakes games, but they dictate the "vibe" of your locker room. If your bottom 20% are disengaged or "poisonous," your top 80% will eventually rot. You must coach these players with as much passion as your starters, because they are the "scout team" that prepares your champions for Friday night. The Middle 40% (The Development Engine): This is the "swing" group. These players are your primary rotation pieces and future starters. Your success in January and February depends on how quickly you can move players from the "Middle 40" into the "Top 20." This group requires the most "Rep Density" in practice to bridge the gap between their current skill and their required production. The Top 20% (The Performance Drivers): These are your "Alphas"—the players who will take the big shots and guard the opponent's best threat. Your job with this group is "Management and Empowerment." You don't need to over-coach their talent; you need to coach their Leadership and Accountability. To win the "Mid-Season Grind," you must master "Segmented Feedback." Use your TeachHoops member calls to "audit" your time management: are you spending 90% of your energy on the Top 20% while the Middle 40% withers away? A championship program is built when the "Middle" feels valued and the "Bottom" feels connected. By applying the 20-40-60 Rule, you ensure that every player in your gym—regardless of their ppg—has a "Job Description" that contributes to the mission statement. Finally, use this rule to Manage Parent Expectations. When you can clearly articulate to a family where their child sits in the 20-40-60 framework—and more importantly, what the specific "Roadmap" is to move from one bracket to the next—you remove the "Mystery" that leads to "Drama." Transparency is the ultimate "de-escalator." When everyone knows the "Math of the Roster," the focus returns to the "Hardwork of the Team." 20-40-60 rule in coaching, basketball roster management, team culture, player development, high school basketball, youth basketball, coach development, athletic leadership, basketball strategy, "Trust Equity" in sports, basketball IQ, program building, championship habits, coaching philosophy, character development, coach unplugged, teach hoops, basketball success, mental toughness, leadership standards, coaching legacy. SEO Keywords Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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    13 mins
  • Ep 2877 Are Winners Really "Wired Differently," or Are They Just Better Trained?
    Mar 22 2026
    https://teachhoops.com/ We often hear the cliché that elite athletes and coaches are "wired differently," as if they were born with a biological advantage in competitive grit. In reality, what we perceive as "wiring" is actually a highly developed "Default Setting" created through intentional habit-building. "Winners" don't possess a different set of emotions; they possess a different "Relationship with Discomfort." While the average player views fatigue or failure as a signal to "pull back," the elite player views it as the "Entry Fee" for success. This is what psychologists call "High Frustration Tolerance." To build this in your program, you must move beyond the scoreboard and begin rewarding the "Process of Struggle." The second pillar of the "Winner's Wiring" is "Obsessive Role Clarity." Winners don't try to do everything; they try to do their thing at a world-class level. They possess an "Internal Compass" that keeps them focused on their "Circle of Influence." In the mid-season January grind, "Winners" are the ones who don't get distracted by the "noise" of social media rankings or playing time complaints. They have a "Monastic Focus" on the next rep. You can train this by implementing "Single-Task Drills" where a player’s only job for 5 minutes is to be an elite "communicator" or an elite "rim protector." By narrowing their focus, you widen their impact. Finally, Winners possess "Emotional Elasticity." They bounce back from a turnover or a missed shot faster than their opponents. This isn't because they don't care about the mistake—it’s because they have a "Short-Term Memory for Failure" and a "Long-Term Memory for Success." Use your TeachHoops member calls to "audit" your team's "Recovery Speed." Are your players "hanging their heads" for three possessions after a bad call? If so, their "wiring" needs a reboot. By teaching "The Art of the Reset," you ensure that your team spends more time in the "Present Moment" than in the "Past Mistake." This mental agility is the ultimate "competitive gear" that separates the champions from the contenders. Basketball mindset, winner's mentality, elite performance, coaching psychology, mental toughness, basketball IQ, player development, high school basketball, youth basketball, coach development, team culture, "next play" mentality, competitive grit, success habits, athletic leadership, coach unplugged, teach hoops, basketball success, frustration tolerance, leadership standards, program building. SEO Keywords Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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    13 mins
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