Quote of the Day – Steve Kerr on AAU Problems

Even if today’s players are incredibly gifted, they grow up in a basketball environment that can only be called counterproductive. AAU basketball has replaced high school ball as the dominant form of development in the teen years. I coached my son’s AAU team for three years; it’s a genuinely weird subculture. Like everywhere else, you have good coaches and bad coaches, or strong programs and weak ones, but what troubled me was how much winning is devalued in the AAU structure. Teams play game after game after game, sometimes winning or losing four times in one day. Very rarely do teams ever hold a practice. Some programs fly in top players from out of state for a single weekend to join their team. Certain players play for one team in the morning and another one in the afternoon. If mom and dad aren’t happy with their son’s playing time, they switch club teams and stick him on a different one the following week. The process of growing as a team basketball player — learning how to become part of a whole, how to fit into something bigger than oneself — becomes completely lost within the AAU fabric.

 

– Steve Kerr, Head Coach, Golden State Warriors

 

 

 

Share

Top 9 Mistakes

The Top 9 mistakes made by parents:

  1. Coaching your child during a game
    1. You can disagree all you want. This is an absolute no-no.
  2. Thinking that because you believe your child outplayed an athlete who already has scholarship offers, your child must be a scholarship level player.
    1. You don’t know what you’re looking at, or what your doing
  3. Allowing your child to specialize in one sport at too early an age
  4. Spending thousands of dollars on unofficial visits, but failing to use all 5 official visits
  5. Spending money on recruiting services
  6. Failure to investigate and/or take advantage of prep school options
  7. Failure to prioritize education in decision making process
  8. Not taking SAT and ACT, or waiting too long to take them
  9. “Great” youth coaches who think that experience qualifies them to second guess high school coaches. This is a classic, ego driven, mistake.

 

Share