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Open gym can be one of the most valuable parts of your offseason — or one of the biggest wastes of time. Too often, players show up, shoot around, play sloppy games, argue calls, and leave without getting better.

In this episode, Coach breaks down how to turn open gym into a culture-building, competitive, player-led environment that actually helps your team win later in the season.

Open gym should not be random.

Random open gyms create random habits.

If players are going to be in the gym, coaches need a simple structure that builds the things that matter:

communication

competitiveness

leadership

shot selection

defensive habits

team standards

accountability

Open gym does not need to feel like practice, but it should still have purpose.

Too many open gyms become:

half-speed shooting

lazy transition defense

arguing over fouls

players choosing teams by popularity

no communication

no standards

no leadership

no carryover to the season

Players get sweaty, but they do not always get better.

Before the first game starts, give players one clear standard for the day.

Examples:

“Today we sprint back every possession.”

“Today we talk on every screen.”

“Today every team must get a paint touch before a shot.”

“Today no one argues calls.”

“Today the winning team stays only if they defend.”

One standard gives the gym focus.

1) The First 10 Minutes: Skill With PurposeStart with something short and sharp.

Examples:

finishing through contact

catch-and-shoot decisions

two-dribble attacks

closeout into containment

advantage passing

This sets the tone and keeps players from drifting into lazy habits.

2) The Middle Segment: Competitive Play With ConstraintsDo not just roll the ball out.

Add a rule that teaches the habit you want.

Examples:

no paint touch, no point

defensive stop counts double

no talking, possession does not count

turnover means automatic point for the other team

must make one extra pass before scoring

Constraints teach better than speeches.

3) The Final Segment: Pressure FinishEnd open gym with something that feels like a game.

Examples:

first team to 3 stops wins

down 4 with 2 minutes left

free throw decides possession

no dribble possession

one stop to stay on

Players remember how you finish.

Open gym reveals a lot if you know what to look for.

Watch for:

Who organizes the group?

Who talks when they are tired?

Who competes without the ball?

Who includes younger players?

Who pouts after mistakes?

Who sprints back after a bad shot?

Who makes others better?

Your team’s future leaders often reveal themselves in open gym before they ever get a title.

Open gym should not be coach-dominated.

Give players ownership.

Assign simple jobs:

one player starts warmups

one player explains the standard

one player organizes teams

one player tracks wins and stops

one player brings younger players into the group

You are not just building basketball habits.

You are building ownership.

At your next open gym, do not just unlock the doors and hope.

Pick one standard.

Add one constraint.

Create one pressure finish.

Then watch who leads, who competes, and who brings others with them.

Open gym should have purpose without feeling like formal practice

One daily standard is enough

Constraints create better habits than lectures

Pressure finishes teach competitiveness

Open gym reveals leaders, connectors, and tone-setters

Random open gyms create random teams

The offseason is not just about who gets shots up.

It is about who builds habits when nobody is clapping.

Make open gym matter.

Make it competitive.

Make it player-led.

Make it something that carries into your season.

For open gym templates, practice plans, leadership tools, and complete coaching systems, go to:

teachhoops.com

The Big IdeaThe Problem With Most Open GymsThe Open Gym StandardThe 3-Part Open Gym StructureWhat Coaches Should WatchThe Leadership PieceCoach ChallengeKey TakeawaysClosing Thought Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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