Chris Oliver - Youth Basketball Development Ideas for Fun and Retention

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024

Комментарии • 8

  • @garrisonberg3837
    @garrisonberg3837 3 года назад +1

    Great content! Will be using a ton of your tips in my practices! Thank you!

  • @tidesmaniandevil
    @tidesmaniandevil 3 года назад

    Great stuff! I am using a lot of this with my teams (youth club and Junior High/Middle School). I have used coach Oliver's concepts in past and will continue to implement and reinforce based on this.

  • @TheeDjSpecial
    @TheeDjSpecial 3 года назад

    Great content thank you...

  • @tidesmaniandevil
    @tidesmaniandevil 3 года назад

    @57:21 are you saying that it is "not safe for kids to go to the playground"? You are about evidence. What is the evidence for THAT statement? The notion kids are not safe going to a playground is GREATLY exagerrated statistically and at very least depends on where you live of course. For 98% of folks watching this, including you kids out there, go the the playground, it is safe! Now go play some 1v1!

    • @gumbarich
      @gumbarich 3 года назад +3

      I agree. Playing at the park when I was a teenager (I'm 52 ) against older kids. younger kids, better skilled, lesser skilled kids taught me life lessons on (among other things) how to resolve conflicts, how to play fair, how (and when) to speak up for yourself, etc....

    • @tidesmaniandevil
      @tidesmaniandevil 3 года назад +2

      @@gumbarich EXACTLY! Kids are now sheltered from these opportunities as everything has to be organized, safe and sanitized (i mean in the general not literal sense of that word). Basically, without adults around kids had to figure out conflict managment and coping skills. No wonder we are now on our 2nd generation of adults and young adults that are incapable of coping with life's challenges. They've always had their safe space. Coach Oliver saying "it's not safe to go to park" is not only wrong but downright laughable.

    • @SoloBoredGamer
      @SoloBoredGamer 3 года назад

      @@tidesmaniandevil the park I go to play in there's druggies, knife crime and frequent muggings. Anyone going to an area like that isn't safe by themselves. I agree with all the sentiments as that is one of the best way to get exposure to a high skill level, but I don't think most parents would agree that's worth a kid losing their phone, money, house keys or coming home hurt. Recent surveys show that on average parents won't let there kids go out unsupervised over the age of 11, without the impact of a crime wave in a particular area. A court or a driveway is the only way that most would see as a safe opportunity.

    • @tidesmaniandevil
      @tidesmaniandevil 3 года назад

      @@SoloBoredGamer Fair enough, I am not saying every park is safe (certainly not the case) and i am sorry to hear of the issues in your area; however, i still say Coach Oliver just making a blanket statement of park's not being safe is a gross overgeneralization. I dont have the direct numbers, but i strongly suspect that the percentage not allowing kids under 11 in parks does not align with the percentage of parks nationwide that actual have the problems you speak of. Bottom line: use common sense and know your area.