
15 May 2026
Ep 1929 How Do You Keep Multi-Sport Athletes Bought In Without Starting a War in May?
Basketball Coach Unplugged (A Basketball Coaching Podcast)
About
https://teachhoops.com/
May is when programs collide—football lifting, track traveling, baseball finishing, AAU starting, kids getting jobs. If you don’t handle multi-sport athletes the right way, summer turns into a tug-of-war. This episode gives a simple framework to keep your best athletes connected to basketball without drama and without unrealistic expectations.
Why multi-sport athletes aren’t the problem—unclear expectations are
How to keep kids invested without guilt, pressure, or “choose us” ultimatums
The difference between summer development roles and in-season playing roles
The minimum effective dose that prevents kids from disappearing for 6 weeks
How to build buy-in through structure, not speeches
1) Respect
If you trash another sport, you lose the kid
Say it out loud: “We support multi-sport athletes”
Trust goes up immediately when you lead with respect
2) Roles
Summer is for earning trust—not owning starting spots
Define what “trust” means: communicate, show up when you can, bring energy, do your plan
Clear roles remove the fear of “losing my spot” because of schedule conflicts
3) Reps
Give multi-sport athletes a plan that fits real life
The “Two Touch Rule”: two basketball touches per week
Keeps the chain unbroken and prevents rust, frustration, and drop-off
The 24-Hour Rule
If you’re missing something, communicate the day before
Builds maturity and eliminates last-second drama
Two-Lane Summer Plan
Lane 1: Team development (open gyms, small-sided, culture, leadership)
Lane 2: Individual development (two-skill plan: one strength + one weakness)
Leadership Group in May
3–5 kids (mix multi-sport and basketball-only)
Give them jobs: organize workouts, bring freshmen, lead warmups, send weekly texts
Responsibility builds connection
Don’t treat multi-sport kids like they’re disloyal—resentment kills effort
Structure beats complaining
Celebrate communication and effort: what you praise gets repeated
Win May by setting clear expectations before summer chaos hits
This weekend, do 3 things:
Tell your team you support multi-sport athletes
Define “trust” in your program (what it looks like in summer)
Set the Two Touch Rule so nobody disappears
Offseason templates, tracking sheets, two-skill plans, and open gym structures:https://teachhoops.com/
Episode SummaryWhat You’ll LearnThe Framework: Respect, Roles, and RepsPractical Tools From the EpisodeKey TakeawaysCoach ChallengeResource Mention
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
May is when programs collide—football lifting, track traveling, baseball finishing, AAU starting, kids getting jobs. If you don’t handle multi-sport athletes the right way, summer turns into a tug-of-war. This episode gives a simple framework to keep your best athletes connected to basketball without drama and without unrealistic expectations.
Why multi-sport athletes aren’t the problem—unclear expectations are
How to keep kids invested without guilt, pressure, or “choose us” ultimatums
The difference between summer development roles and in-season playing roles
The minimum effective dose that prevents kids from disappearing for 6 weeks
How to build buy-in through structure, not speeches
1) Respect
If you trash another sport, you lose the kid
Say it out loud: “We support multi-sport athletes”
Trust goes up immediately when you lead with respect
2) Roles
Summer is for earning trust—not owning starting spots
Define what “trust” means: communicate, show up when you can, bring energy, do your plan
Clear roles remove the fear of “losing my spot” because of schedule conflicts
3) Reps
Give multi-sport athletes a plan that fits real life
The “Two Touch Rule”: two basketball touches per week
Keeps the chain unbroken and prevents rust, frustration, and drop-off
The 24-Hour Rule
If you’re missing something, communicate the day before
Builds maturity and eliminates last-second drama
Two-Lane Summer Plan
Lane 1: Team development (open gyms, small-sided, culture, leadership)
Lane 2: Individual development (two-skill plan: one strength + one weakness)
Leadership Group in May
3–5 kids (mix multi-sport and basketball-only)
Give them jobs: organize workouts, bring freshmen, lead warmups, send weekly texts
Responsibility builds connection
Don’t treat multi-sport kids like they’re disloyal—resentment kills effort
Structure beats complaining
Celebrate communication and effort: what you praise gets repeated
Win May by setting clear expectations before summer chaos hits
This weekend, do 3 things:
Tell your team you support multi-sport athletes
Define “trust” in your program (what it looks like in summer)
Set the Two Touch Rule so nobody disappears
Offseason templates, tracking sheets, two-skill plans, and open gym structures:https://teachhoops.com/
Episode SummaryWhat You’ll LearnThe Framework: Respect, Roles, and RepsPractical Tools From the EpisodeKey TakeawaysCoach ChallengeResource Mention
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices