In this episode of the By Any Means Coaches Podcast, Coleman Ayers dives into one of the most common, and most mishandled, questions in basketball: how do you develop players during the season without sacrificing team performance? With limited time, energy, and gym access, Coleman breaks down why generic “vitamin” work and feel-good reps often fail to transfer, and how intentional player development can actually solve team problems rather than distract from winning.
Coleman outlines a practical, system-aligned approach to in-season player development, centered around individualized player development plans, rate limiters, and superpowers. He explains how to use small-sided games, constraints, and representative environments to build better decision-makers, improve confidence, and directly impact team success. This episode is a deep dive into aligning player growth with tactical performance—without turning athletes into system robots.
00:00 – Why in-season player development is one of the hardest problems in coaching
02:13 – Why player development often disappears once the season starts
03:12 – The importance of a true player development plan and a “North Star”
03:37 – Rate limiters vs. superpowers and why both matter
05:12 – Breaking development into situations, decisions, and skills
06:48 – Using film and observational learning during the season
07:43 – Connecting player development directly to your system and actions
09:11 – Why on-air, scripted reps don’t build real confidence or transfer
10:43 – Avoiding “system robots” while still defining roles
13:44 – Rethinking daily vitamins and maximizing the first 15–20 minutes of practice
14:28 – Using staple small-sided games with individualized constraints
16:10 – A detailed 2v1 shooting example for individualized development
18:44 – Why constraints unlock more value than new drills
20:15 – Aligning individual improvement with team performance
22:36 – Identifying individual rate limiters that hold back the entire offense
24:43 – Why yelling at players doesn’t fix development problems
26:44 – The underrated defensive benefits of small-sided games
29:03 – Improving communication between head coaches, assistants, and players
31:19 – Making pre- and post-practice work more efficient and game-relevant
33:19 – Using film and other players to accelerate learning
34:43 – Final thoughts on efficiency, creativity, and in-season constraints
Resources & Links:
Coaching Resources: https://byanymeansbasketball.com
BAM Blueprint Book: https://byanymeansbasketball.com/bam-blueprint
If this episode sparked ideas or challenged how you approach in-season development, share it with another coach in your circle. And if you want more tools, frameworks, and real-world applications for modern coaching, make sure to check out the BAM resources linked above.