
11.05.2026
admin
In the world of evidence-based coaching, the most important metric isn’t the number of shots made; it’s Time on Task. “Decision-making density” is another way to describe this concept. Simply put, every second a player spends listening to a coach lecture is a second lost where they could be learning to navigate a defense.
To prepare players for the pressure of a game, they need to make 10 to 20 decisions in the gym for every one they’ll face on game night. If a player only sees a short-roll read twice in a game, but you use Small-Sided Games to give them 30 reps in a Tuesday session, you’ve just compressed fifteen games’ worth of experience into one practice.
Try this SSG:
If you want to maximize your basketball practice design, you have to be intentional about the clock. Here are three ways to immediately increase your team’s Time on Task:
Think of a toddler learning to walk. We don’t lecture them on biomechanics; we create an environment where they can pull themselves up and stumble. Practice design should function the same way. Speeding up the learning process requires the courage to let your players fail, turn the ball over, and find their own solutions. If it looks perfect in the gym, it’s likely too easy, and no real learning is happening.
Does this mean every session should be chaotic? Not quite. Effective basketball practice design uses a “sliding scale” of complexity:
If your players can’t solve problems in the gym without you yelling instructions, they won’t solve them in the fourth quarter. Trust your constraints, maximize your Time on Task, and watch your team’s adaptability skyrocket.
Great basketball practice design doesn’t just make practice look organized—it helps players adapt, think, and perform when the game becomes unpredictable. When coaches build sessions around decision-making, retention, and game-like reps, players develop habits that actually transfer to competition. That is the real goal of practice.
Ready to transform your gym?




