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In this quick-hitter episode of the BAM Coaches Podcast, Coleman Ayers breaks down a concept that most basketball coaches overlook: how to build truly basketball-strong players. Not weight-room strong. Not just bigger or more powerful. But athletes who can absorb, create, and manipulate contact in ways that directly translate to the game. Coleman reframes strength as a skill, one rooted in timing, momentum, and feel. Rather than brute force.
He organizes all on-court physical interactions into four key categories: closing space, maintaining and gaining position, standing your ground, and arm battles. From there, he delivers plug-and-play solutions you can implement immediately—especially through warm-ups and creatively designed 1v1 constraints. The message is simple: you don’t need perfect strength & conditioning to build basketball strength. You need better environments that allow players to experiment with contact and develop real, transferable feel.
00:00 Introduction and why basketball strength is often misunderstood
01:52 The difference between brute strength and basketball strength
02:46 The four contact categories: closing space, maintaining/gaining position, standing your ground, and arm battles
06:03 Why timing, momentum, and contract–relax separate elite players
09:05 Repetition without repetition: why feel can’t be taught verbally
10:10 Using warm-ups to build basketball strength (sumo holds, grappling, arm battles)
12:22 Dynamic bumps, curvilinear runs, and holding angles
13:55 Creative 1v1 starts to force contact situations
16:07 Constraints that encourage physical finishes and vertical contests
17:43 Simplifying contact with tools (holding a ball, hands behind back, exaggerated pushes)
18:27 The value of 1v2 scenarios and individual constraints
19:21 Final thoughts and practical takeaways
Coaching Resources: https://byanymeanscoaches.com/
More resources & Coleman's books: https://byanymeanscoaches.com/resources
If this episode gave you practical tools you can apply immediately, share it with another coach in your network and leave a review. And if you’re serious about building smarter, more adaptable players, dive deeper into our coaching resources and certification programs. Let’s keep raising the standard.
By By Any Means Coaches4.8
2525 ratings
In this quick-hitter episode of the BAM Coaches Podcast, Coleman Ayers breaks down a concept that most basketball coaches overlook: how to build truly basketball-strong players. Not weight-room strong. Not just bigger or more powerful. But athletes who can absorb, create, and manipulate contact in ways that directly translate to the game. Coleman reframes strength as a skill, one rooted in timing, momentum, and feel. Rather than brute force.
He organizes all on-court physical interactions into four key categories: closing space, maintaining and gaining position, standing your ground, and arm battles. From there, he delivers plug-and-play solutions you can implement immediately—especially through warm-ups and creatively designed 1v1 constraints. The message is simple: you don’t need perfect strength & conditioning to build basketball strength. You need better environments that allow players to experiment with contact and develop real, transferable feel.
00:00 Introduction and why basketball strength is often misunderstood
01:52 The difference between brute strength and basketball strength
02:46 The four contact categories: closing space, maintaining/gaining position, standing your ground, and arm battles
06:03 Why timing, momentum, and contract–relax separate elite players
09:05 Repetition without repetition: why feel can’t be taught verbally
10:10 Using warm-ups to build basketball strength (sumo holds, grappling, arm battles)
12:22 Dynamic bumps, curvilinear runs, and holding angles
13:55 Creative 1v1 starts to force contact situations
16:07 Constraints that encourage physical finishes and vertical contests
17:43 Simplifying contact with tools (holding a ball, hands behind back, exaggerated pushes)
18:27 The value of 1v2 scenarios and individual constraints
19:21 Final thoughts and practical takeaways
Coaching Resources: https://byanymeanscoaches.com/
More resources & Coleman's books: https://byanymeanscoaches.com/resources
If this episode gave you practical tools you can apply immediately, share it with another coach in your network and leave a review. And if you’re serious about building smarter, more adaptable players, dive deeper into our coaching resources and certification programs. Let’s keep raising the standard.

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