Become the Athlete Coaches Trust.
For athletes who want to earn more playing time, lead their team and perform when the pressure is on.
Communication. Leadership. Mindset.
Most athletes think they need more training. More combo moves. More shooting drills. More time in the gym.
Of course, skill matters. But decision-making, resilience and consistency matter too.
The athletes who earn more playing time and get recruited are rarely just the most talented. They're the athletes coaches trust the most because they are coachable.

What Coachable Really Means
Most athletes think being coachable means being polite and respectful and saying, “Yes Coach!” That's part of it, but being coachable is so much more.
Being coachable means hearing what is asked, making an honest effort to apply it, and continuing to work on it until it becomes a habit.
If you nod your head, say “yes coach” but then continue to make the same mistake … you are an agreeable or obedient athlete, but not necessarily coachable.
Coachable athletes listen to the instructions and try to apply what they were taught. They learn from their mistakes … then evaluate and adjust. Are you coachable or just polite?

What Makes TIC Different?
Most training focuses on what athletes do. We focus on how athletes communicate, lead and think.
Build confidence
Improve decision-making
Become more coachable
Compete under pressure
Develop leadership and communication skills
Learn how to adapt during the game

Because basketball is not about memorizing moves. It's about solving problems.
Train Different
Most training focuses on drills, moves and building a bag. We focus on decision-making and communication.
Using game-like situations and small-sided games, athletes learn how to read the game, adapt to defenders, and make better decisions under pressure.
Because the best athletes don't just react to the game. They adapt to it.
Training Opportunities