Growth Spurts, Talent, and Long-Term Basketball Development
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About this listen
This episode explores long-term athlete development in youth basketball, focusing on growth spurts, biological versus chronological age and why early performance does not reliably predict future success. It explains why coordination, shooting accuracy and confidence often drop during rapid growth, why this is a normal adaptation rather than regression, and how training, strength work, skill development, and mindset should be adjusted during these phases to support long-term development instead of short-term results.
Key takeaways
- Early basketball dominance is often driven by early physical maturation, not superior skill
- Biological age can differ significantly from chronological age and strongly affects performance
- Performance drops during growth spurts are normal and represent adaptation, not regression
- Coordination temporarily decreases as limbs grow faster than the nervous system adapts
- Extra conditioning cannot replace skill work during periods of rapid growth
- Strength training is safe during growth when done intelligently and supports injury reduction
- Youth athletes should not copy adult strength programs during growth spurts
- Movement variety and technique should be prioritized over chasing strength numbers
- Speed before puberty is mostly neurological; muscle-driven speed improves after puberty
- Long-term success comes from patience, work ethic, and focusing on development, not comparison
Link to 1-pager with practical advices:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1d0YQRjm1EbiFc78c4REJJ3lQAb-wdG-W/view?usp=sharing
Link to episode for Vertical Jump:
https://youtu.be/28-R19myrl4
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