Ep 1966 Are You Coaching Your Bench… or Letting It Drain Your Team?
teachhoops.com
Episode Title: Are You Coaching Your Bench… or Letting It Drain Your Team?
Your bench is never neutral. It is either giving your team energy or taking energy away. Too often, coaches focus only on the five players in the game while the players on the bench sit, pout, whisper, or check out.
In this episode, Coach breaks down how to build a bench culture that creates readiness, energy, ownership, and team-first habits.
Players do not magically become ready when their name is called.
They become ready because they have been engaged the whole time.
The bench is not where players disappear.
The bench is where readiness is built.
1) EyesBench players must watch with purpose.
They should be watching:
matchups
who is tired
how the opponent guards screens
where rebounds are coming off
what defense the team is in
time, score, and fouls
2) EnergyBench players must add life to the team.
That means:
clapping for teammates
standing on big plays
celebrating charges
bringing positive energy
staying connected when they are not playing
3) EchoBench players must repeat the team standard.
Examples:
“Sprint back.”
“Next play.”
“Get a stop.”
“Hit first.”
“Talk early.”
Your bench should echo your culture.
Body language spreads fast.
One player pouting can drain the bench.One player checked out can impact the group.One player with bad energy can make the team feel divided.
Players can be frustrated.Players can want to play more.But they cannot take energy away from the team.
Play 5-on-5, but let the bench earn points too.
Plus One For:
calling out a screen early
celebrating a charge
reminding a teammate of the standard
knowing time, score, and fouls
bringing energy after a mistake
Minus One For:
silence
pouting
not knowing the defense
negative body language
checking out
Once the bench matters, players start owning it.
Do not just tell players, “Be ready.”
Tell them what ready means.
Examples:
“You are going in to defend.”
“You are going in to rebound.”
“You are going in to handle pressure.”
“You are going in because we need talk.”
“You are going in to bring energy.”
Players need to understand how they impact winning.
If you do not define a player’s role, they will define it by minutes and shots.
That can poison a team fast.
Have role conversations early, clearly, and honestly.
A winning role might be:
“I get on the floor because I defend, rebound, talk, and bring energy.”
That is not a small role.
That is a championship role.
There is no neutral bench
The bench must be coached intentionally
Body language is part of team culture
Every player needs a job
Role clarity prevents frustration
Energy, engagement, and readiness must be practiced
Championship teams do not have throwaway players
This week:
Give your bench three jobs: Eyes, Energy, Echo
Score bench impact during scrimmage
Praise positive bench behavior out loud
Correct negative body language early
Have one honest role conversation before frustration builds
Your bench is where culture is tested.
In February, when foul trouble hits, injuries happen, and momentum swings, you will need those players locked in.
Coach the bench now.
Eyes.Energy.Echo.
For role templates, culture tools, practice plans, and complete coaching systems, go to:
teachhoops.com
Show NotesEpisode SummaryThe Big IdeaThe 3 Bench JobsCoach Body LanguagePractice Idea: Bench Impact ScrimmageDefine What Gets Players on the FloorWhy Role Conversations MatterKey TakeawaysCoach ChallengeClosing Thought
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