22. June 2026
Dear Parents: At Elite Camps, Your Job Is Not To Coach From The Stands
Elite camps can create big opportunities.
They can also expose bad habits fast.
Not just from players.
From parents too.
I’ve watched it for years.
A player checks into a drill.
Before the rep even starts, mom or dad is yelling from the sideline:
“Shoot it!”
“Attack!”
“Pass!”
“Go score!”
“Box out!”
“Push it!”
Let me be direct.
At an elite camp, that usually does more harm than good.
The Coaching Staff Is Evaluating More Than Skill
Yes, they’re watching:
- Shooting
- Ball handling
- Athleticism
- Size
- Production
But they’re also evaluating things many families miss:
- Body language
- Coachability
- Response to instruction
- Focus
- Emotional control
- How players handle mistakes
Those things matter.
A lot.
Body Language Talks Loud
A player misses two shots.
What happens next?
Do they sulk?
Roll their eyes?
Drop their shoulders?
Blame teammates?
Or…
Do they sprint back?
Clap?
Communicate?
Stay engaged?
College coaches notice all of it.
Every bit.
Body language can raise your stock.
It can also tank it.
Eyes on the Coach, Not the Stands
This is the big one.
Players—when a coach is speaking, your eyes should be on the coach.
Not mom.
Not dad.
Not your trainer.
Not your phone.
The stands cannot help you earn trust from evaluators.
The coaching staff can.
When instruction is being given, lock in.
Listen.
Make eye contact.
Ask questions if needed.
Then apply it.
That shows maturity.
That shows basketball IQ.
Parents: Your Presence Should Bring Peace, Not Pressure
Your kid already feels pressure.
They know this camp matters.
They know people are watching.
They do not need 40 extra instructions from the bleachers.
Sometimes the best thing a parent can do is…
Be quiet.
Observe.
Take notes.
Encourage afterward.
Trust the work.
Support does not always sound loud.
Sometimes support sounds like silence.
The Truth
At elite camps, everybody notices scoring.
But the best evaluators notice everything else.
Who listens.
Who competes.
Who communicates.
Who responds to coaching.
Who stays composed.
That’s where separation happens.
Parents, help your player by letting them own the moment.
Players, lock into instruction and control what you can control.
Because talent gets attention.
But coachability earns trust.
And trust opens doors.
It Ain’t For Everybody.