The Ryan Hanley Show - Building Resilient Kids: The Real Game of Youth Sports
Episode Date: November 25, 2024In this episode, we sit down with Steve Dagostino, a nationally recognized basketball trainer and player development coach, to dive into the chaotic world of youth sports. Connect with Steve Dagostino...: Dags Basketball: https://www.dagsbasketball.com/ Maximize Basketball: https://www.maximizebasketball.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stevedags0/ Steve shares his journey from playing elite basketball to training athletes at every level—from kindergarteners to NBA players. Together, we unpack the growing tension between parents, coaches, and players and explore how the focus on winning has overshadowed the real purpose of youth sports. Steve provides invaluable insights into building resilience and competitiveness in kids, balancing competitiveness with emotional growth, and reframing success for both young athletes and their parents. Whether you’re a parent, coach, or someone passionate about sports, this episode delivers honest advice and actionable strategies for creating positive, impactful experiences in youth sports. What You’ll Learn in This Episode: The root causes of toxicity in youth sports today. Why focusing on effort and attitude trumps winning at an early age. The importance of resilience and competitiveness for long-term success. How to navigate team dynamics and challenging coaches as a parent. The truth about college recruitment and why Division I isn’t the only path to success. Sponsors:  Get a FREE trial of unlimited access and an additional 20% discount on Shortform through my special link: https://shortform.com/ryanhanley  Take your podcasting journey to new heights. Get booked on high-influence podcasts with That 1 Agency: https://bit.ly/that1podcasttour  Episodes You Might Enjoy:  From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delk  From One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymello  Is Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9   Get in Touch: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanley
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everyone and welcome back to the show.
We have a tremendous conversation for you today with Steve D'Agostino.
He is the founder of DAGS Basketball, of Maximize Basketball.
Steve is a high-performance basketball coach and trainer.
He works with kids all the way as young as kindergarten up to NBA players and everyone in between.
He is a big part of the renaissance that has happened in my local community.
This is the best part about this podcast.
Steve lives here in Albany, New York.
His business is based here in Albany, New York.
And he has been a major part of the sports renaissance that is happening in our area. We are consistently sending high-level basketball players
to Division I schools like North Carolina, Syracuse.
We currently have four local kids in the NBA,
and so much of that has to do with Steve and his training.
And I wanted to bring him in because he has a particular mindset, methodology,
thought process that I find to be, it's, it's refreshing. It is a refreshing way of approaching
this. I'm a former high school basketball referee. I did some college basketball as well. I played sports in college. You know,
I've seen the brilliance of youth sports as well as some of the nightmares that can come
with youth sports. And currently I coach my kids in both baseball and basketball as well.
And what I wanted to get into with Steve was how as parents or as coaches of youth athletes, do we align our
mindset so that we can help them become what they want to be? And it's an important framing. And so
much of this comes out of Steve's mindset. I love this episode. Whether you have kids and use sports or not, you are going to enjoy this because of concepts that Steve talks about,
like creating chaotic drills and the importance of training yourself for chaotic moments.
Now, you can have kids or not have kids.
You can have kids in sports or not have kids in sports.
And the idea of inserting yourself into chaotic situations, preparing yourself for chaotic situations
so that when they happen out of the blue, you are ready for them and can perform inside
of them is wonderful and powerful.
So with all that preamble, let's get on to Steve D'Agostino.
In a crude laboratory in the basement of his home.
Steve, appreciate you making the time today, my man.
Yeah, thanks for having me. I'm excited to be here.
You know, it's not very often that I get to interview someone from my hometown.
You know what I mean? We're both Capital Region guys.
And, you know, it's pretty cool that we're not sitting too far apart and getting to have
this conversation. And one of the reasons that I wanted to have you on the show is, and I brought
this up on the show before, so the audience has heard me talk about it, but I coach my own kids
in sports and I was a, a fastball referee at a fairly high level, both at the high school and
the college levels for, for 12 years years and I've just seen it feels
to me like every year the relationship between the adults and the kids becomes more toxic
and you've accumulated an incredible following not just in our local community with your coaching
program but nationally as well and you you working with incredibly high level players. And what that
tells me is the way you are talking about the relationship between coaches and kids, the way
that you're addressing that relationship, how you're speaking to these young athletes is really
resonating. So I'd love to start with, you know, where did your core philosophies come from?
Like we can get into exactly what they are, but what were the, what were the inputs into
your life, into your career that helped you develop those and to be such a positive influence
on kids?
Yeah, a hundred percent.
So I've, I've been lucky.
So my dad was a high school coach forever before I was even born. And then
he coached youth. He coached my brother all the way up and then was an assistant on our high
school teams. And then once we graduated high school, he went back to being a varsity head
coach. And so I've always had a good perspective from him on the youth basketball landscape,
the high school basketball landscape. And then my brother went on to be a college coach
locally at UAlbany, Hudson Valley,
and then down in Florida at an NAIA school.
So I got the insight, right,
for like the college stuff through him.
And then just in my own career,
having played elite AU on the Nike circuit
and then division two basketball,
and then overseas for six years,
I went through all that as a player.
And when I transitioned to being a trainer and a player development coach,
typically what happens is these development coaches are in one level, right?
You'll see their college MBA or their youth high school.
And I have two businesses, one, Daggs Basketball,
who we do kindergarten all the way up through 12th grade.
And then my national brand
maximize basketball that's where we focus on our NBA clients all of our national camps and clinics
and so I literally get every single level that I get to work with and so I I'm able to see you
know obviously like you're saying with the adults and all the craziness of youth basketball the high
school recruiting college landscape,
and then the professional aspect as well too.
And so there's so many different variables that go in it.
And I'm sure we'll get into a lot of them,
but I've been lucky enough that I have experience in all the different levels.
Yeah.
Why, you know, one of the things that got me out of reffing basketball,
and I can, I'll actually explain to you,
maybe you can find this funny because you'll know the teams,
but I would 12 years in the, in the, in reffing.
I've been to college camps. I'd done division three.
I'd done clinics at division two level.
I'd gone all the way to Glens Falls and done semifinals for state championship
games for, for high school.
Uh, loved it. Loved every second of it. Um, and the last two or three years that I was reffing,
I noticed, and this was probably 2010 to 2013. I noticed a severe shift in the overall attitude that people had. It went from
winning, but in this kind of the way that I was raised up and through it. There's always the
competitive nature. There's always kind of that you have your rivals in your local communities,
but it became much more combative, much more individualistic, much more the parents yelling from the stands.
And I had an experience.
I was at Rensselaer High School for a freshman basketball game.
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Area, which means it's fairly small, Visit MasterOfTheClothes.com to learn how. deal this stuff all happens it's all part of the game i'm walking off the court after the game and a parent walking through the crowd catches me with their shoulder and spins me around and i turn and i look at this guy now one i'm six foot four 200 pounds and this dude makes me look like a smurf
and he's looking at me like if you take one step towards me i'm gonna take you out and then he says
this is your fault 30 point game in a freshman, on a freshman, towards the end of the season, right?
And it was like, at that moment, I lost all love for reffing basketball.
It just killed it for me.
Because that accumulation of events.
And my question for you is, where did that transition start to happen?
I'd like to kind of talk about some of these root issues that we're seeing
and some of the negatives,
and then we can kind of layer in where we feel the solutions are
and working with our kids and finding performance in our lives.
What have you seen that maybe started to make that transition?
Because it happened.
I mean, this is not like, oh, the previous generation, blah, blah, blah,
kind of crap.
There is absolutely a different attitude in the way parents and not so much coaches, but especially parents interact with this game.
Yeah, 100 percent. I think at the youth level, it's different now.
And I'm a player development coach, so I do a lot of like the training. And so I can see that parents are a lot more invested in their kids use sports now than maybe they were 20, 30 years ago. And I'm not
saying like emotionally invested as far as like, hey, you want your kid to play sports and be well,
but like the time and money that goes into it. And those both lead into stress, right? So like,
hey, I'm investing this time, I'm investing this money. And then also now
everything is on social media. So like, you'll have, you know, if you're a parent, you go on
social media, just take a you season, you know, your kids on one team, and then you go on social
media, and all these other teams are posting their championship, and I'll put it in quotes,
right? Like t shirts and pictures. And now you're like, man, I wish my kid was on that team. And
this, there's all this like fear of missing out and trying to keep up with the Joneses. And it really takes away with
like the best thing about youth sports is that it teaches kids how to be accountable, how to handle
adversity, how to be part of a team, how to sacrifice. And like you were saying, we've lost
a lot of that for like this manipulation of like trying to win games or having to be on the best team and
and it leads to a ton of stress and that stress is mostly there because of the adults and then
it gets taken out on whether it's a coach taking it out on the players whether it's a parent taking
it out on a coach whether it's the parent or the coach taking it out on the refs it's just it manifests in all this chaos and it's like yo just let the kids play yeah i um there's a uh there's a local you probably know him uh danny
barbaro who's local um uh baseball uh trainer and performance coach and my kids play baseball as
well and one of the parents of our team asked a question.
We know we know the honest question about performance at the age of 11.
And and he's a particular guy, but he looks at her and he goes, he's fucking 11.
Yeah. And it was like it like took her in.
And this is nothing against her because her question was honest and it was not meant to be persuasive.
But it literally, you could see that hit her like, oh, yeah, they're just 11.
So I guess my question is at what point should, as a parent,
if you have a kid who is dedicated to a sport and has made a commitment to being good,
when do you think that ages that you shift into fifth gear with them?
And when, you know, when does that moment happen?
Yeah, so I think when they're younger.
So I would say, like, just take basketball, for instance.
Like, typically these kids will be on teams starting in, like, third grade, right?
And then, like, from third grade to seventh grade,
I think it's very much like the parent kind of like leading the way a little bit
like, hey, you're going to be on this team and you're going to go to this and this might help.
This camp might help you and you're leading the way. But when they get into like eighth, ninth,
tenth grade, dude, the kids are going to tell you by their action. I can't tell you the amount of
kids that come into our gym locally and you could tell they don't want to be there. And so, you know,
like and it's extra work. So so I get it. But but, you know, like, and it's extra work. So, so I get it, but, but, you know,
at some point the kid is going to lead the way and you're going to be spending all this time and
money and the kid's not even going to want to be there. My thought is, and there was actually a
study, I was listening to Malcolm Gladwell podcast and there was a study, they studied like elite
runners in the UK when they were, I think like 15 15. And what they did by the time they got up to
22 and like the smallest, smallest percentage of those elite runners at 15 ended up being elite at
22. And we sit here and there's all these like elite middle school teams and they're traveling
all over the country. And it's like, dude, you can you can literally pick out the one or two kids
like Andre Jackson's in the NBA for the Milwaukee Bucks.
He was in fifth grade.
You're like, whoa, that guy moves different.
You know what I mean?
Kevin Herter, when he was in seventh grade, like, yo, that kid's got a chance.
And so what we do is it's the intention behind it.
It's, okay, I'm going to invest all this because I want my kid to be great,
and they want to play college sports,
and they're going to go play college basketball or college baseball.
That shouldn't be the intention because all of that is just a byproduct
of how productive the kid is when they're on varsity, right?
And so if the intention was I'm going to invest in my kid,
just say basketball training because they're going to learn how to be dedicated to something,
be disciplined, wake up early, go hard in training sessions,
fight through adversity, struggle, learn how to come dedicated to something, be disciplined, wake up early, go hard in training sessions, fight through adversity, struggle, learn how to come out on top. And then whatever they end up doing in high school, college and beyond, this is going to help them there. That's how my
philosophy has always been when we're training people. So like when they come in eighth, ninth
grade, they're talking about college, like, you know, we lose all the crazies because we're not
on the same page. That's not what we're looking to do.
Yeah.
I know one of the things that I preach to my kids constantly is, like, it's attitude and effort.
That's what we're learning.
At fourth grade baseball, at fifth grade basketball, you know, like, it's attitude and effort.
Like, we're learning skills.
We're learning how to show up.
We're learning how to be proud of our performance.
Like, I literally don't give a shit if you miss all ten shots you take today. Like, it learning skills. We're learning how to show up. We're learning how to be proud of our performance. Like I literally don't give a shit if you miss all 10 shots you take today.
Like it's meaningless.
I mean, honestly, and I've been accused of this.
I want to win, but I literally don't care if we win or not.
Like in my brain, walking away from the field.
And what's been interesting is the feedback that I've gotten from parents is like,
you don't push them to win enough. And'm like you don't want that like if i if i push them to win
you wouldn't like that side of what this looks like because in fifth grade these kids half of
them just learn to tie their shoes you know it's like when the kid when you got to run out in the
field and tie a kid's shoe yeah we should not be concerned about winning.
So I coach my daughter's fifth grade team.
I also coach third grade.
The third grade is like they're just learning whatever.
But fifth grade, I've had them now for a couple years.
And so I am the same way as you.
We're going to compete to win, but I don't care whether we win or lose.
I actually prefer like we lose.
Man, over two years,
we probably lost seven games by like one possession. And part of the problem with our team is we're not focused. Like we come in practice and it's not like we're on them, but they have a hard
time and you're not going to win close games if you're not focused. And so I actually like it
because they're learning now like, hey, you don't like losing by one point, two points,
three points.
We missed 10 foul shots.
We didn't run this play and execute.
And so it's helping us, right?
Like fight through adversity, lose, and now come back and practice and work on those things.
Right?
And so I'm the same way as you.
Like, I do this for a living.
So I could be as crazy as you need me to be.
But in fifth grade, the biggest thing is not that we win games.
It's not that we run a million plays.
We have one play that we run.
It's that your kid, by the time they're in eighth or ninth grade, if they want to do basketball,
that then they're ready to be in the gym all the time and compete.
Yeah, yeah.
And I do think, unfortunately for a lot of these kids, it's so much luck of the draw. You know, you call it dad ball, right? Like we call it in baseball, we call it dad ball a lot of these kids, it's so much luck of the draw.
You know, you call it dad ball, right?
Like we call it in baseball, we call it dad ball a lot.
And you can see, literally, you see the teams that, you know,
hit the jackpot because there's a dad who actually gets it,
maybe played at a high level, understands, you know,
has the perspective of like what we're doing here at this level,
at this like fourth, fifth, sixth grade level.
And then you got these dads that maybe never played on their varsity team or, or, or, you know,
whatever didn't, didn't get to where they thought they should be. And now they're taking it out on
the kids. And that experience is very difficult. You know, I guess just kind of wrapping up maybe
the youth side of this, if you, if you're a parent and your kid is on a team, you know,
maybe you have good perspective. You understand, let's say it's a rational parent, but you're on a team where that head coach, that dad, whatever, who God bless him for putting his time in fifth grade just are a little more athletic right now kind of thing.
Like, do you recommend them looking for other teams?
How do you address that?
Because I do think this team hopping so young that happens in all these sports is not necessarily a positive.
It seems to happen way too much.
So how would you approach that as a parent if you were coming in
and you just knew this coach just doesn't get it?
He's too aggressive.
He's yelling.
It's the win-at-all-cost kind of stuff.
Yeah.
Obviously, that's never a good thing.
You don't want to rail on volunteers because they are giving their time.
I've always said, if you're going to complain about the volunteer coach, then you go coach.
Go do it.
You know what I mean?
That stinks. then you go coach. Yeah. Go do it. You know what I mean? And so that, that stinks, but you know, kids are going to, if they're going to play sports and it's going to be competitive,
they're going to have to deal with all different types of coaches. And so, you know, you get a
coach that maybe is not your style for a year. It's a good thing for your kid. Yeah. It's a good
thing. And so how can you support your kid? And like, maybe they don't get, they don't like getting
yelled at and that coach is a yeller. Then how do you support them to get through it? And then once they get through it,
they'll be able to deal with people like that, you know? And so, and then as far as like finding
another team, like, you know, the team hopping is crazy, especially in basketball. I'm sure it's
similar in baseball. Yeah, it is. The not having the continuity of players and coaches and all
that is not a good thing for development.
But if you are lucky enough to have options, then you've got to balance it.
What happens now is parents want the perfect situation.
They want the best coach.
They want their kid to play a ton.
They want their kid to be the best player on the team.
And that's not the case.
You're almost never going to have that.
And so you have to sacrifice in some areas.
So if you're going to prioritize the coaching over everything, then you can't all of a sudden come back and be like, well, my kid's playing half the game. Yeah, but he could have played
on this team where the coaching might not have been as good and they would have played the whole
game, but you prioritize coaching. And so there's no perfect scenario. And so the parents have to
really, hey, what do I prioritize?
And if they're not in a great situation, maybe their kid's not playing a ton, great.
Support him through it.
And then he should be stronger or she should be stronger because of that, and they got through it.
I love that response because I think one of the things I've seen,
particularly with this generation or the
past couple, past couple of generations, they couldn't survive the way we were coached.
I mean, I had a football coach pick me up by my face mask and shoulder press me into
a fence because I got a personal foul.
Right.
And this is the crazy part.
This is what I tell my kids.
I'm flying through the air, literally slamming into a fence.
I step up and I'm like i deserved that like that
was my mentality was not even that he was wrong for doing today he'd be in jail yeah be a national
news story right i mean this was just a tuesday you know afternoon game or whatever and you know
my point in saying that is the the i'm so i love that answer because I feel like we don't, we don't take as parents,
the, we don't take the ownership of, I'm going to help my kid work through this tough situation.
Instead, it's, I'm going to bitch to the league. I'm going to bitch to the coach. And then if none
of that works, I'm going to take my kid out of this program and stick them in another program
and expect that to be better. And what the kid
learns is if I don't like what's going on, mom and dad will come in and solve all my problems for me.
And, you know, so, so I guess operating with high, you know, uh, we'll call them high performers at
the levels that they're at or kids striving for high performance at the levels that they're at and seeing that full spectrum can you start to pull out maybe a few of the the core i'd love to stay on mindset right
like the core mindsets that these types of kids tend to have versus those who who fall away over
time yep so so we can get into like the talent levels later because obviously the more talented
you are, the, you know, the more opportunities you're going to have. But I would say this,
and we, this is kind of like what I've come to realize with this generation. And this is,
if everybody had this mindset of this is what you're trying to build in your kids, right? With
you sports, if you can get your kid to be competitive and resilient, you've done your
job. Doesn't matter how many games you've won, what sport you're playing. You know this, when they get
to college and beyond for life, if they're competitive and they're resilient, they're
going to have a good chance to succeed, right? And so like for our development and our training,
how do we put them in situations where they have to be competitive?
Wins, losses. Right. Goes hard as you can and then put them in adversity.
So they learn that failing is a good thing and they're going to build up that resilience within themselves.
Then go let them play, play whatever sport you want. Do a, you know, start a business.
You're competitive, you're resilient. You're going
to figure it out. That's really what the mindset should be for you, sports and beyond.
How do you manage the competitiveness without over-indexing on the winning? Because I see
some kids who are hyper-competitive, but they also do not understand how to handle a loss.
They're crying on the basketball court on a Tuesday night in the middle of the season
because you lost a game and they're in fifth grade.
And like, you love the competitiveness.
You love the fact that they care, but they've so over-indexed on winning.
You know, how do you address that?
Yeah, clarity.
And fifth grade, sixth grade may be too young for them to completely understand it,
but they'll get it.
Competitiveness is not the result.
It's the action.
Okay, what does that mean?
You're focused.
You're engaged.
You're giving 100% effort.
You're being physical.
You're trying to do everything that you need to do to win the game.
The result is separate from that, right?
You could be more talented and not compete in a game and still win. That's not separate from that, right? You could be more talented and not be,
not compete in a game and still win. That's not a good thing, right? So them understanding that
that result of winning is separate from the action of being competitive. Yeah. How do you train
resilience into a kid or coach resilience into a kid? I think you put them into challenging
situations, right? And so like so like you know we'll do
it with uh you know in our area we've been lucky we've had a ton of really good like shooters come
out of this area you know Joe Girard was at Syracuse and Clemson Kevin Herter's in the NBA
Joe Cremo was at Villanova like and so what we what we do is we try to get them in a situation
what let's say they come in and we're doing shooting stuff, where they're not going to win every drill.
I think, and you know this with coaching,
you want every drill a lot of times to be clean,
and you want your kids to do it really well.
And part of what I've started to embrace is chaotic drills,
where you're going to lose, it's going to be messy,
but you've got to figure out a way to get through it.
And so that inherently, putting them through more adversity
and everything that they do,
then they tend to start figuring out,
okay, I haven't beaten this shooting drill
seven days in a row.
And then on the eighth day, they get it.
Boom, you did it.
So we put that into all of our development stuff.
I love that.
I love the idea of the chaotic drills. You know,
it's, it's funny how, uh, like, so I was, I played, um, I played basketball in high school,
but only because, uh, I w I was like the punching bag for the guys that were actually good. I was
like the 12th man that just showed up with the Jersey and the starters just beat the shit out
of me in practice, you know, and that was my role the shit out of me in practice. That was my role.
But in football, you see this a lot in football.
I was more of a football and baseball player.
And in football, this is like a given.
You're going to get knocked down.
You're going to be bleeding.
You're going to be bruised.
But in a lot of the other sports,
I've seen the contact side of the game that, like you said, I hadn't framed it in my head as chaotic drills.
I love that.
I'm going to put more thought into that idea.
I think that's a good life lesson.
I think handling chaos is a life skill, not just a sports skill, and I really think that's wonderful. So let's say you have a kid who's never been exposed to this before, right?
They hit eighth, ninth grade.
They have some talent.
They may have some drive to be good, but they have been sheltered
or they have been maybe kind of moved around to places
where they could be successful without real challenges
how do you introduce them to them is just throw it to the fire do you have like a like a methodology
that you take them through like how do you get them introduced to this chaotic nature because
to me it feels fairly unique yeah i i think um it's it depends on the kid right and really how
you know uh opposed to contact and all that they are, you know.
But we throw them right to the fire, I mean, most of the time.
There's no, especially when they're in eighth, ninth grade.
Younger kids, yeah, okay, you ease them into it.
But most of our drills are, you know, when we're doing, let's just say, like, finishing drills,
which is like layups around the basket and stuff, we'll work on some, like, on air,
meaning it's just like reps one on zero.
But most of them
are live. They're one on one. It's a defender pushing you out. It's a rebounding drill where,
again, two guys or two girls are pushing against each other. And so the more they're exposed to
that contact, the more comfortable they get in it. But you can't talk your way through that.
You have to experience it. That's my biggest thing too with youth kids
and high school kids and all that, right? I always hear a coach like, well, I told them.
Yeah, but when you were a kid, you didn't listen to any adults. You learned from experience,
right? And so, yeah, as coaches, we want to keep telling them and telling them. And so they're
hearing the same things over and over again so that once they do experience, they're like, oh
crap, that's what he was talking about.
They don't just learn by, hey, you've got to be more physical.
No, throw them in a physical drill, be physical,
get beat up for two, three, four, five days,
and then you figure out how to be comfortable with it.
So we throw them right to the fire.
It's the only way.
I want to transition to, let's say, someone who really does have talent, right?
So I reffed Kevin Herter, and it was obvious.
He was playing in 7th grade, at 7th grade Capital District, as a 5th grader.
He was playing on the 7th grade team, and he was the starting point guard
and competing at a high level, two ages above him.
It was obvious.
How do you make sure that kid doesn't flame out, fizzle out,
ego doesn't get too big?
How do you keep that hyper-talented individual,
how do you keep them focused on the task at hand and moving forward?
Because there's almost as many or more pitfalls that that player can fall into than the kid who's 12th on the bench. That's trying to make the team. That's
just, you know, running as hard as they can. People think it's like such a good thing for
their kid to be the best player in middle school. And I would almost argue that it's not,
you know, that you're better off having them like not be the best player and be chasing because
that best player can be complacent.
And so how do you fight complacency?
I think the kid has to constantly be challenged.
I think that they have to not only play in a space where, okay,
they can go be the best player and kill because they are the best player,
but then go play against older kids too where they get beat up a little bit
and they're not the best player.
And so it's hard. And again, the kid's going to lead the way. And so a lot of these kids, when they're in
middle school and they're the best player, you know, you haven't in middle school, you don't
even know what hard work is, you know? And so you're just talented. And so when you get to high
school, some of these kids just, they're not that personality where they're going to put in the
extra work, especially as others keep catching up to them. And so what you're trying to develop again,
is that competitive competitiveness, the resilience, and then that work ethic,
right? And that comes from the people that you have around them and, and the perspective that
they have. And I think that's where, I mean, there's in our area, Ryan, this is crazy. I did
it with my camera guy the other day. There's at least 16 other trainers, player development coaches that do like workouts
and stuff.
Dude, I'm all for it.
There's enough kids.
I don't care.
But a lot of times you're, yeah, you're going to work out with these people, but now you're
listening to them too.
And so if you're not hearing the right things, then your mindset, when you go back to your high school team is going to be off, right?
Your mindset on how the world actually works, the world of basketball, whatever sport, is going to be warped.
And I think that's what ends up happening is not only do the players have like, they don't really have clarity on how the, you know, basketball.
These kids, when they're freshmen, are like, well, offers, offers. Dude, unless you're a top 100 player, you're not getting a scholarship offer
in freshmen. Colleges aren't recruiting freshmen and sophomores unless you're the best player in
the country, right? And so, but they're hearing that, and that's what they're focused on. Then
the parent gets hyper-focused, and they get more stress, and it's that whole snowball, you know?
And so, I think it's, like I said before, like, it's not only the training, it's the perspective.
You have to have somebody that's giving you the right information.
Because if you don't have the right information, you're going down the wrong path.
You know, the other thing, too, is playing Division III sports is pretty fucking fun.
Like, the fact that it, you know, so many.
Now, we shouldn't shoot
for as high as we can possibly go right now i'm not saying that but like there's like this i he
i've heard from parents and different stuff like like i played division three baseball i loved it
i played against guys i played against a couple guys that played that ended up going and playing
triple a right like we play it was good baseball i had a fun career. I played a little baseball after college as well.
I don't think anything of, to me, it's not a miss.
I came from, you might know where Nassau is, right?
It's a town of 900.
Escaping that town was the best thing that ever happened to me.
So my point in saying all that is we put these expectations on our kids
that if they don't go to a
name brand division one school that somehow their sports career has been less than it should have
been and it's like if your kid gets the opportunity to play college sports they're the best of the
best in the high school level like yeah there's going to be best of the best of the best yeah
they're playing at the kentuckys and north carolinas and all this kind of stuff and sure that's great but what how many players
on those teams 12 15 if you count the practice players maybe 20 with a practice team like
that's 20 guys for what 150 schools that potentially have a chance of making the ncaa
tournament so like that's not that many kids out of all the kids that play the sports.
So I sometimes feel like we put so much pressure on these kids to reach these
levels. And it's like,
there are so many avenues for them to take these skills that they're learning
and make successful lives that are rewarding out of them. I just, I,
you know,
I don't ever want to tell anybody that they shouldn't shoot as high as they should possibly go.
They absolutely should.
But I think we've lost perspective a little bit on what a win actually looks like
out of all this effort that we put in.
The expectation of the Division I college basketball is so blown out of proportion
that people don't even know what they want. Meaning,
if you're good enough, where you play in college is a byproduct of how well you do in high school
when you're a junior and a senior, whether it's high school or AAU, right? And so the focus now
is, well, we got to do this to go to college and that. No, you have to try and be, if you're into it,
the best high school player that you can be.
And guess what?
There's not many players that should be playing in college
that weren't good high school players.
Because when you're in high school, if you're the best player,
it's going to show that you're the best player, right?
And so we have this expectation from when they're younger,
it's like Division I, Division II, Division III, college. And you and you're sitting there you're like why not just try to be the best high
school player you can be and develop all these life skills and then if your talent raises and
you're productive all that other stuff is going to come the second part would be um so i'm a junior
national team coach with usa basketball and so there's like 15 or 16 of us and during covid we
had all these
Zooms. And one of them was with a Harvard professor. And she was saying how they've been
doing like a study on student athletes at the college level. And I know the number was over
60%. I want to say it was like 70% of the student athletes had some form of anxiety and depression.
And for those people that have played college basketball or college sports,
it's hard.
It's really hard.
And guess what?
You're not going to be happy.
You're not going to be happy most of the time, unless you really,
really love what you're doing and you can handle,
like we've been saying,
the adversity,
those hard times.
Yeah.
Right. And so I always say when these people are chasing, like we've been saying, the adversity, those hard times. Yeah. Right?
And so I always say when these people are chasing this, like, okay, would you rather
your kid be a college basketball player or would you rather them be happy?
Like, oh, happy.
Well, then wait.
You're pushing college over happy.
You don't even know if you want college basketball.
You don't even know if your kid wants college basketball.
But yet you're pushing this notion that, and to
your point, I play division two. I don't care what level you go to. I mean, obviously for all these
organizations and businesses that have players, you want them to go to the highest level, right?
I'm the opposite. We had a kid who's probably the best player in the area right now. And he's,
he was choosing between Johns Hopkins, Tufts. I think he's a division one player. Those are
high academic division three schools. And we hadfts. I think he's a Division I player. Those are high academic Division III schools.
And we had a conversation.
I'm like, dude, you're going to go to Johns Hopkins,
and in 10 years, you're going to be looking back and be like,
oh, my God, I can't believe that I was going to go to, you know,
name a low Division I school.
It doesn't matter.
This school, that.
I don't even want to name any because I don't want to disrespect anybody, right?
But you're looking at it from such a short lens of like, yo, Johns
Hopkins, man, are you crazy? You got to go to Johns Hopkins, you know? And so like, if the focus was
just be the best you can in high school, if you're productive enough and good enough, somebody's
going to want you. And then hopefully you choose that right situation that's
going to benefit you the most for your future. Yeah. I mean, I can tell you as a division three,
so I, um, I got a couple opportunities to play division two as a baseball player.
And, uh, I ended up going to the university of Rochester and Johns Hopkins is one of the schools
that we played against for baseball. And, you know, Division III sports are fun.
Guess what we did the night before games?
We went out and we chased women and drank beers.
And then we showed up the next day and played a doubleheader.
Like, I mean, I'm not saying to take away.
We trained hard.
We practiced every day.
It was a full-time thing.
We took it very seriously.
But, like, the point is, like, we had fun.
Like, after a double header,
if we were sleeping over in that town,
we would hang out with the other teams and go out to their bars and like,
have a good time.
Like you can't do that shit at the division one level.
Like that's not taught.
Like there's that level you are playing at a level where you,
like you said,
and I'm not saying you can't have fun in division one.
I know play,
I got plenty of buddies that did and it's all good.
And I'm not knocking that.
I'm just saying that can't have fun in Division I. I got plenty of buddies that did, and it's all good. And I'm not knocking that. I'm just saying that I think, to your point, like,
Johns Hopkins is a meal ticket for having a job the rest of your life,
like a good job that's going to make you money, let you provide for your family,
whatever you want.
Like, it's there.
And I guess I want people to push as hard as they can and be everything they can be
with an understanding to your point I love that this is the way you're framing this that of what
you're actually going to get out the back end of making that decision like it and we phrase it not
to cut you off but but the way that it's framed to these kids by the parents and the the other
you know AU coaches trainers, trainers, decision makers,
is that the college level is like good, better, best. It's not the case. It's not the case.
Because everybody's different. So what? So you get a Division I scholarship to a low Division I school that's better than going to a Tufts or a Williams or a Johns Hopkins? Not in 20 years,
it's not. You know? And so the perspective, and this goes back to the right
information.
Do you have somebody that can frame it in a way so that you and your, the kid and the
parent can still make the choice on what they think is better for them, but they have all
the right information.
You have all of it, you know.
Let's transition to your actual business.
And one of the things that I've, you know, just watching, you know, living in the same community, our kids go to the same school, like watching, watching your brand, your business grow.
You know, and I was watching one of your Instagram videos the other day and like I clicked on your profile just to just to I'm always interested.
I like I like the way you talk to the kids.
You know, I thought, you know, I follow you because I'm interested in it. And I go, Holy shit, this
dude's got 120,000 people that follow him on Instagram and like numbers are numbers. I don't
want to make it, but like, dude, you're a, you're a, you're a, you're a basketball train performance
development coach from upstate New York. And you have 120,000 people that find your kind,
the engagements incredible.
And my point in framing all this for the audience is that you have been consistent.
You've obviously dialed in on a message
and you're delivering a product that's valuable,
incredibly valuable.
How does someone who maybe is sitting there
going to themselves, well, I'm from a small town.
Albany's not a big market for those listening.
We're 154th largest market in the country.
Like how does someone who has a message,
who could be coaching,
and let's say coaching for someone who's coaching today.
They played sports.
They love kids.
They want to do what you're doing.
They're 15 years behind you.
How do they start delivering a message?
How do they start building their business so that they can have greater impact than just the kids that they're coaching?
And not that they shouldn't focus on the kids they're coaching, but obviously you're having an impact well outside of just the humans that are sharing air with you.
Yeah.
So I think a couple of things.
When I started Dag's Basketball, which is the local business, it was it was I'm just reacting to what the market is. Right. And there wasn't a ton of honesty and value. Right. And so what I've always said is whatever we do, we're going to try to provide the most value and we're going to mess up. We're going to have days where we're not great. But for the most part, we're going to try to provide great value. And then we're going to be honest. We're going to be honest with the players. We're going to be honest with the parents. And I think that social media following
is there because of those two things. People see like, whoa, there's value in this. And it's honest.
It's not some in an authentic, like somebody trying to do it because I want to be famous.
If I could not do social media, I would not do social media. Yeah. But the fact of the matter is that the people who get more opportunities are the
ones that have a great social media following. So I have to do it. And so all you're seeing on
there is like actual conversations that I would have with our parents and players and during our
training sessions, you know? And so I think that helps. I think the other thing is we're,
you know, it's crazy.
I can't remember our area having as many high-level players as we have right now.
Andre Jackson with the Bucs.
Kevin Herter with the Sacramento Kings.
Boo Booey just signed with the New York Knicks.
I know I'm missing a handful of players. I mean, we had guys at Villanova, Syracuse, like I mentioned before,
North Carolina. And I think what happened, you know, in like that small period of time in Albany,
New York is I was able to work with all those players and it wasn't anything that I did,
but they were all around each other and they all had a similar perspective right and so like when you
know like Andrew Platek played at North Carolina before he went there his freshman year I remember
being in the gym with Joe Cremo and Kevin Herter or both you know high major players and Platek was
saying how you know what he thought that North Carolina would be like and we were all sitting
there like you're gonna learn buddy what you think it's gonna be like and after your freshman year is
gonna be and so you have all these people that have real life experience.
It's not somebody spewing some crap so that their business makes more money.
Right.
And so I think, you know, I always say this, especially it helps when you have NBA players.
If I was in New York City or Los Angeles or Miami, I'd have, you know, triple the amount
of NBA players that I work with now.
But I'm home in Albany, New York. So whoever comes in the gym, we're going to do the best job. And it's been
crazy to see the success of some of our players. And, you know, it's, it's on them because they're
the ones who have to decide who they listen to and how they go about their business. So, um,
it's been cool to be a part of it. That's for sure. For the parents listening out there, how do, what's the filter or is there a filter that you can recommend for someone who's trying to bullshit them to sell a $300 program and the coach who's there to really help their kid get better?
Like how do you, how would you filter that out for them?
It's, it's so hard, ready, I do this all,
I've been doing this for a long time, right?
And so this is like not what we do,
but I think I can make, my revenue could double easy.
Ready?
Hey, right, Duke and Colton are one of the,
they're some of the best basketball players that I've seen.
Like really, if they like locked in
and really trained a couple of times a week,
I think that they could end up being
like some of the best players in the area. What are you going to do? You're gonna say, Oh no, this guy's
BSing me. I was reaching for my wallet. Right. I was like reaching under here. I'm like, is he
serious? I got mad, you know? And so like, it's so hard for the parents. Like somebody wants to
compliment your kid and say that they're doing really, really well. You're going to be like,
Oh man, I knew my kid was pretty good, you know? And so it's just, it's that your question of the BS filter, it's hard because that's all you have
to do. I think over time though, you figure out like a lot of the trainers, you know, I think
there's two things. One, a lot of them do it because they want themselves to be famous. They
want to be famous and they want more for themselves. And then the other ones are, I think they're good hearted,
but they might not have the background
and really the capabilities
to really, really help a kid.
So they think they're helping them,
but they're maybe not as much as they think they are.
And so, listen, at the end of the day, it's this.
If your kid's in middle school
and they're putting in extra work,
no matter what that work is, it's a good thing, dude. It's a good thing, right? And I think, so I've been doing a lot
more consulting now. And to me, the number one thing that a person could do, if you're going to
spend money on anything, is find somebody that's been through it and knows what they're talking
about and invest the money and let them give you an honest opinion of your kid. Hey, here's an
honest opinion. Here's what the landscape is. We had a guy from Massachusetts who hopped on a
consultation the other day. His son's a really good baseball player, really good basketball
player. He's like, hey, he doesn't know which one to choose. What should he be doing? He's in ninth
grade. We went through the whole landscape and he decided at the end, like, you know what, we're going to stay with baseball. We're going to train
a little more for basketball and like our hometown, get in the gym with our high school coach
and stuff. And then when he gets to like 10th grade, maybe 11th grade, see how things shake
out, see how tall he ends up being, you know, a six, six foot guard, you know, does he go and
start her on, he started on varsity baseball in eighth grade, you know, like, I don't think you
got to choose right now, but at least he's got better clarity You know, like, I don't think you got to choose right now,
but at least he's got better clarity on,
oh, wait, I don't have to go to every AAU tournament
as a ninth grader because I'm not going to be seen.
Dude, nobody's looking for you in ninth grade.
You know, that's the one thing that I would do
as your kid gets up there
because then you're operating with, again,
the right information.
Steve, I love the way you approach this.
For someone who's listening to this and they want to, guys, I, the right information. Steve, I love the way you approach this. For
someone who's listening to this and they want to, guys, I'm going to have links to, regardless if
you have kids in youth sports or not, I highly recommend that you follow Steve's Instagram. I'm
going to have the links as well as links to his website in the show notes, whether you're watching
or listening, guys. Just to see the way he presents himself the way he presents his product if you don't have kids if you do have kids the way he talks about the sport i can attest
to the honesty the authentic the authenticity and just the directness of how you approach certain
topics i think is phenomenal um but if someone's listening and wants to work with you or wants to
come and get a consultation because they have a kid that might be at an age and has a tough decision
like the one that you just described.
How do they get a hold of you?
What's the best way to get into your ecosystem?
Yeah, so if they're outside of the area, just Maximize Basketball is the name of that company, MaximizeBasketball.com.
All the information for the consultations, online courses to come in if they want to come fly up here and work with us or need us to come down there.
And then if they're local, just DaggsBasketball.com.
And all that is on my Instagram.
So if they follow my Instagram, SteveDaggs0, they'll be able to get all that information.
Awesome, brother.
I appreciate you and I appreciate the time.
Yeah, thanks for having me.
It's fun.
Let's go.
Yeah, make it look, make it look, make it look easy.
Thank you for listening to The Ryan Hanley Show.
Be sure to subscribe and leave us a comment or review
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