EPISODE · Jun 26, 2026 · 9 MIN
Ep 1959 Can You Actually Teach Toughness, or Are You Just Demanding It?
from Basketball Coach Unplugged (A Basketball Coaching Podcast) · host Teachhoops.com
teachhoops.com Episode Title: Can You Actually Teach Toughness, or Are You Just Demanding It? Every coach talks about toughness. But too often, we tell players to “be tough” without ever defining what toughness actually looks like. In this episode, Coach breaks down how to teach toughness as a behavior, not just demand it as an attitude. Toughness is not chest pounding, trash talk, or acting hard. Toughness is doing the next right thing when you do not feel like it. It is not emotion. It is behavior. And if it is behavior, it can be taught, tracked, praised, and repeated. 1) Sprint Back After MistakesThe mistake is not the problem.The response is the problem.Miss a layup, throw a bad pass, or get a bad call — sprint back and save the next possession. 2) Take Contact FirstTough teams do not watch contact happen.They create legal contact on box outs, cuts, drives, screens, and loose balls.Early position beats late strength. 3) Talk When TiredEverybody talks early.Tough teams talk late.Communication in the final five minutes is one of the clearest signs of team toughness. 4) Do Your Job Without Getting RewardedSet the screen.Make the extra pass.Guard the best player.Box out so someone else gets the rebound.That is real team toughness. Track toughness behaviors in practice: Plus One For: sprint-back saves great box outs early talk loose ball effort positive response after mistakes Minus One For: jogging back silence watching rebounds arguing calls What gets measured gets repeated. Put three minutes on the clock and play 4-on-4 or 5-on-5. Any turnover, missed layup, or bad shot creates automatic transition the other way. No stopping.No complaining.No walking. Grade only the response. Did we sprint back?Did we communicate?Did we protect the paint?Did we rebound the next shot? End practice with a competitive segment. First team to three stops wins. But the stop only counts if they talk. No talk, no stop. This teaches players that communication is part of toughness, not optional. Fake toughness is arguing.Real toughness is sprinting back. Fake toughness is flexing after a bucket.Real toughness is taking a charge. Fake toughness is talking at the opponent.Real toughness is talking to your teammates. This week: Define toughness for your team Pick three toughness behaviors Score them in practice Praise them out loud Hold everyone to the same standard Toughness is not something you give a speech about once. It is something you teach every day. One possession at a time.One response at a time.One habit at a time. For toughness scoreboards, practice plans, culture tools, and complete coaching systems, go to: teachhoops.com Show NotesEpisode SummaryThe Big Idea4 Toughness Behaviors to TeachToughness ScoreboardDrill of the Episode: Next Play ToughnessDrill of the Episode: Tired Talk FinishFake Toughness vs. Real ToughnessCoach ChallengeClosing Thought Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What this episode covers
teachhoops.com Episode Title: Can You Actually Teach Toughness, or Are You Just Demanding It? Every coach talks about toughness. But too often, we tell players to “be tough” without ever defining what toughness actually looks like. In this episode, Coach breaks down how to teach toughness as a behavior, not just demand it as an attitude. Toughness is not chest pounding, trash talk, or acting hard. Toughness is doing the next right thing when you do not feel like it. It is not emotion. It is behavior. And if it is behavior, it can be taught, tracked, praised, and repeated. 1) Sprint Back After MistakesThe mistake is not the problem.The response is the problem.Miss a layup, throw a bad pass, or get a bad call — sprint back and save the next possession. 2) Take Contact FirstTough teams do not watch contact happen.They create legal contact on box outs, cuts, drives, screens, and loose balls.Early position beats late strength. 3) Talk When TiredEverybody talks early.Tough teams talk late.Communication in the final five minutes is one of the clearest signs of team toughness. 4) Do Your Job Without Getting RewardedSet the screen.Make the extra pass.Guard the best player.Box out so someone else gets the rebound.That is real team toughness. Track toughness behaviors in practice: Plus One For: sprint-back saves great box outs early talk loose ball effort positive response after mistakes Minus One For: jogging back silence watching rebounds arguing calls What gets measured gets repeated. Put three minutes on the clock and play 4-on-4 or 5-on-5. Any turnover, missed layup, or bad shot creates automatic transition the other way. No stopping.No complaining.No walking. Grade only the response. Did we sprint back?Did we communicate?Did we protect the paint?Did we rebound the next shot? End practice with a competitive segment. First team to three stops wins. But the stop only counts if they talk. No talk, no stop. This teaches players that communication is part of toughness, not optional. Fake toughness is arguing.Real toughness is sprinting back. Fake toughness is flexing after a bucket.Real toughness is taking a charge. Fake toughness is talking at the opponent.Real toughness is talking to your teammates. This week: Define toughness for your team Pick three toughness behaviors Score them in practice Praise them out loud Hold everyone to the same standard Toughness is not something you give a speech about once. It is something you teach every day. One possession at a time.One response at a time.One habit at a time. For toughness scoreboards, practice plans, culture tools, and complete coaching systems, go to: teachhoops.com Show NotesEpisode SummaryThe Big Idea4 Toughness Behaviors to TeachToughness ScoreboardDrill of the Episode: Next Play ToughnessDrill of the Episode: Tired Talk FinishFake Toughness vs. Real ToughnessCoach ChallengeClosing Thought Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Ep 1959 Can You Actually Teach Toughness, or Are You Just Demanding It?
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