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Lake Nona Performance Club
6775 Chopra Ter, Orlando, FL 32827

Hours of Operation

Our Location

Lake Nona Town Center
6775 Chopra Terrace
Orlando, FL 32827

Hours of Operation:
Mon-Fri 5am-11pm
Sat-Sun 7am-7pm

ROX Hours:
Mon 12pm-9pm
Tues-Fri 11am-9pm
Sat 10am-7pm
Sun 10am-5pm

Aquatics Hours:
Lap Pool and Warm Water Therapy Pool
Mon-Fri  5:30am-10pm
Sat-Sun 7am-6pm
Family Pool
Mon-Fri 1pm-9pm
Sat-Sun 9am-5pm

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5 Basketball Training Habits That Translate to All Sports

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When you think about basketball training, you might picture endless drills, shooting practice, or running plays. But the truth is—many of the best habits you develop in basketball carry over to almost any sport. 

As someone who has coached thousands of athletes (including my own kids who play multiple sports), I’ve seen how skills built on the basketball court make athletes better at soccer, football, baseball, volleyball, and more. At Breakthrough Basketball, now partnered with LNPC, we see this every day—players who train with us often thrive not just in basketball, but in other sports because of the habits they’ve built. 

Here are five basketball training habits that translate directly to all sports—and even to life. 

1. Develop Overall Athleticism 

If I had to pick one habit that makes the biggest difference across sports, it’s improving your overall athleticism. 

This includes: 

  • Balance
  • Coordination
  • Core strength
  • Speed and agility
  • Muscle strength

The difference between an average athlete and an elite athlete often comes down to athleticism. Size matters, sure, but you don’t control your height. You do control your strength, quickness, and movement skills. 

Think about it: 

  • Speed helps you beat a defender on the soccer field just like it helps you blow past one on the basketball court.
  • Lateral movement is crucial for playing defense—whether you’re guarding a point guard, stopping a run in football, or defending in soccer.  

The bottom line: the better you move, the better you’ll do in any sport. 

2. Be Coachable: Listen With Your Eyes and Ears 

One of the most important skills an athlete can develop has nothing to do with physical ability—it’s being coachable. 

That means giving your full attention when a coach, teacher, or even a parent is speaking. Don’t just “hear” them. Look at them. Listen carefully. 

Why does this matter? 

  • You’ll earn respect from your coaches and teammates.
  • You’ll pick up more details and improve faster.
  • You’ll be seen as a leader because you respect others.  

Being coachable doesn’t just make you a better athlete. It’s a life skill that will serve you well anywhere. 

3. Build Resilience and Stay Positive

Every player makes mistakes. In fact, if you played a full season, you probably made hundreds—maybe thousands. Even NBA players make dozens in a single game. 

The great athletes know mistakes are part of the process. They don’t pout, hang their heads, or give up. Instead, they: 

  • Acknowledge the mistake
  • Stay positive
  • Play through it  

Sports (and life) will bring tough practices, sore muscles, and frustrating stretches. Resilience—pushing through with a good attitude—is what separates good athletes from great ones. 

Hard work + resilience + positive thinking = incredible results. 

4. Master the Fundamentals 

No matter the sport, the fundamentals matter most. 

  • In soccer: dribbling, passing, and shooting are the building blocks of success.
  • In basketball: dribbling, passing, and shooting serve the same role.  

When you’re great at the fundamentals, you can fit into any coach’s system. No matter the strategy, the basics give you a strong foundation. 

This applies to every sport—and even to business or school. Get the basics right, and the advanced stuff becomes much easier. 

5. Stay Consistent 

Consistency beats intensity. Practicing 30 hours in a single week might give you a short-term boost. But practicing one hour a day for a month? That’s where the long-term growth happens. 

Daily habits are powerful. They build skills that last—and they work for athletes in every sport. 

Talent can take you only so far. Consistency and discipline are what turn potential into success. 

Final Thoughts

So why do basketball habits carry over so well into other sports? 

Because basketball develops movement, teamwork, and a mindset for building high-level skills. Those same qualities make you a better soccer player, football player, volleyball player—you name it. 

Parents—if you’re encouraging your kids in sports, pay attention to these habits. The mistakes I see most often are fear of failure, worrying too much about mistakes, or looking for quick fixes. Instead, focus on resilience, consistency, and fundamentals. Those lessons will serve your kids for a lifetime. 

👉 At Breakthrough Basketball, now partnered with LNPC we help players build these exact habits—athleticism, fundamentals, resilience, and consistency—that not only make them better basketball players, but better athletes overall. If you’d like to see how we can help your player grow on and off the court, check out our training programs today. 

 

 

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Lake Nona Performance Club
6775 Chopra Ter, Orlando, FL 32827
(407) 216-5672

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