KING announces new podcast: Behind the Game
Kids in the Game is excited to announce the launch of our brand new podcast “Behind the Game”! The podcast will cover the intersection of youth development, sports, education, and technology in the New York City landscape. You will be hearing from the likes of principals, executive directors, coaches, teachers, and other change makers that are all working towards building a better city for our youth. With more than 1 million students in New York City, we want to help families, schools, and organizations learn to navigate the complex ecosystem we live and breath.
Last week we recorded our very first podcast with guest Ben Schornack. Ben got his start on the world of NYC youth development with Kids in the Game as our very first program coordinator. Since then he has been with Up2Us Sports and is currently a program manager with the Laureus Sport for Good USA Foundation. Laureus recently launched it’s Sport for Good NYC initiative — a long-term commitment to improving the lives of underserved youth in the five boroughs of New York City through the power of sport. The initiative will bring together nonprofit leaders by providing resources and facilitating collaboration. Ben mentions in the podcast that New York is full of organizations doing great work, but it is also full of funders and by working together we can tap into more funding sources to improve and provide even more programming. KING’s Wilson Rose is sitting on the leadership team for the initiative and we are excited to work with Laureus and Ben on this project.
Throughout the podcast, led by KING Hoops Director Paul O’Connor and KING Founder Michael Murphy, Ben details the changes he has seen in funding youth sport programs and the direction the industry is headed. The group also spends time talking about coaches that have impacted them and how important the role of a coach is. The podcast ends with a lightening round of questions and more Iowa basketball trivia than you ever thought you would need to know! Check out the link to listen and subscribe as we continue to bring leaders in the community onto “Behind the Game”!
Review: First Annual KING of the Court
What’s up KING fam?!? We here at KING wanted to give a huge thanks to our sponsors and our teams for coming out to support our programs and mission this past weekend. Our first ever 3 on 3 basketball tournament, KING of the Court, was a huge success. In total, we had 18 teams participate this year and plan to double that next year!
It takes a village to run a successful event and we feel very lucky to have the best village around. A big thanks to Indoor Hoops for signing on as our first major sponsor of our tournament. If you need leagues to play in throughout the city, they are should be your go to! As you all know, the key to a successful event is bomb food… shout out to Panera Bread for providing breakfast and lunch for all our players and volunteers. Thirdly, a big shoutout to Nature’s Bakery for providing 300+ fig bars to help our players charge back up in between games.
We’d also like to thank Yogaworks, Soul Cycle, Essentia Water and GNC for coming out and supporting our event. We look forward to working with you in the future.
Most importantly, we want to thank each and every single player that participated this year. Anytime you take the jump to start something new, it can be nerve-racking and all of you came through in a major way. This tournament represents our dedication to provide Kids growing up in New York City with opportunities to play basketball, go to summer camp and #growupking.
In ten years, when we are running the 2027 KING of the Court tournament, we will always remember this year and where it all began. We cannot wait to see all of you back year after year.
For more information on how you can be involved in KING Kids year around please contact Kingkids@kidsinthegame.com
Navigating the AAU Basketball Landscape
Dear Parents,
I am writing this article in the attempt to reach as many parents of kids that love basketball as possible. I hope by the end of this article I have provided you with some guidance and direction on how to better help your child’s journey through the land (mine) scape that is AAU basketball in 2016. My name is Paul O’Connor and I am what you would call a junkie, basketball junkie that is. Basketball has been at the center of my life, from the first time I began playing at age five, to coaching at the collegiate level at schools across the country. I played AAU, watched AAU, recruited AAU, and now run an AAU program in New York City.
The other day I was scrolling through twitter and found a parent of a child in Florida discussing some of the local AAU teams and the tactics they have used on some of the kids in that area. About 50 tweets later I was fully immersed in a pretty typical conversation of any parent nowadays that has a child in the AAU circuit. Some complaints were about sponsored AAU clubs making kids purchase gear. Now, let me explain. When a club becomes sponsored, that means that brands like Nike, Adidas, Under Armour have decided to provide free gear for the players and staff of that program. Each club receives an allotment every year (some more than D1 college programs) and they then give this to all the kids in the program. You can see now to turn around and charge kids for free gear is not only flat out wrong, it’s embarrassing. This is one of many different things that bad AAU clubs can do to scam people.
Let’s back up…
So your child wants to play basketball and is good enough to make an AAU team, congratulations, it is an exciting time and you should be proud. First things first, breathe, relax, and enjoy the ride. I mean this sincerely; AAU basketball does not become serious until your child’s junior year in high school. The first thing you need to do is select a program. This obviously is the hardest part. I’m going to list the most important criteria of a program as well as major things to avoid.
Find a program that has coaches with ACTUAL coaching background.
It is a running joke amongst college coaches who watch all these AAU games how horrendous the coaching is at the AAU level. See here with this dedicated twitter account to it. (AAU Bingo) Do your research, meet with the coaches, ask them where they have coached, who they have coached, and most importantly, WHY they coach.
Do the coaches or operators of the program have a solid grasp on the NCAA academic requirements to get into D1, D2, D3 schools?
I’ve seen kids miss SAT tests to play in a tournament, eventually not qualify and then have to go to a JUCO or a Prep school. Again, ask questions early and often. O.K. So they understand the requirements. But do they help?
One of the best programs in NYC and the country, is New Heights. They have a comprehensive program that offers tutoring, academic support, on top of basketball. Your child could be the #1 player in the country, if he can’t get into school, none of that matters.
Things to avoid like the plague:
#1. If you hear, “we’ve placed over 20 D1 players”, RUN.
Not only is this sentence completely meaningless, it could have nothing to do with your son or daughter. DO NOT obsess with the level, D2 and D3 schools need players the last time I checked. When you hear that, follow up with, how many of those players transferred after 1 year?
#2. “I promise.”
This should probably be number 1. If an AAU coach, or any coach for that matter starts promising things you are sliding down a slippery slope. When I meet with my parents I tell them that I promise their kids will have fun, be safe, and improve. That’s it. No playing time, no gear, no money, none of that.
#3. Find out how long kids stay in their program and why they leave.
My program has a hard policy on if you leave to play with another program that is totally fine, but you cannot come back to us. This jump around culture promotes selfishness, and only leads to kids knowing one response when things get tough, leave. This contributes to the D1 transfer epidemic currently happening in college basketball. (http://www.miamiherald.com/sports/college/acc/university-of-miami/article76460722.html)
This is not an easy or honest business, and sadly that is what it has become, a business. Parents you need to educate yourselves, do your research, and find someone you can trust to not only be a coach to your son or daughter, but be an advocate throughout their entire career whether they stay in their program or not. Feel free to email me at anytime if I can ever be of any help, paul@kidsinthegame.com