Saturday, December 10, 2011

Saturday, September 17, 2011

BG Hoops Basketball Program Selling Custom Flip-Flops & Sliders

If you’re interested in purchasing flip-flops or sliders see a boy’s basketball player or coach ASAP. The flip-flops are $20 and the sliders are $25

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Guidelines for our program


Players:
·         Be the hardest worker in practice… every day.
·         Be a spark of enthusiasm… every day.
·         Showcase your mental toughness… every day.
·         Compliment a teammate… every day.
·         Challenge your teammates to get better… every day.
·         Support your teammates and coaches in any way possible… every day.
·         Build a bond with your teammates and coaches… every day.
·         Represent yourself and your team with class… every day.
Coaches:
·         Your players want to feel appreciated; so compliment them.
·         Your players may lack direction; so guide them.
·         Your players want to get better; so teach them.
·         Your players want to achieve great things; so inspire them.
·         Your players are invested in your program; so care for them.
·         Your players will occasionally lack the ‘want to’; so motivate them.
·         Your players will make mistakes; so discipline them.
·         Your players dictate your success; so appreciate them.
Parents:
·         Be supportive and positive at all times; no yelling, cursing, or screaming at officials or coaches.
·         Let your kids be kids; don’t push them too hard!
·         Be proud of your children unconditionally; even when they don’t play particularly well.
·         Encourage your kids to eat well, get sleep, and give 100% in everything they do.
·         Let your children be coached! It is their team; not yours.
·         Coaches shouldn’t tell you how to parent; you shouldn’t tell them how to coach.
·         Listen to your children! If your child doesn’t say much; ask questions. Show an interest!

Monday, August 8, 2011

BGHS Gymnasium Getting Facelift!!

The BG Hoops Gymnasium started our summer facelift on Saturday, August 6th, 2011 and continued this week. The lobby has been painted and had a new floor put in, the gym is getting painted & new murals will be added and new banners, and the lobby trophy case is getting updated & upgraded. Check out some of the work in the photos below.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

BG Hoops Stars Playing Professionally Together!

Richard Lopez (BG Hoops Class of 1996) , Head Coach Ivan Deniz,
Sergio Lugo (BG Hoops Class of 2007) 
Two BG Hoops Alumni getting ready to begin their pro seasons in Mexico on the same team. Click on the link here to read the article (Spanish).

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Disease of Me


Disease of Me

By Alan Stein19. July 2011 08:12
I am a huge advocate of Point Guard College (www.PGCBasketball.com / @PGCBasketball). I appreciate their mission, curriculum, and passion for the game. I have tremendous respect for their commitment to teaching the game the right way. 

I never had the opportunity to meet the late Dick DeVenzio (PGC founder) – but am a fan of his work. I am thankful to have met many of PGC’s top staff members… Sefu Bernard (@SefuBernard), Mano Watsa (@ManoWatsa), and Lyndsey Fennelly(@LyndsHoops). They each do a terrific job and make a positive impact on the game.

PGC helps fight the mindset that is rampant in youth players today – ‘the disease of me.’ Many kids today don’t understand that basketball is a we game – not a me game.  They play for the scorebook, not the scoreboard. Am I allowed one more cliché? They play for the name on the back of their jersey instead of the name on the front.  OK, I think 3 overused coaching clichés should suffice in getting my point across.

Kidding aside, there are 3 symptoms of the ‘disease of me’ – each of which severely stagnates a player’s growth and development. Having worked a ton of camps and events this summer, I have seen each of these symptoms from players of every age and every level:

1.    Too cool
2.    Too good
3.    Too shy

Too cool: This symptom is rampant… in fact it is a borderline epidemic. Players are too cool to listen when a coach is talking, too cool to show enthusiasm during drills, too cool to warm-up properly, too cool to get on the floor for a loose ball or take a charge, and too cool let the people around them know that they don’t understand something or need some help.  Players are often more concerned with ‘how they look’ then ‘how they perform.’  To paraphrase Woody Harrelson in White Men Can’t Jump – players that are too cool would ‘rather look good and lose than look bad and win.’ 

Too good: This symptom is tricky… because it is actually an illusion.  The players who think they are too good – actually aren’t! They aren’t anywhere close to being good enough, much less too good!  They are so hypnotized by their ranking, or brainwashed by their entourage, that they won’t admit they have areas of their game that need improvement. They are too good to work on their left,too good to work on their footwork, or too good to work on their mid-range game.  Who needs to be able to do those things when you can dribble between your legs 19 times in a row or dunk the ball with ease? Players that are too good are often shoot 1st, pass 2nd type players.  Actually, they are usually shoot 1st, shoot 2nd, and don’t pass type players. They never bother with making those around them better.  If a teammate can’t hold their own on the court… that is their problem.

Too shy: This symptom is complicated as well.  I don’t know if I would go as far as to say that being too shy is selfish per se; but being shy does stunt improvement.  You have to be assertive if you want to get better! You can’t be too shy to ask questions. You can’t be too shy to reach out and ask for help from your coach.  You can’t be too shy to verbally communicate on offense and defense.  Most kids aren’t shy when it comes to texting, Twitter, and Facebook… but they quickly go into a shell when expected to speak face to face.

If you are trying to be the best player you can be… to maximize your potential and play at the highest level possible… you can’t betoo cooltoo good, or too shy.  You need to find a cure for the ‘disease of me.’

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Are You Dedicated?

Are You Dedicated?
By Alan Stein5. April 2011 03:08
My wife and I had a wonderful time in Aruba. We enjoyed delicious food and plenty of sunshine.

We made the commitment to take a yearly vacation, without Luke and Jack, to enjoy quality time together and to keep our marital connection strong. I know plenty of coaches who feel they don’t have time for a vacation, which is understandable, given how hectic the pace of life can get. But you know when you need a vacation the most? When you don’t have time to take one!

As Ferris Bueller so poignantly said back in the ‘80’s:

“Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around every once in a while… you could miss it.”

As a veteran strength & conditioning coach, my goal is to create an extraordinary environment for players to work out. I take pride in staying on the cutting edge of basketball specific training methodology, techniques, and equipment and aim to create an atmosphere that is positive, inspiring, and where players must step out of their comfort zone to keep up.

To learn how to be ‘comfortable being uncomfortable’ on a consistent basis requires dedication.

Dedication is essential for success in anything, but especially in basketball. The game is so competitive, if you aren’t dedicated, you won’t make it.

The top players at every level spend hours and hours on the court and in the weight room making their strengths stronger, tightening up their applicable weaknesses, and being students of the game. That is dedication.

A powerful quote from legendary Coach Don Meyer comes to mind:

“There are two pains in life. The pain of discipline and the pain of regret. Take your choice.”

Being dedicated means accepting the pain of discipline and answering 3 questions:

1. What do you want? (ex. play college or pro basketball)

2. What will it take to get it? (ex. time, effort, consistency)

3. Will you pay the price? (make sacrifices, dedicate yourself)

While it may be urban legend, I heard that back in his prime (before his spiraling downfall), Tiger Woods used to make 100 consecutive 10-foot putts to end every practice. That is 100 in a row, not 100 total. If he missed his 92nd putt, he started over! That is dedication.

An appropriate equivalent would be free throws. Are you dedicated enough to end every workout by making 5 or 10 or 25 consecutive free throws?

Tiger went on to say:

“If people knew how dedicated I was, they wouldn’t think this came so easy to me.”

Another example of dedication is the NBA early bus. There are two buses that head to the arena before every road game. The early bus heads over 3 hours before tip-off and the late bus heads over 90 minutes before tip-off. The players on the early bus are usually rookies and guys that need to prove themselves. They go over early to get up extra shots and work on their game.

Rumor has it that NBA superstar Tim Duncan still continues to take the early bus every game, even now that his Hall of Fame legacy is solidified. That is dedication.

I also heard that the Spurs organization took notice and said “if our best player can take the early bus, then everyone can take the early bus.” Needless to say the Spurs only take one bus to the arena now!

Top players and coaches understand that dedication isn’t a sometimes thing… it is an all of the time thing. You can’t be kind of dedicated.

You are either dedicated or you’re not; there is no in between.

Are you dedicated?

Alan Stein
www.StrongerTeam.com
www.Twitter.com/AlanStein
www.Facebook.com/StrongerTeam

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Location:Bell Gardens,CA

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Sand Dunes










Who's ready?

Location:Manhattan Beach, CA

Shoot The Rock Spring League


April 2, 2011  
  9:30 AM Whittier vs Don Bosco Tech
  10:30 AM Bell Gardens vs Roosevelt
  11:30 AM Don Bosco Tech vs Bell Gardens
  12:30 PM Whittier vs Santa Fe
  1:30 PM Santa Fe  vs Salesian
  2:30 PM Roosevelt vs Salesian

April 9, 2011  
9:30 AM Don Bosco Tech vs Roosevelt
10:30 AM Santa Fe vs Bell Gardens
11:30 AM Roosevelt vs Whittier
12:30 PM Don Bosco Tech vs Santa Fe
1:30 PM Salesian vs Whittier
  2:30 PM Bell Gardens vs Salesian

April 16, 2011
  9:30 AM Don Bosco Tech vs Whittier
  10:30 AM Santa Fe vs Roosevelt
  11:30 AM Don Bosco Tech vs Santa Fe
  12:30 PM Bell Gardens vs Whittier
  1:30 PM Roosevelt vs Salesian
  2:30 PM Bell Gardens vs Salesian

April 23, 2011  
9:30 AM Whittier vs Don Bosco Tech
10:30 AM Bell Gardens vs Santa Fe
11:30 AM Roosevelt vs Don Bosco Tech
12:30 PM Bell Gardens vs Roosevelt
1:30 PM Salesian vs Whittier
  2:30 PM Santa Fe vs Salesian

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

BG Hoops Fundraising

We are raising funds to pay for our Spring & Summer Program. We'll bring in over 75 kids this spring & summer and they'll participate in practice, clinics, an end of summer camp, they recieve practice gear, and play almost 200 Frosh, JV, & Varsity games combined. All the kids pay for is their own shorts & jerseys. The Spring/Summer Program will cost more than we're trying to raise here but the kids will do a lot of fundraising too. Anything you can do to help our kids out is greatly appreciated.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Selfishness

‎"The most DIFFICULT thing for individuals to do when they become part of a team is to sacrifice, it's much easier to be SELFISH." Pat Riley

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Building Your House

“A carpenter was fixing to retire and tells the company he works for he was through building houses. They ask him to build one more before he retires. He agrees and through the process of building this last house he begins to cut corners, uses cheaper materials, doesn’t use the same precision in which he used to and basically built an inferior home. When he’s done he gives the keys to his boss and says here you go I’m done. The boss returns the key and says thanks for all your hard work and dedication to this company. This home is yours and we appreciate you. Obviously, had the carpenter known he was building his own house he would not have cut corners. You are building your house every day and you don’t even know it.”

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Senior Night on Friday: Feb. 11, 2011 at 5:15 PM

Join us tomorrow in celebrating our seniors before our game against Alhambra High school. Also we'll be having a fundraiser with Don Chow Tacos Diner truck in attendance. Join us for a great game and some great Chino-Latino Food.

Friday, January 7, 2011

Alumni 2010-20111

Thanks to all the alumni that showed up to support BG Hoops!!!

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Alumni Game January 6th, 2010

Alumni Game Thursday, January 6th, 2011 at 7 PM.
1990s vs 2000's: Which BG Hoops decade had the best ballers? Get your teams together & get in text with Coach Cuevas ASAP at 213-215-0363.