The 60-Minute Youth Basketball Practice Plan

A ready-to-run 60-minute youth basketball practice plan with a timed schedule: dynamic warm-up, skill drills, team concepts, and a live scrimmage. Copy it for your next practice.

Youth basketball coach planning a 60-minute practice
Youth Basketball Coaching

The 60-Minute Youth Basketball Practice Plan

A great 60-minute youth basketball practice breaks into four blocks: a 10-minute dynamic warm-up, 25 minutes of skill work, 15 minutes of small team concepts, and a 10-minute scrimmage with a short cool-down. That structure keeps every player moving, teaches real skills, and finishes with the live play kids love. Copy the timed plan below and run it at your next practice.

The biggest mistake new coaches make is winging it. A written plan with a clock keeps the gym organized, cuts standing around, and makes sure shooting and ball-handling actually get reps. Build the plan once, draw it on a board, and your hour runs itself.

The Plan at a Glance

What a Good 60-Minute Practice Looks Like

Here is the full hour on one page. Print it, or better, draw it on your coaching board so players can see the flow when they walk in.

Time Block Focus
0 to 10 Dynamic warm-up Movement and ball handling
10 to 25 Skill stations Dribbling, passing, layups
25 to 35 Shooting Form and game-speed reps
35 to 50 Team concepts Spacing, one set play, defense
50 to 60 Scrimmage and cool-down Live play and one teaching point
Minutes 0 to 10

Start With a Dynamic Warm-Up

Open with movement, not a lecture. Run a lap, then move into dynamic stretches: high knees, butt kicks, lunges, and side shuffles down the court and back. Give every player a ball for the last five minutes and do stationary ball-handling: pound dribbles, crossovers, and figure eights. The goal is warm muscles and a hundred touches on the ball before any drill begins.

Coaching point: keep it loud and fast. A warm-up that drags sets the tone for a slow practice. Use a whistle and a countdown so players sprint between movements.
Minutes 10 to 25

Run Skill Stations

Break the team into small groups and rotate through three stations of about five minutes each: dribbling (cone weaves and change-of-direction moves), passing (chest and bounce passes against the wall or with a partner), and finishing (Mikan layup drill at the rim). Small groups mean more reps per player and less standing in line, which is where youth practices lose their energy.

Coaching point: demo each station for ten seconds, then let them go. Walk the floor and fix one thing per player rather than stopping the whole group.
HoopsKing Custom Pro 2-sided basketball whiteboard with handle
Coach's Pick

Custom Pro Basketball Whiteboard

Map your station rotations and draw each drill on a two-sided, wipe-clean board with your team name on it. Full court on one side, half court on the other.

Minutes 25 to 35

Get Up Shooting Reps

Shooting is the skill players want most, so give it its own block. Start with two minutes of close-range form shooting (one hand, then two) to lock in mechanics, then move to game-speed reps: catch-and-shoot from a pass, and a simple shooting game like beat the pro or knockout to add pressure. Keep players in pairs with a passer and a rebounder so nobody is chasing their own ball.

Coaching point: teach feet and follow-through before arc. Most missed youth shots come from bad balance, not bad aim.
Minutes 35 to 50

Teach One Team Concept

Now connect the skills to team play, but only install one new idea per practice. Pick a single focus: spacing in a 5-out alignment, one set play, or a basic man-to-man defensive stance and slides. Walk it through at half speed on the board first, then on the court without defense, then live. Trying to teach five concepts in one practice guarantees players remember none of them.

Coaching point: give the concept a one-word call so you can run it from the sideline. Repetition of one thing beats a tour of ten things.
Minutes 50 to 60

Finish With a Scrimmage

End every practice with live play. Scrimmage 3-on-3 or 5-on-5 and let them apply what they worked on. Pause once or twice to reinforce the day's concept, then let them play. Bring it in for a 60-second cool-down and one positive takeaway so players leave on a high note and remember the main teaching point.

Coaching point: award a point for the team that runs the day's concept correctly, not just for baskets. It rewards the habit you are trying to build.
Make It Repeatable

Four Rules for a Practice That Runs Itself

1Write it down and time it. A plan with a clock keeps the gym moving and cuts standing around.
2Keep groups small. More stations and fewer lines mean more touches and far less boredom.
3Teach one concept a day. Install a single team idea and rep it until it sticks.
4Draw it on a board. Players learn faster when they can see the drill before they run it.
Coach drawing a drill on the HoopsKing Pro 2-sided basketball whiteboard
Run Practice On It

Draw Your Whole Plan in Seconds

Bring this 60-minute plan to life on a board your players can see. Customize the Pro Whiteboard, or browse the full coaching-board range.

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick Answers for Youth Coaches

How long should a youth basketball practice be?

About 60 minutes for ages 7 to 11, and up to 90 minutes for older or more competitive teams. Younger players lose focus after an hour, so a tight, well-paced 60 minutes beats a loose 90.

How much of practice should be drills versus scrimmage?

Roughly two-thirds skill and concept work, one-third live play. Kids learn through games, so always finish with a scrimmage, but protect the skill blocks earlier in the hour.

What should the first practice of the season cover?

Establish routines: where to line up, how stations rotate, and basic ball handling and layups. Install your warm-up so it becomes automatic, and teach just one simple offensive idea.

How do I keep young players from standing in line?

Use small-group stations instead of one big line, give every player a ball whenever possible, and keep groups to three or four. More stations means more reps and less boredom.

How many drills should one practice have?

Five to seven, with one clear focus each. A short menu run with energy and good reps beats a long list rushed through with little teaching.

What does a coach use to plan practice?

A written, timed plan plus a dry-erase coaching board to diagram drills and sets. A two-sided board shows full and half court so you can map the whole hour and adjust on the fly.

Get the Right Tools

Plan Every Practice On Your Own Board

A timed plan runs even better when your players can see it. The HoopsKing Custom Pro Whiteboard is two-sided and wipe-clean, customized with your team name, and built to map drills, stations, and sets at a glance.