All the Time and Effort, but no results?
If you are putting in tons of time and tons of effort but not seeing the same results READ THISβΌοΈ #1 First and foremost you have to be consistent. If your just getting one long good workout in spontaneously your not gonna improve close to as much. Itβs better to have a few short workouts throughout the week, but YOU HAVE TO BE CONSISTENT. Iβm talking get outside or in the gym or wherever you do you workouts at least a few times throughout the week rain or shine. The small consistent workouts build up over time and improve you a lot and a player. I suggest a minimum of 3, 45+ minute workouts a week and that is the very bottom thatβs the minimum. If your thinking thatβs a lot of time and effort and you just are putting the minimum work in. If thatβs you, donβt ever think your gonna be the best. If your not putting more work in your just getting left behind. Your not gonna make it to the NBA by putting in the bare minimum you have to put your all in. Kobe would have 4, 2 hour basketball workouts everyday. Thats what separated him from all the other players he put more work in. The more work you put in the better youβll be if you apply the other steps also. Resultes arenβt gonna just happen over one night. Itβs going to happen over a few weeks, or months, of consistency. #2 PUT IN THE EFFORT. If you are being consistent putting the time in but not seeing results maybe you are being lazy. If you are putting the time in, but not trying your very hardest on every rep/workout your only cheating yourself from getting better. You need to put your best effort into every drill every rep. Even small stuff like walking to get a rebound or jogging to get your rebound could be the difference of you getting 200 shots up or 500 shots up in your 2 hour workout. THE GRIND IS REAL, donβt be lazy, hustle hard, put the work in, donβt cheat the system, see results. # 3 ADD VARIETY. This is probably the one most often forgotten. You can put the work in day in and day out. You can be doing two workouts in a day at max effort, but you start to plateau if you do the same workout every time. You could improve so much quicker if you just make the workout harder. Donβt make your workouts harder till you master the basics first. For example: I do the same dribbling drills 4x a week, but after like a week or two the drills get so easy I donβt have a hard time doing that dribbling drill. So what I do is after a workout gets easy is I switch it out for a harder one that I struggle to do, whether itβs one ball or two balls I try to constantly make it harder. By constantly changing the dribbling drills I am constantly improving at a quicker pace. I keep my dribbling warm up the same but I change the workouts past that. Donβt change the workouts till you master them though.