The By Any Means Coaches Podcast

Why Player Development Isn’t Linear

By Any Means Coaches

In this solo episode of the By Any Means Coaches Podcast, Coleman Ayers breaks down the concept of nonlinear pedagogy, reframed as the nonlinear progression model, and explains why learning, development, and skill acquisition in basketball are rarely clean, linear processes. Drawing from research across sport, education, and motor learning, Coleman challenges the traditional “start simple and build up” mindset and makes the case for starting closer to (or slightly above) an athlete’s true challenge point to accelerate learning and improve transfer to the game.

Through practical basketball-specific examples like shooting footwork, ball screen decision-making, warmups, and youth development, Coleman explains how nonlinear structure and nonlinear progress work together. He outlines why struggle is not only acceptable but necessary, how regressions should often replace progressions, and why coaches must reframe expectations around visible improvement. The episode closes with actionable rules of thumb to help coaches design more efficient, engaging, and game-representative training environments.

Timestamps:

00:01 – Introduction to nonlinear pedagogy and why learning isn’t linear
 01:28 – Nonlinear structure vs. nonlinear progress explained
 02:39 – Traditional linear progressions and why they fall short
 04:08 – Starting with difficulty and regressing instead of building up
 05:09 – Inefficiency of linear models and wasted training time
 06:32 – Engagement, autonomy, and mental toughness benefits
 07:14 – Giving athletes time to struggle and self-organize
 08:28 – Why linear progressions don’t transfer well to games
 09:13 – Addressing concerns about bad habits and technique
 10:58 – Confidence, psychological momentum, and game reality
 11:50 – Example: shooting footwork and nonlinear application
 13:00 – Example: handling aggressive ball screen coverages
 15:19 – Starting live, then regressing with purpose
 16:05 – Rules of thumb: start 10% harder, regress more than progress
 17:25 – Finding challenge in warmups
 18:41 – Whole–part–whole and play–drill–play frameworks
 20:27 – When it makes sense to start simple
 22:01 – Youth development, experimentation, and learning windows
 24:25 – Advanced challenges making basic skills easier
 26:34 – Nonlinear progress and managing expectations
 28:00 – Spacing, consolidation, and why breaks matter
 30:30 – Final takeaways on embracing the chaos of learning

Coaching Resources: https://www.byanymeanscoaches.com
BAM Blueprint Book: https://www.byanymeanscoaches.com/modern-basketball-blueprint

If this episode challenged the way you think about player development, be sure to check out the By Any Means Coaches Certification and Coleman’s book, The Modern Basketball Blueprint, where these concepts are explored in much greater depth. If you enjoyed the episode, share it with another coach, and we’ll see you next time on the By Any Means Coaches Podcast.