Ten years is long enough to forget where your jumpshot lives. It's not long enough to forget how to play basketball. Here's how to make the return worthwhile.
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Ten years is long enough to forget where your jumpshot lives. It's not long enough to forget how to play basketball.
The instincts come back faster than you think. The conditioning takes longer than you expect. Here's how to make the return worthwhile instead of humiliating.
Your first few sessions back will feel clunky. Your body remembers more than your brain thinks it does — the footwork, the court vision, the instinct to cut — but the execution will be inconsistent while the neural pathways reconnect. This is normal and it gets better fast.
Your conditioning will be the bigger issue. The lateral movement and stop-start demands of basketball use muscles that gym training rarely touches. Plan to be tired. Plan to be sore. Plan for it to improve week over week.
Shoot at an empty gym twice. Not to get your game back — just to reacquaint yourself with the ball, the court, and your body. Walking into a league game cold after ten years is harder than it needs to be.
Get basketball shoes. Whatever you've been wearing to the gym isn't appropriate for a basketball court. The lateral support and court traction are non-negotiable.
Register in the right division. D5 Rookie or D4 Rec. Seriously. Your ego says D3. Your ten-year-gap says D4. Start lower and move up. You'll develop faster and have a better time.
The return to basketball is not a one-game test. It's a season. By week four, you'll be playing recognizable basketball. By week eight, you'll wonder why you waited ten years. The progress compounds quickly once the rust starts coming off.
Start your return at brodierec.com.