Arizona Basketball Training: Trainers, Camps & Teams
Arizona has emerged as one of the country’s most active basketball development states — with a year-round warm climate, nationally ranked prep academies, and a Phoenix metro that produces consistent NBA talent. That’s a lot of options. This page exists to provide context, not direction — helping families ask better questions rather than rushing into decisions.
Looking for specific resources?
Why This Directory Exists
Arizona’s basketball landscape has changed significantly in the last decade. The Phoenix metro has become a destination for elite prep academies — programs like AZ Compass Prep, CIA-Bella Vista, Dream City Christian, and Hillcrest Prep recruit nationally and produce NBA draft picks. Meanwhile, public school programs from Sunnyslope to Millennium to Perry have built nationally competitive teams. For families with kids in local rec leagues or middle school programs, understanding where your child’s journey fits into all of this is genuinely confusing.
This directory doesn’t rank trainers or declare winners. It exists to help families understand what types of programs exist in Arizona, when they run, what questions to ask before committing, and how Arizona’s specific basketball culture shapes the options available. A family in Flagstaff faces different decisions than a family in Chandler — and both face different decisions than a family whose kid is weighing an academy offer.
Arizona’s year-round warm climate is genuinely unique. Unlike most states, outdoor training is available twelve months a year, summer AAU tournaments don’t get rained out, and fall development seasons run without weather interruptions. That creates opportunities — and also creates pressure to train year-round that not every family needs to feel.
Context, Not Direction
We don’t rank trainers or camps as “best” — we help you understand what makes different programs right for different needs. The best trainer for one Arizona family might not fit another’s goals, budget, or schedule. Arizona’s range of options — from elite academies competing nationally to neighborhood rec programs — makes thoughtful evaluation more important than ever.
Learn how BasketballTrainer.com works |
Read our editorial standards
Arizona Basketball Season Calendar: When Everything Actually Happens
This timeline exists to help you plan thoughtfully, not to create panic about deadlines. Understanding when different programs run helps families make decisions that fit their schedule rather than reacting to last-minute pressure. Arizona’s calendar runs nearly year-round — which is both an opportunity and a potential source of overwhelm if you’re trying to do everything.
High School Season (AIA — Arizona Interscholastic Association)
- November 3: First practice allowed by AIA (all classifications)
- November 19: First games begin across all divisions
- November–February: Regular season — your school team’s primary focus
- February 5: Regular season ends for 1A–3A divisions
- February 12: Regular season ends for 4A–6A divisions
- February 12–19: Play-in games (varies by division)
- February 27 – March 7: State championships by classification (1A Feb 27 through 6A/Open Mar 7)
- Girls state championships held at Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Phoenix
AAU/Select Basketball Season
Here’s what surprises many Arizona families: AAU tryouts begin in January and February — while the high school season is still active for 4A–6A players. Teams form early because they want rosters locked before spring tournaments begin in March and April.
- January–March: Select/AAU tryouts (yes, while school season is ongoing)
- March–April: Season launches immediately after state championships conclude
- April–May: Spring tournament circuit begins
- June: Section 7 Basketball Team Camp at State Farm Stadium — over 250 teams and 400+ college coaches attend annually, AIA-sanctioned
- June–August: Peak summer tournament season — teams often travel to Las Vegas, San Diego, and Southern California for high-profile events
- August: Season winds down; some teams continue into early fall
Basketball Camps
- May–June: Early summer camps launch; university-run programs begin
- June–July: Peak camp season across Arizona
- University of Arizona Wildcats Basketball Camps (McKale Center, Tucson)
- Arizona State Sun Devils Basketball Camps (Tempe)
- Grand Canyon University Lopes Camps (Phoenix)
- Arizona Basketball Coaches Association (ABCA) Youth Development Academy — 3 regional sites, serves 2,500+ players grades 3–8
- Section 7 Team Camp at State Farm Stadium (major college exposure event)
- Private trainer camps throughout Phoenix metro and Tucson
- July–August: Final summer opportunities before fall training prep begins
Year-Round Training
- September–October: Fall skill development season — private trainers are typically busiest preparing players for November school tryouts
- November–March: The overlap season — school practices, AAU tryouts, and individual training happening simultaneously. This is when families feel most stretched.
- Anytime: Private training available year-round across Phoenix metro, Tucson, Scottsdale, Gilbert, and Chandler corridors; outdoor training possible in all months due to climate
Planning Timeline, Not Pressure Timeline
This calendar shows when programs typically run in Arizona — not deadlines you must meet. Some families train year-round. Others focus only on school season. Some skip AAU entirely. Arizona’s warm climate can create a sense that you need to be doing something every month — you don’t. The goal is understanding what exists and when, so you can make choices that fit your family’s actual goals, budget, and capacity.
The Arizona Reality: If you’re in the Phoenix metro — Chandler, Gilbert, Scottsdale, Glendale, Tempe, Peoria — you have access to one of the most concentrated basketball development environments in the western United States. If you’re in Tucson, your options are solid but smaller in scale. If you’re in Flagstaff, Yuma, or a smaller community, you’ll be driving to participate in AAU tournaments or attending camps in hub cities. That’s not a failure — that’s Arizona geography. Plan travel costs into your decision-making from the start.
Full AIA calendar and governance info: Arizona Interscholastic Association (AIA) | Private school athletics: Canyon Athletic Association (CAA)
Understanding Arizona’s Basketball Program Types
Arizona offers private trainers, structured camps, and select/AAU teams — none of which is inherently better than the others. They’re tools for different needs. Understanding how they differ helps you pick what actually fits your situation rather than what sounds most impressive.
Private Trainers
Best For
Players who want focused skill development on specific weaknesses, players preparing for school tryouts, or athletes who learn better in 1-on-1 or small-group settings than team environments.
What to Know
Quality and pricing vary widely in Arizona’s large metro markets. Phoenix and Scottsdale have high concentrations of trainers, which creates competition — and also means less-experienced trainers can charge premium rates. Expect $60–$120 per hour for individual sessions; small groups run less per player. Look for trainers who can explain why they’re teaching specific skills, not just running drills.
Basketball Camps
Best For
Younger players building fundamentals in a structured environment, players wanting concentrated development during summer break, and families looking for an affordable one-week intensive rather than a year-long commitment.
What to Know
Arizona university camps (UA, ASU, GCU, NAU) offer credibility and experienced coaching, but camp instructors vary year to year. Exposure camps that promise college coach attention for younger players (under 14) tend to overpromise. The Section 7 Team Camp at State Farm Stadium is genuinely significant for high school programs — not for individual skill development, but for team competition at a high level.
AAU / Select Teams
Best For
Players ready for competitive team basketball beyond their school season, athletes actively pursuing college recruitment visibility, and players who thrive with consistent team structure and game-speed repetitions.
What to Know
Arizona’s proximity to Las Vegas and Southern California means strong tournament access — and real travel costs. All-in seasonal budgets for competitive programs run $2,000–$5,000+ when you include travel, hotels, and entry fees. Arizona also has nationally elite academies (AZ Compass Prep, CIA-Bella Vista) competing in circuits like EYBL — these are different from regional AAU programs and involve entirely different commitments.
Arizona High School Basketball Rankings
Rankings as Reference Points, Not Ceilings
Arizona’s rankings reflect where the competitive landscape stands at a point in time — they don’t define where your child should aim. A player from an unranked school can still reach college basketball. A player from a top-ranked program still needs to earn their opportunity. Note that Arizona’s landscape includes nationally ranked private academies alongside public school programs — these operate in different contexts and rankings treat them differently depending on the source.
Boys Basketball — Top 10 (2025–26 Season)
Source: AZPreps365, MaxPreps, Arizona Republic — as of mid-February 2026
| Rank | School | City | Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sunnyslope Vikings | Phoenix | ~22-2 |
| 2 | Millennium Tigers | Goodyear | ~20-3 |
| 3 | AZ Compass Prep Dragons * | Chandler | #2 nationally |
| 4 | CIA-Bella Vista Bears * | Phoenix | #12 nationally |
| 5 | Brophy College Prep | Phoenix | 12-6 |
| 6 | Basha Bears | Chandler | — |
| 7 | Cibola Raiders | Yuma | 12-5 |
| 8 | Highland Hawks | Gilbert | — |
| 9 | Perry Pumas | Gilbert | — |
| 10 | Hamilton Huskies | Chandler | — |
* Elite prep academies competing in national circuits — different context from traditional AIA programs.
Girls Basketball — Top 10 (2025–26 Season)
Source: Arizona Republic, Prep Girls Hoops — as of late January 2026
| Rank | School | City | Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Millennium Tigers | Goodyear | 14-4 |
| 2 | Perry Pumas | Gilbert | 15-3 |
| 3 | Hamilton Huskies | Chandler | — |
| 4 | Higley Knights | Gilbert | — |
| 5 | Campo Verde Coyotes | Gilbert | 5A |
| 6 | Highland Hawks | Gilbert | — |
| 7 | Salpointe Catholic Lancers | Tucson | 4A |
| 8 | Valley Vista Monsoon | Surprise | — |
| 9 | Sunnyside Blue Devils | Tucson | — |
| 10 | Xavier College Prep | Phoenix | — |
Millennium girls program won the 2025 Open Division state title; Valley Vista was runner-up.
Arizona College Basketball Programs
College Basketball as One Possible Outcome
Understanding Arizona’s college basketball landscape helps families set realistic timelines and goals — not create pressure around a single outcome. Arizona offers pathways at every level from NJCAA community colleges to nationally ranked D1 programs. Most college basketball players — even good ones — don’t play at the D1 level. Knowing the full range of options helps families evaluate their situation without tunnel vision on the most visible programs.
NCAA Division I
NAIA Programs
NJCAA Junior Colleges (ACCAC)
Arizona has one of the larger community college basketball systems in the West through the Arizona Community College Athletic Conference (ACCAC), with 12+ programs serving players across the state. JuCo programs are a legitimate development bridge — many players sharpen their skills here before transferring to four-year programs. Mesa CC, Pima CC (Tucson), South Mountain CC (Phoenix), Arizona Western (Yuma), Yavapai College (Prescott), Chandler-Gilbert CC, Eastern Arizona College, and Central Arizona College all run competitive men’s and women’s programs.
Understanding Division Levels
Arizona has zero NCAA Division II or Division III programs. The pathway structure here runs D1 → NAIA → NJCAA community colleges, which is different from states with full D2/D3 ecosystems. Families evaluating Arizona college options should understand that the NAIA and NJCAA pathways are legitimate and often provide more playing time, closer coaching relationships, and athletic financial aid than comparable D3 schools in other states.
What to Ask Before Committing in Arizona
Arizona’s basketball market — especially in the Phoenix metro — has a specific set of pressure points families encounter. Elite prep academies competing nationally, EYBL circuit programs promising exposure, and a dense trainer market where credentials vary significantly. These questions are designed for the Arizona environment specifically.
Questions for Private Trainers
- Can you show me a typical session plan? What specific skills does a player at my child’s level need most, and how does your approach address those?
- Phoenix and Scottsdale have hundreds of trainers. What distinguishes your background — where did you play, and what have players you’ve trained gone on to do?
- Do you train players from both public school programs (like Basha or Sunnyslope) and academy environments? Understanding those contexts is different.
- What do you charge all-in, including any group sessions or packages, and how do you measure and communicate progress to parents?
Questions for Camp Programs
- Is this a skill development camp or a showcase/exposure camp? For players under 14, exposure claims are largely marketing — ask directly what college coaches attended last year’s event.
- What is the coach-to-camper ratio, and who is actually doing the instruction? At university camps, the head coach is often not running most sessions.
- Is the Section 7 event at State Farm Stadium right for my child’s level? That event is high-level team competition — it’s not a development environment for beginners.
- What is the total cost including registration, transportation, and any gear? Arizona’s heat in June/July means indoor facilities matter — confirm the facility.
Questions for AAU/Select Programs
- Are you affiliated with an EYBL circuit program, a regional Arizona circuit, or an independent team? These operate in completely different worlds — EYBL-level programs require a very different commitment than regional AAU.
- What tournaments do you attend, and which specific college coaches attended those events last year — not which coaches “might be there”?
- Get the all-in number: team fees plus travel to Las Vegas, San Diego, or other tournament destinations. Arizona AAU families regularly face $3,000–$5,000+ seasonal commitments when travel is included.
- If a program is promising D1 exposure for a 13-year-old, ask to see their specific track record of college placements by age group. Arizona’s academy market can create unrealistic timelines for younger players.
Red Flags in Arizona’s Basketball Market
- Programs that compare themselves to AZ Compass Prep or CIA-Bella Vista without being honest that those academies recruit nationally and operate at an entirely different level than regional programs.
- Trainers in the Scottsdale/Gilbert corridor charging premium rates based on client name-dropping without substantive credential explanation — this market has many trainers; not all experience is equal.
- Summer camps promising “college exposure” for players under 9th grade — legitimate exposure events at that age are extremely rare; most are development environments, which is what young players actually need.
- AAU programs claiming EYBL-level tournaments without being able to show which specific college coaches attended and what offers resulted from recent players on the team.
- Any program creating urgency around “your child will fall behind” given Arizona’s weather — year-round training access is a genuine advantage, not a reason to panic about missing one session or one season.
Typical Arizona Pricing Ranges
Private Training
$60–$120/hr
Individual; small groups less per player
Day Camps
$200–$500/week
University and skill-focused programs
Regional AAU
$800–$2,000
Team fees before travel
Competitive AAU
$3,000–$5,000+
All-in with Las Vegas / SoCal travel
Not sure where to start?
Our free guides walk through what to ask and look for before committing to any program.
Arizona Basketball by City
Arizona’s basketball options are heavily concentrated in the Phoenix metro — but “the Valley” spans dozens of distinct communities, each with its own programs, school rivalries, and training access. Tucson offers a solid but smaller ecosystem. Beyond these two metro areas, families should plan for travel as part of their basketball equation.
Phoenix
Pop. 1,600,000+
Home to Sunnyslope Vikings (nationally ranked boys program), CIA-Bella Vista (nationally ranked academy), and historic programs like Carl Hayden and Central. Mike Bibby (2nd overall pick 1998) played at Shadow Mountain HS here. The Phoenix Suns’ Footprint Center and GCU Arena give Phoenix youth players consistent exposure to NBA-level basketball culture. Phoenix basketball →
Tucson
Pop. 545,000
Sean Elliott (Cholla HS) — whose “Memorial Day Miracle” shot helped San Antonio win the 1999 NBA championship — is Tucson’s signature basketball product. University of Arizona (1997 national champions, Tommy Lloyd era, currently ranked #4 nationally) anchors development here, with Salpointe Catholic running a competitive 4A girls program and Sunnyside among the stronger public school programs. Pima Community College offers NJCAA ball. Tucson basketball →
Mesa
Pop. 518,000
Mesa Community College runs a competitive NJCAA program that serves as a development bridge for players not yet ready for four-year basketball. Public school programs at Red Mountain, Mountain View, and Desert Ridge compete in 5A and 6A. Benedictine University Mesa also offers NAIA basketball for players seeking that pathway. Mesa basketball →
Chandler
Pop. 280,000
Chandler may be the most basketball-dense corridor in the state. AZ Compass Prep (nationally ranked #2) and the consistently competitive Basha Bears and Hamilton Huskies — along with Chandler-Gilbert Community College for NJCAA — make this area a genuine development hub. Families evaluating programs here need to understand the significant difference between AIA public schools and nationally recruiting academies operating in the same geography. Chandler basketball →
Gilbert
Pop. 278,000
Gilbert fields some of the state’s strongest girls programs — Perry, Highland, Higley, and Campo Verde all appear consistently in statewide rankings. Perry is also strong on the boys side. Koa Peat (Perry HS, 2026 top prospect) has put national attention on Gilbert. Ottawa University and Park University both run NAIA programs here, and Inspire Courts is a notable private training facility serving the East Valley. Gilbert basketball →
Scottsdale
Pop. 258,000
Scottsdale’s private school landscape (Notre Dame Prep, Saguaro, Desert Mountain) competes in AIA alongside strong public programs. Scottsdale CC runs NJCAA basketball. The affluent market here creates a high concentration of private trainers — which means both more options and more variation in quality. Families should apply the evaluation questions in this guide more carefully here than almost anywhere else in the state. Scottsdale basketball →
Glendale
Pop. 250,000
Arizona Christian University (NAIA Firestorm) is based in Glendale, and Dream City Christian School — where Shaedon Sharpe (2022 #7 pick) developed — is a nationally known academy program here. The Section 7 Team Camp held annually at State Farm Stadium brings 250+ teams to Glendale each June, drawing 400+ college coaches. Glendale basketball →
Goodyear & Surprise
W. Valley Hub
Millennium HS (Goodyear) is one of the state’s most accomplished programs — the Tigers boys team is nationally ranked and the girls program won the 2025 Open Division state title. Neighboring Surprise is home to Valley Vista, the 2025 Open Division girls runner-up. These West Valley programs demonstrate that Phoenix suburb basketball is not limited to the east and central corridors. West Valley basketball →
Tempe
Pop. 185,000
Arizona State University’s campus dominates Tempe’s basketball landscape. ASU (Big 12) runs summer camps and has produced notable talent — James Harden attended ASU before being drafted. Corona del Sol is a consistently competitive AIA program. Tempe’s proximity to ASU facilities makes it one of the better environments in the state for players interested in training in high-quality indoor facilities year-round. Tempe basketball →
Flagstaff
Pop. 75,000
Northern Arizona University (Big Sky Conference) anchors Flagstaff basketball, offering camp programming and a D1 pathway. At 7,000 feet elevation, Flagstaff’s outdoor training conditions are genuinely different from Phoenix — heat is not the concern here, but altitude training can benefit conditioning. Flagstaff HS and Coconino compete in smaller AIA classifications. Families here need to plan travel to Phoenix for most AAU activity. Flagstaff basketball →
Yuma
Pop. 100,000
Yuma punches above its weight in high school basketball. Cibola Raiders consistently compete in 6A despite Yuma’s smaller market size. Arizona Western College runs an NJCAA program that serves as an important development resource for players in the region. Distance from Phoenix (3+ hours) means Yuma families face meaningful travel commitments for competitive AAU play and major events. Yuma basketball →
Peoria
Pop. 200,000
Peoria’s Liberty and Centennial programs compete in 4A and 5A with consistent results. As part of the Northwest Valley corridor, Peoria families have full access to Phoenix metro AAU programs, trainer networks, and the Section 7 event at nearby State Farm Stadium in Glendale. The Northwest Valley has grown quickly and basketball infrastructure has expanded with the population. Peoria basketball →
Getting Started in Arizona Basketball
Rather than rushing toward the most visible or expensive option, here’s a realistic sequence for families navigating Arizona’s basketball programs for the first time.
Clarify What Your Player Actually Needs Right Now
Is the goal making a school team this fall? Building skills over the summer? Exploring competitive AAU? College recruitment visibility? Arizona’s market includes programs for every one of those goals — but they’re different programs. Knowing your actual goal prevents signing up for something that doesn’t serve your situation. Our free trainer evaluation guide includes a goal-setting framework that’s useful here even if you’re not yet focused on training.
Start Local, Evaluate Before Expanding
Every city in this guide has city-level pages with more specific program information. Start with what’s accessible in your community before committing to programs that require significant travel or cost. Arizona’s weather advantage is real — local training is productive. A year of consistent local development with one quality trainer beats scattered involvement in high-cost programs across the metro. Browse the Arizona city pages to find programs near you.
Ask the Hard Questions Before Signing
Arizona’s market — especially in Phoenix and Scottsdale — has programs that sound impressive but don’t hold up under scrutiny. The evaluation questions in this guide are not meant to make you skeptical of all programs. They’re meant to help you distinguish between programs that have real track records and programs that have good marketing. The investment of two or three conversations before committing is always worth it in this market.
Ready to Find Arizona Basketball Programs?
Use our free guides to evaluate programs before you commit — trainers, camps, and AAU teams all in one place.




