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California Basketball Training – Trainers, Camps & Teams

California Basketball Training – Trainers, Camps & Teams

California offers 500+ basketball trainers, 200+ camps, and 300+ select teams across 100+ cities. That’s a lot of options — but not all answers. This page exists to provide context, not direction — helping families ask better questions rather than rushing decisions.

500+
Trainers
200+
Camps
300+
Select Teams
100+
Cities

Why BasketballTrainer.com Created This California Resource

I had the great fortune of living in playing in Southern California and love my memories of playing in courts.  California’s basketball landscape is overwhelming and chock full of basketball training, teams and camps to help you. With year-round outdoor training weather, an extremely competitive high school scene, and major AAU programs in every metro area, families face thousands of training options. The sheer volume creates paralysis, not clarity.

I played on legendary courts well known like Venice Beach and Laguna Beach, to lesser known but higher quality like Isis Avenue in El Segundo, Live Oak Park in Manhattan Beach where everyone headed to the Shellback after games.  I played in absurdly talented summer leagues like the Aviation League for the perennial champs “Hangar” Team.  I came back from a devatastating complete knee injury and played my first game in years at Clark Stadium in Hermosa Beach, CA.   And wherever, I travelled, I brought my kicks so I could get on the courts in the Marina section of San Franncisco, the pickup courts at UCLA and the courts up and down the beaches of San Diego.

Rather than ranking trainers or declaring “best” camps, this directory provides frameworks for evaluation. We help you understand the different types of programs available in California — from individual skill trainers to intensive camps to competitive select teams — so you can determine what fits your family’s goals, budget, and values. The best trainer for a family in Sacramento might not fit one in San Diego, even if they’re both excellent at what they do.

This page isn’t about steering you toward specific programs. It’s about helping you navigate California basketball training with realistic expectations and thoughtful questions. Learn more about how BasketballTrainer.com works and our editorial standards.

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 family might not fit another’s goals, budget, or learning style. California’s basketball scene is deep enough that you can find excellent training at multiple price points and approaches — the challenge is knowing what questions to ask. At 25 I decided to volunteer to coach a local team of 5th graders in Manhattan Beach.  As a former college player, I certainly had some skill levels and passion to help kids but I was pretty raw.   So my resume as a coach or trainer was weak, yet I think my impact and gift to the kids was meaningful.  

California Basketball Season Calendar & Key Dates

Understanding when different programs run helps families plan thoughtfully rather than react to last-minute pressure. California’s year-round climate means training never truly stops, but the competitive season follows clear patterns across the state’s CIF sections.

Planning Timeline, Not Pressure Timeline

This calendar shows when programs typically run in California — not deadlines you must meet. Some families train year-round. Others focus only on school season. Some skip AAU entirely. The goal is understanding what exists and when, so you can make choices that fit your family’s goals, budget, and capacity.

High School Season (CIF)

  • Early November: First practice allowed (typically November 3 across most sections)
  • Mid-to-Late November: First games begin (November 17-24 depending on section)
  • November-February: Regular season — your school team’s primary focus
  • February: Section tournaments across California (Southern Section, North Coast Section, etc.)
  • Late February/Early March: Regional tournaments (NorCal and SoCal brackets)
  • Mid-March: State tournament (March 13-14, 2026 at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento)

AAU/Select Basketball Season

Here’s what surprises many California families: AAU tryouts often start in late February and early March — while the high school season is still happening. Teams form quickly because they want rosters set before spring tournaments begin.

  • February-March: Tryouts happening (yes, during school season)
  • March-April: Season launches immediately after state tournaments end
  • April-May: Spring tournament season
  • June-August: Peak summer tournaments — teams often travel to Las Vegas, Phoenix, Sacramento for major events
  • Late July/August: Season winds down

Basketball Camps

  • May-June: Early summer camps start
  • June-July: Peak camp season across California
    • UCLA, USC, Stanford, and other D1 college camps
    • Private trainer camps in LA, Bay Area, San Diego
    • Exposure camps throughout the state
  • August: Final summer opportunities before fall training begins

Year-Round Training

  • September-October: Fall skill development season — private trainers are typically busiest preparing players for school tryouts in November
  • March-August: The overlap season — AAU practices, tournaments, and camps all happening simultaneously. This is when California families feel stretched.
  • Anytime: Private training is available year-round in major California cities

The California Reality: Year-round outdoor weather means training never stops in major metro areas like Los Angeles, the Bay Area, and San Diego. However, the state’s massive size creates travel requirements — families in rural Northern California or the Central Valley may drive 2-4 hours to access top-tier training or compete in AAU tournaments. That’s not a failure — that’s California geography. Plan accordingly.

California Governance & Resources

California high school basketball is governed by the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF), which organizes into regional sections including the Southern Section, Central Section, North Coast Section, and Sac-Joaquin Section, among others. Each section has its own governance and playoff structure, feeding into the state championships each March.

California Basketball Training Teams and Camps

Understanding Your California Basketball Training Options

California basketball training falls into three main categories: individual trainers, camps, and select/AAU teams. None is inherently better — they’re tools for different needs. Here’s what each provides and what to consider:

Individual Trainers

Best For:

Skill development, technical work, personalized attention, flexible scheduling, players who need specific mechanical fixes.

What to Know:

Costs vary widely in California ($50-200+ per session). Location matters — trainers in LA and Bay Area typically charge more than Central Valley. Look for verified playing/coaching experience, clear communication about development timelines, and compatibility with your child’s learning style.

Basketball Camps

Best For:

Intensive skill work, exposure to college programs, competitive environment, meeting players from other areas, trying out basketball seriously.

What to Know:

California camps range from local week-long sessions ($200-500) to elite college exposure camps ($800+). College camps at UCLA, USC, Stanford provide visibility but don’t guarantee recruitment. Day camps offer skill development without overnight costs. Evaluate based on coaching quality, not just the program’s name.

Select/AAU Teams

Best For:

Competitive game experience, team play development, exposure to college coaches (for older players), learning to compete under pressure.

What to Know:

California AAU costs range dramatically ($500-5,000+ annually) depending on team level and travel schedule. Tournament travel in California can mean weekend trips to Las Vegas, Phoenix, or Sacramento. Understand the time commitment (15-20+ hours weekly) and whether it conflicts with school team development. Not every player needs AAU to develop or play in college.

Evaluating Basketball Training Options in California

Rather than ranking trainers or declaring “best” camps, we help you know what questions to ask. Better questions lead to better decisions for your family’s specific situation in California’s competitive basketball landscape.

Questions to Ask Trainers

  • Playing & Coaching Background: Where did you play? What levels have you coached? Can you provide references from current families?
  • Development Philosophy: How do you approach skill development? What’s your timeline for seeing improvement? How do you handle players at different skill levels?
  • Communication: How often will we discuss progress? What does improvement look like at my child’s current level? How do you measure development?
  • Logistics: What’s your cancellation policy? Do you offer makeup sessions? Where do sessions take place? What happens if my child’s school season conflicts?

Questions to Ask Camps

  • Coaching Quality: Who actually runs the drills and provides instruction? What’s the coach-to-player ratio? Will my child get individual feedback?
  • Competition Level: How do you group players by skill? What level of competition should my child expect? Is this more instructional or competitive?
  • Safety & Supervision: What’s your injury protocol? How are campers supervised outside of basketball time? What are the facility’s safety measures?
  • Value: What’s included in the cost? What should my child bring? Are meals provided (for day camps)? What’s the refund policy?

Questions to Ask AAU/Select Teams

  • Program Goals: What’s your coaching philosophy? How do you define success? What college programs have your players attended?
  • Playing Time Philosophy: How is playing time determined? What happens if my child doesn’t perform well initially? Do you guarantee minutes?
  • Costs & Commitments: What’s the total annual cost including tournaments, uniforms, travel? How many tournaments? Where will we travel? What’s required outside of practices/games?
  • Team Culture: How do you handle parent concerns? What’s your practice schedule? How many players are on the roster? How do you balance AAU with school ball?

Red Flags to Watch For

  • Trainers who promise specific outcomes (scholarships, varsity spots, rankings improvement)
  • Programs that pressure you to commit immediately or claim spots are “almost gone”
  • Coaches who can’t provide references or verifiable playing/coaching backgrounds
  • AAU teams that don’t clearly explain total costs upfront or have hidden fees
  • Anyone who discourages you from asking questions or talking to current families
  • Programs that require year-round exclusive commitments for young players (under 14)

California Training Costs (General Ranges)

  • Individual Training: $50-200+ per session (LA/Bay Area typically higher; Central Valley lower)
  • Group Training: $25-75 per session
  • Day Camps: $200-500 per week
  • Overnight Camps: $500-1,500+ per week
  • AAU Teams: $500-5,000+ annually (varies dramatically by level and travel)

Download Our Free Evaluation Guides

Get detailed frameworks for evaluating trainers, camps, and teams with specific questions to ask and red flags to avoid.

Download Trainer Evaluation Guide

Find Basketball Training by City in California

California’s 100+ cities offer basketball training options at every level. Below are the major metro areas with the most concentrated programs. Each city page provides local trainer listings, camp schedules, and select team information specific to that area.

Los Angeles

Pop: ~3.9M | Programs: 200+

Home to elite prep programs including Sierra Canyon, Harvard-Westlake, Notre Dame. Extremely competitive year-round training environment with access to UCLA, USC, and professional facilities.

San Diego

Pop: ~1.4M | Programs: 80+

Strong high school programs, major AAU presence, home to San Diego State and University of San Diego. Year-round outdoor training climate.

San Jose

Pop: ~1.0M | Programs: 60+

Part of Bay Area basketball scene, home to San Jose State. Strong club programs and competitive high school basketball culture.

San Francisco

Pop: ~875K | Programs: 50+

Historic basketball tradition, home to USF, Archbishop Riordan, St. Ignatius. Part of larger Bay Area basketball ecosystem.

Fresno

Pop: ~545K | Programs: 40+

Central Valley basketball hub, home to Fresno State. Strong local programs with less travel required than coastal cities.

Sacramento

Pop: ~525K | Programs: 45+

State capital, home to Sacramento State, hosts state championships at Golden 1 Center. Growing basketball scene.

Long Beach

Pop: ~470K | Programs: 35+

Part of Southern California basketball scene, home to Long Beach State. Access to LA-area tournaments and training.

Oakland

Pop: ~435K | Programs: 35+

Deep Bay Area basketball culture and tradition. Strong local programs and community basketball emphasis.

Bakersfield

Pop: ~410K | Programs: 25+

Home to CS Bakersfield. Central Valley programs with strong local competition.

Riverside

Pop: ~330K | Programs: 30+

Inland Empire basketball, home to UC Riverside and Cal Baptist. Growing competitive scene.

Stockton

Pop: ~320K | Programs: 25+

Home to University of the Pacific. Northern California programs with Central Valley character.

Anaheim

Pop: ~350K | Programs: 30+

Orange County basketball with proximity to major Southern California programs and tournaments.

Other Locations and Cities

Hermosa Beach Basketball Training 

Manhattan Beach Basketball Training 

Ready to Find the Right Basketball Training in California?

Start with clarity about what you’re actually trying to solve. Most families jump to “find a trainer” before they’ve defined what development actually looks like for their child right now. Here’s a more effective approach for navigating California’s extensive basketball options:

Step 1: Define Your Current Reality

What specific skill or situation are you addressing? “Get better at basketball” is too vague. “Improve ball-handling for varsity tryouts in November” or “develop shooting consistency from outside” gives you something concrete to evaluate. California’s training options can address almost any specific need — but only if you’re clear about what that need is.

Step 2: Understand Your Constraints

What’s your realistic budget? How much time can your family commit? California training options range from $50/session to $5,000+ annually for elite AAU teams. The “best” option you can’t afford or sustain isn’t actually best for your family. Be honest about your constraints before you start searching, especially given California’s travel requirements for higher-level competition.

Step 3: Start Local, Expand If Needed

Begin by exploring options in your immediate area. Talk to current families. Watch a practice or training session if possible. California’s concentration of basketball talent means you don’t necessarily need to drive across LA or the Bay Area to find quality training. If local options don’t fit after genuine evaluation, then consider expanding your search radius.

California Basketball Training Gauntlet Infographic

High School Basketball Rankings & Competitive Context

Rankings Are Reference Points, Not Ceilings

These rankings help understand the competitive landscape in California — they don’t define where your child should aim. A player from an unranked school can still reach college basketball. A playground game and a cold call got me to college basketball… don’t chase ranked high schools.  These are snapshots of current competitive standing, not predictions of individual potential or future success.

California Boys Basketball Top 10 (2025-26)

Source: High School On SI / Yahoo Sports — Updated January 20, 2026

RankSchoolCityRecord
1Sierra CanyonChatsworth18-1
2Harvard-WestlakeStudio City20-2
3Santa Margarita CatholicRancho Santa Margarita20-3
4Notre DameSherman Oaks15-6
5St. JosephSanta Maria13-2
6Archbishop RiordanSan Francisco10-1
7St. John BoscoBellflower15-5
8Salesian College PrepRichmond15-2
9CentennialCorona18-5
10Other ranked programsVarious—

California Girls Basketball Top 10 (2025-26)

Source: High School On SI — Updated January 20, 2026

RankSchoolCityNotes
1Ontario ChristianOntarioNational contender
2Archbishop MittySan JoseStrong Bay Area program
3Sierra CanyonChatsworthElite SoCal program
4EtiwandaEtiwandaInland Empire power
5JSerraSan Juan CapistranoTrinity League
6Sage HillNewport CoastRising OC program
7Mission HillsSan MarcosSan Diego Section
8San Ramon ValleyDanvilleNorCal competitive
9Clovis WestClovisCentral Valley
10Francis ParkerSan DiegoTop San Diego program

For complete rankings and regular updates, visit High School On SI California Basketball Rankings.

Callifornia High School Coaching Greats Chart

California College Basketball Programs: Your Development Pathway

College Basketball is One Possible Outcome

College basketball is one possible outcome of youth development — not an expectation. Understanding California’s college landscape helps families set realistic timelines and goals without creating pressure. Players reach college basketball through many different paths, and California’s 25+ D1 programs represent just one level of opportunity. My oldest daughter is finishing her senior season at Macalester College in Minneapolis at this time and my youngest is going to play at Kenyon College in Ohio.   I am really proud of them… but this was their joy and path, not mine.  Many talented players I have trained chose to go to University of Texas rather than pursue high academic D3 basketball.

California has one of the richest college basketball ecosystems in the nation: 25+ NCAA Division I programs, numerous Division II and III schools, NAIA options, and 100+ community college programs through the California Community College Athletic Association (CCCAA). This creates pathways for players at every competitive level.

Understanding Division Levels

NCAA Division I: Highest competition level, most scholarships (13 for men, 15 for women), largest athletic budgets. California’s D1 programs include major programs like UCLA, USC, Stanford and UC Berkeley.

NCAA Division II & III: Strong academic focus, competitive basketball, smaller rosters. D3 offers no athletic scholarships but merit aid. Great options for student-athletes prioritizing education alongside basketball.

NAIA & JUCO: NAIA offers scholarships and immediate playing time. I had the good fortune of playing at University of Maine at Fort Kent… an NAIA school back then.  I continued my education at University of Southern Maine and UCLA and I can tell you my NAIA school classroom wast the most valuable.  So beware rankings and look for fit.  California’s community colleges provide affordable development pathways and transfer opportunities to four-year programs.

 

California NCAA Division 1 Basketball Programs

SchoolDivisionMen's BasketballWomen's BasketballMen's Recruit FormWomen's Recruit Form
Cal Poly SLONCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
Cal State BakersfieldNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
Cal State FullertonNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
CSUN (Northridge)NCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
California BaptistNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
Fresno StateNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
Long Beach StateNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
Loyola MarymountNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
PepperdineNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
Sacramento StateNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
Saint Mary'sNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
San Diego StateNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
San Jose StateNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
Santa ClaraNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
StanfordNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
UC BerkeleyNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
UC DavisNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
UC IrvineNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
UC RiversideNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
UC San DiegoNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
UC Santa BarbaraNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
UCLANCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
University of San DiegoNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
University of San FranciscoNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
University of the PacificNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm
USCNCAA D1LinkLinkFormForm

California NCAA Division 2 Basketball Colleges

SchoolDivisionMen's BasketballWomen's BasketballMen's Recruit FormWomen's Recruit Form
Academy of ArtNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Azusa PacificNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Biola UniversityNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Cal Poly HumboldtNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Cal Poly PomonaNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Cal State Dominguez HillsNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Cal State East BayNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Cal State LANCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Cal State Monterey BayNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Cal State San BernardinoNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Cal State San MarcosNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Chico StateNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Concordia IrvineNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Dominican University CANCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Fresno PacificNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Jessup UniversityNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Menlo CollegeNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Point LomaNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
San Francisco StateNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Sonoma StateNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Stanislaus StateNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
UC MercedNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Vanguard UniversityNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
Westmont CollegeNCAA D2LinkLinkFormForm
California NCAA Division 2 Basketball Colleges with links to the team pages for men and women .

NCAA Division 3 Basketball Colleges

SchoolDivisionMen's BasketballWomen's BasketballMen's Recruit FormWomen's Recruit Form
Cal LutheranNCAA D3LinkLinkFormForm
CaltechNCAA D3LinkLinkFormForm
Chapman UniversityNCAA D3LinkLinkFormForm
Claremont-Mudd-ScrippsNCAA D3LinkLinkFormForm
Occidental CollegeNCAA D3LinkLinkFormForm
Pomona-PitzerNCAA D3LinkLinkFormForm
UC Santa CruzNCAA D3LinkLinkFormForm
University of La VerneNCAA D3LinkLinkFormForm
University of RedlandsNCAA D3LinkLinkN/AN/A
Whittier CollegeNCAA D3LinkLinkFormForm

California NAIA Basketball Colleges

SchoolDivisionMen's BasketballWomen's BasketballMen's Recruit FormWomen's Recruit Form
Cal MaritimeNAIALinkLinkFormForm
Hope InternationalNAIALinkLinkFormForm
La Sierra UniversityNAIALinkLinkFormForm
Life Pacific UniversityNAIALinkLinkFormForm
Pacific Union CollegeNAIALinkLinkFormForm
San Diego ChristianNAIALinkLinkN/AN/A
Simpson UniversityNAIALinkLinkFormForm
The Master's UniversityNAIALinkLinkFormForm
University of Antelope ValleyNAIALinkLinkN/AN/A
Westcliff UniversityNAIALinkLinkFormForm

California JUCO College Basketball Programs A-Z

SchoolDivisionMen's BasketballWomen's BasketballMen's Recruit FormWomen's Recruit Form
Allan Hancock College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
American River College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Antelope Valley College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Bakersfield College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Butte College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Cabrillo College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Cerritos College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Chaffey College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Citrus College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
College of the Canyons3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
College of the Sequoias3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Cypress College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Diablo Valley College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
East Los Angeles College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Fullerton College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Glendale Community College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
SchoolDivisionMen's BasketballWomen's BasketballMen's Recruit FormWomen's Recruit Form
Hartnell College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Imperial Valley College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Irvine Valley College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Lake Tahoe CC3C2ALinkLinkN/AN/A
Laney College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Las Positas College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Lassen College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Long Beach City College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Los Angeles City College3C2ALinkLinkN/AN/A
Los Angeles Harbor3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Los Angeles Pierce3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Los Angeles Southwest3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Los Angeles Trade-Tech3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Los Angeles Valley3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
MiraCosta College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Modesto Junior College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Moorpark College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Mt. San Antonio (Mt. SAC)3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Orange Coast College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Pasadena City College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
SchoolDivisionMen's BasketballWomen's BasketballMen's Recruit FormWomen's Recruit Form
Reedley College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Rio Hondo College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Riverside City College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Saddleback College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
San Bernardino Valley3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
San Diego City College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
San Diego Mesa3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
San Diego Miramar3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
San Joaquin Delta3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Santa Ana College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Santa Barbara City3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Santa Monica College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Santa Rosa Junior College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Shasta College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Sierra College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Skyline College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Southwestern College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Taft College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Ventura College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
West Hills Lemoore3C2ALinkLinkFormForm
Yuba College3C2ALinkLinkFormForm

Download Our Free Basketball Training Guides

Get comprehensive evaluation frameworks for choosing trainers, camps, and teams in California’s competitive basketball landscape. Learn what questions to ask, what red flags to avoid, and how to determine genuine fit.

Download Free Guide

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