Mississippi Basketball Training – Trainers, Teams, & Camps
Mississippi offers dozens of basketball trainers, camps, and select teams from the Gulf Coast to the DeSoto County suburbs. That’s a lot of options — but not all answers. This page provides context, not direction — helping families ask better questions rather than rushing decisions.
Not sure where to start?
Why This Mississippi Basketball Training Directory Exists
Mississippi basketball training options vary dramatically depending on where you live. If you’re in the Jackson metro area or along the Gulf Coast, you’ll find trainers, AAU programs, and camps within a short drive. If you’re in the Delta or rural northeast Mississippi, your options look very different — and that’s not a failure, that’s geography. This directory exists to help every Mississippi family understand what’s available, what questions to ask, and how to evaluate the options that fit their situation.
We don’t rank programs. We don’t tell you which trainer is “the best.” Instead, we provide the context you need — from MHSAA season dates to college program landscapes — so you can make decisions that align with your family’s goals, budget, and schedule. Whether your child is just starting or preparing for college-level play, the right next step depends on your specific circumstances, not someone else’s recommendation.
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Our Approach: 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 family might not fit another’s goals, budget, or learning style.
Mississippi 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 Mississippi families make decisions that fit their schedule rather than reacting to last-minute pressure.
High School Season (MHSAA)
- October 20: First practice allowed by MHSAA
- November 1: Scrimmages begin
- November 4: First games of the season
- November–February: Regular season — your school team’s primary focus (28-game max)
- Early February: Region tournaments across Mississippi’s 7 classifications (1A through 7A)
- February 9–28: State playoff rounds — higher seeds host through quarterfinals
- March 2–7: State Championships at the Mississippi Coliseum in Jackson
MAIS (Private School) Season
The Midsouth Association of Independent Schools (MAIS) runs on a similar schedule to MHSAA. With programs like Madison-Ridgeland Academy and Jackson Academy competing at an increasingly high level, private school basketball in Mississippi has become a significant part of the state’s competitive landscape.
AAU/Select Basketball Season
Here’s what surprises many Mississippi 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–July: Peak summer tournaments — teams often travel to Memphis, Atlanta, Birmingham, and Orlando
- August: Season winds down
Basketball Camps
- May–June: Early summer camps start
- June–July: Peak camp season across Mississippi
- MHSAA June Scholastic Basketball Events (showcase format)
- Ole Miss Basketball Camps in Oxford
- Mississippi State Basketball Camps in Starkville
- Southern Miss Camps in Hattiesburg
- Private trainer camps throughout Jackson metro and Gulf Coast
- Late July–August: Final summer opportunities before fall training begins
Year-Round Training
- September–October: Fall skill development season — private trainers are busiest preparing players for school tryouts in late October
- March–July: The overlap season — AAU practices, tournaments, and camps all happening simultaneously. This is when families feel stretched.
- Anytime: Private training is available year-round in Jackson, the Gulf Coast, and Tupelo
Planning Timeline, Not Pressure Timeline
This calendar shows when programs typically run in Mississippi — 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.
The Mississippi Reality: If you’re in the Jackson metro, DeSoto County, or along the Gulf Coast, you’ll have access to most of these options within a reasonable drive. If you’re in the Delta, rural northeast, or central Mississippi, you’ll likely be driving 45 minutes to two hours for AAU tournaments or attending camps in hub cities like Jackson, Hattiesburg, or Tupelo. That’s not a failure — that’s Mississippi geography. Plan accordingly, and don’t let the distance create false urgency about needing to do everything.
Types of Mississippi Basketball Training Programs
Three primary types of programs exist. None is inherently better — they’re tools for different needs at different stages.
Private Trainers
Best For:
Individual skill development, shooting mechanics, position-specific work, and personalized feedback. Good for players who need focused attention on specific areas of their game.
What to Know:
Quality varies significantly. A trainer’s playing background doesn’t guarantee teaching ability. Ask for references and watch a session before committing. In Mississippi, most private trainers are concentrated in Jackson, the Gulf Coast, and Tupelo — rural areas have far fewer options.
Basketball Camps
Best For:
Exposure to new coaching styles, group competition, and concentrated skill work over multiple days. Great for younger players developing love for the game and for exposure-level camps for older players.
What to Know:
College camps at Ole Miss, Mississippi State, and Southern Miss offer skill instruction and campus familiarity. The MHSAA June Scholastic Basketball Events provide a showcase format. Not all camps are created equal — ask about coach-to-player ratios and daily schedules. Download camp selection guide
AAU & Select Teams
Best For:
Competitive game experience beyond the school season, exposure to college coaches at tournaments, and playing against different competition. Important for players with college aspirations.
What to Know:
Mississippi’s AAU scene is concentrated in Jackson and the Gulf Coast. Costs include team fees plus significant travel to tournaments in Memphis, Atlanta, and beyond. Some programs emphasize development; others focus on winning. Ask about the coaching philosophy and tournament schedule upfront. Download AAU/select team evaluation guide
Mississippi High School Basketball Rankings
Mississippi’s seven MHSAA classifications (1A through 7A) plus the MAIS private school league create a complex competitive landscape. These rankings provide a snapshot of the current season — they don’t define where your child should aim or what’s possible.
What Rankings Tell You (and What They Don’t)
These rankings help understand the competitive landscape in Mississippi — they don’t define where your child should aim. A player from an unranked school can still reach college basketball. These are reference points, not ceilings. Canton won the 2025 5A boys title. Choctaw Central won the 4A girls title. Programs across every classification produce college-level talent.
Boys Basketball — Top 10 (2025-26)
Source: High School on SI — February 5, 2026
| # | School | City | Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Starkville | Starkville | 22-2 |
| 2 | Gulfport | Gulfport | 24-1 |
| 3 | West Union | West Union | 26-1 |
| 4 | Madison-Ridgeland Acad. | Madison | 29-2 |
| 5 | Columbus | Columbus | 20-5 |
| 6 | Lanier | Jackson | 21-4 |
| 7 | DeSoto Central | Southaven | 21-4 |
| 8 | Booneville | Booneville | 17-3 |
| 9 | West Harrison | Gulfport | 20-4 |
| 10 | Terry | Terry | 19-8 |
Girls Basketball — Top 10 (2025-26)
Source: MaxPreps — February 28, 2026
| # | School | City | Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Biloxi | Biloxi | 30-1 |
| 2 | Starkville | Starkville | 29-3 |
| 3 | Madison-Ridgeland Acad. | Madison | 36-5 |
| 4 | Tishomingo County | Iuka | 26-2 |
| 5 | Laurel | Laurel | 30-2 |
| 6 | Madison Central | Madison | 25-6 |
| 7 | Neshoba Central | Philadelphia | 25-6 |
| 8 | Simpson Academy | Mendenhall | 31-6 |
| 9 | Booneville | Booneville | 23-4 |
| 10 | Harrison Central | Gulfport | 26-5 |
Mississippi College Basketball Programs
Mississippi has 30+ college basketball programs across every level — from SEC powerhouses to JUCO community colleges. Understanding the full landscape helps families set realistic goals and timelines without creating unnecessary pressure.
College Basketball Is One Possible Outcome
College basketball is one possible outcome of youth development — not an expectation. Understanding the landscape helps families set realistic timelines and goals without creating pressure. Mississippi’s JUCO system (15 community colleges) provides an often-overlooked development pathway that has produced numerous D1 and professional players.
NCAA Division I Programs
| School | City | Conference | Men’s | Women’s |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ole Miss | Oxford | SEC | Men’s | Women’s |
| Mississippi State | Starkville | SEC | Men’s | Women’s |
| Southern Miss | Hattiesburg | Sun Belt | Men’s | Women’s |
| Jackson State | Jackson | SWAC | Men’s | Women’s |
| Alcorn State | Lorman | SWAC | Men’s | Women’s |
| MS Valley State | Itta Bena | SWAC | Men’s | Women’s |
NCAA Division II
Mississippi College — Clinton (Gulf South Conference)
Delta State University — Cleveland (Gulf South Conference)
NCAA Division III
Belhaven University — Jackson (Collegiate Conference of the South)
Millsaps College — Jackson (Southern Athletic Association)
Mississippi University for Women — Columbus (St. Louis Intercollegiate Athletic Conference)
NAIA
Blue Mountain Christian University — Blue Mountain
Rust College — Holly Springs
Tougaloo College — Tougaloo
William Carey University — Hattiesburg
NJCAA — Mississippi Community Colleges (MACCC)
Mississippi’s 15 community colleges compete in the MACCC (Region 23) and represent one of the state’s most important basketball development pathways. Programs like Jones College, Pearl River CC, and East Mississippi CC have produced D1 transfers and professional players.
Coahoma CC, Copiah-Lincoln CC, East Central CC, East Mississippi CC, Hinds CC, Holmes CC, Itawamba CC, Jones College, Meridian CC, Mississippi Delta CC, Mississippi Gulf Coast CC, Northeast Mississippi CC, Northwest Mississippi CC, Pearl River CC, Southwest Mississippi CC.
Understanding the Levels
D1 offers athletic scholarships and the highest level of competition. D2 balances athletics with academics and offers partial scholarships. D3 doesn’t offer athletic scholarships but provides strong academic environments. NAIA schools offer scholarships and are similar to D2/D3 in size. JUCO community colleges are two-year programs that serve as development bridges to four-year schools — Mississippi’s MACCC has historically been one of the most competitive JUCO conferences in the country.
How to Evaluate Mississippi Basketball Training Programs
We don’t tell you who to pick. We help you know what to ask. These questions are specific to the Mississippi basketball market — where the training landscape ranges from the competitive Jackson metro AAU scene to rural areas with limited options.
Questions to Ask Trainers
- In a state where many trainers are former college or high school players, ask: what formal training experience do you have working with youth players — not just playing experience?
- If training in Jackson, Hattiesburg, or the Coast where options are plentiful: what makes your approach different from the other trainers available in this area?
- If training in a rural area where this may be your only option: how do you supplement limited in-person access — do you offer video analysis or remote follow-up?
- What MHSAA or MAIS coaches have you worked alongside, and do they recommend your services?
Questions to Ask AAU/Select Programs
- Mississippi AAU costs vary significantly — get the all-in number including team fees, travel to tournaments in Memphis, Atlanta, and Birmingham, uniforms, and hotel costs before committing
- Which specific tournaments do you attend, and do college coaches actually attend those events? There’s a difference between local weekend tournaments and exposure-level events
- How does your program communicate with and support high school coaches? In Mississippi, where school coaches and AAU coaches sometimes have friction, this relationship matters
- How many of your former players have gone on to play at MACCC schools, D2, or D1 programs? Ask for specific names and schools
Red Flags to Watch For in Mississippi
- Programs that promise D1 exposure but only attend local or regional tournaments without verified college coach attendance
- AAU coaches who openly criticize MHSAA or MAIS school coaches — this creates divided loyalty that hurts your child
- Trainers who guarantee results or specific outcomes like “making varsity” or “getting a scholarship” — development doesn’t work that way
- Programs that discourage players from attending the MHSAA June Scholastic events or school team functions
- Any program that pressures you into immediate financial commitment without letting you watch a practice or talk to current families first
Mississippi Training Cost Ranges
Private training in Mississippi typically runs $40–$80 per session, with group rates lower. AAU team fees range from $300–$1,500+ per season depending on program level and travel schedule — and travel costs to out-of-state tournaments can easily double the team fee. Camps range from $100–$500 depending on duration and program. College camps at Ole Miss, Mississippi State, and Southern Miss tend to be at the higher end.
Want a complete framework for evaluating programs?
Mississippi Basketball Training by City
Mississippi basketball training access varies dramatically by location. The Jackson metro, Gulf Coast, and DeSoto County suburbs have the most options, while the Delta and rural areas require more travel planning. Here’s what the basketball landscape looks like across the state’s major cities.
Jackson
Pop. 146,000
Mississippi’s basketball epicenter. Home to Lanier (Monta Ellis’ alma mater), Jim Hill, Callaway, and Murrah. Jackson State University (SWAC D1) is coached by former NBA star Mo Williams. Jackson Academy leads the MAIS. Belhaven and Millsaps offer D3 basketball. The most AAU options in the state are concentrated here. Jackson basketball training →
Gulfport
Pop. 73,000
Gulf Coast basketball hub. Gulfport Admirals are a perennial boys powerhouse (24-1 this season). West Harrison and Harrison Central also rank statewide. Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf (NBA) is from Gulfport. Mississippi Gulf Coast CC provides a JUCO pathway. Strong youth basketball infrastructure along the Coast. Gulfport basketball training →
Southaven / DeSoto County
Pop. 56,000
Memphis suburb with strong 7A programs. DeSoto Central (21-4) leads the area. Center Hill, Lewisburg, and Olive Branch Conquistadors round out a competitive district. Families here also have access to Memphis-area training and AAU programs, which significantly expands options beyond what’s available in Mississippi alone.
Biloxi
Pop. 49,000
Coast basketball powerhouse. Biloxi Indians girls are #1 ranked in the state (30-1). The boys program competes in 7A. St. Martin, a neighboring school, has produced standout players. Coastal training options pair well with Gulfport-area programs for families in Harrison County.
Hattiesburg
Pop. 48,500
South Mississippi hub and home to the University of Southern Mississippi (Sun Belt D1) and William Carey University (NAIA). Southern Miss camps offer college-level exposure. Hattiesburg serves as the basketball center for the Pine Belt region, with Laurel (30-2 girls) and other programs nearby.
Tupelo
Pop. 38,000
Northeast Mississippi basketball center. Tupelo Golden Wave compete in 7A and are ranked #12 statewide. Itawamba CC provides a nearby JUCO option. Tupelo serves as the training hub for northeast Mississippi — families from Corinth, New Albany, and Booneville often travel here for additional training resources.
Meridian
Pop. 34,000
East Mississippi city with deep basketball tradition. Meridian Wildcats rank in the statewide top 25. NBA player Derrick McKey is from Meridian. Meridian Community College offers a JUCO pathway. The city anchors basketball access for the east-central part of the state.
Madison / Ridgeland
Pop. 28,000
Jackson suburb that’s become a basketball hotbed. Madison-Ridgeland Academy (MRA) is a dual-gender powerhouse — Erick Dampier Jr. and coach Richard Duease (second-winningest HS coach in America) lead the boys program. Germantown, Madison Central, and Ridgeland all rank statewide. This corridor offers some of Mississippi’s most competitive basketball at every level.
Starkville
Pop. 26,000
Home to Mississippi State University (SEC D1) and the #1 ranked Starkville Yellow Jackets boys team (22-2). The girls team is #2 statewide. Mississippi State camps provide D1-level exposure. Being a college town means year-round basketball culture and access to high-level training that smaller markets can’t match.
Oxford
Pop. 28,000
University of Mississippi (Ole Miss, SEC D1) anchors this college town. Ole Miss basketball camps provide SEC-level exposure and campus familiarity. Oxford High School competes in 6A. The university atmosphere creates training and development opportunities that extend beyond the typical small-city offerings.
Columbus
Pop. 22,000
East Mississippi city with the Columbus Falcons ranked #5 boys statewide (20-5). Mississippi University for Women (D3) is located here. East Mississippi CC in nearby Scooba is one of the most high-profile JUCO programs in the country, known from the Netflix series “Last Chance U.” Columbus serves as a basketball hub for the Golden Triangle region.
Booneville
Pop. 9,000
Small-town basketball excellence. Booneville Blue Devils won both the 2025 3A boys and girls state championships and rank top-10 statewide in both genders again this season. Northeast Mississippi CC is headquartered here. Proof that championship-level basketball isn’t exclusive to metro areas.
Getting Started with Mississippi Basketball Training
There’s no single right path. Here’s a thoughtful approach to navigating your options.
Understand Your Goals
Is this about skill development, making a school team, college preparation, or just having fun? Different goals lead to different programs. Be honest about where your child is today.
Research Your Local Options
Use this directory to understand what’s available in your area of Mississippi. Talk to your child’s school coach. Ask other families. Watch practices before committing money.
Ask Better Questions
Use our evaluation framework to ask the right questions. Don’t rush. The best decisions come from understanding, not urgency. Download our free evaluation guide for the complete framework.
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