New York Basketball Training – Trainers, Teams, Camps (New York State Page)
New York offers hundreds of basketball trainers, camps, and select teams — from the legendary courts of NYC to programs across Buffalo, Rochester, and Syracuse. That’s a lot of options, but not all answers. This directory provides context to help families ask better questions, not prescriptive rankings.
Before choosing any program, read our free guide:
Why This New York Basketball Training Directory Exists
New York basketball training is unlike any other state’s market. If you’re in New York City, the noise is overwhelming — every trainer claims EYBL connections, every AAU program promises college exposure, and the intensity starts younger here than almost anywhere in the country. If you’re in Buffalo, Rochester, or Syracuse, the market is more manageable but still has enough options to cause confusion.
This directory doesn’t rank trainers or crown “the best” program. New York’s basketball ecosystem is too diverse — a program that’s right for a 10-year-old in Queens who wants to have fun is completely different from what a 16-year-old in Westchester needs to get on a MAAC roster. What works on Long Island doesn’t necessarily translate to Western New York, and vice versa.
What we provide: an honest map of the landscape — when programs run, what they actually offer, what questions separate real development from marketing, and how to understand the competitive context without creating unnecessary pressure. Learn how BasketballTrainer.com works or read our editorial standards.
A Note About New York’s Intensity
New York — especially New York City — can make basketball feel like an emergency. The pressure is real: players are evaluated young, exposure circuits start at 12U, and EYBL access feels like it’s all that matters. We want to gently push back on that. The vast majority of players developing in New York won’t touch the EYBL circuit, and that’s completely fine. Understanding what you actually need — versus what the market says you need — is the most important skill a family can develop here.
New York Basketball Season Calendar: When Everything Actually Happens
This calendar exists to help you plan thoughtfully — not create panic about deadlines. Understanding when different programs run helps families make deliberate decisions rather than reacting to last-minute pressure from coaches and recruiters.
High School Season (NYSPHSAA / CHSAA / PSAL)
- Mid-November: First practice allowed by NYSPHSAA (typically around November 18)
- Late November – December: First games begin; regular season runs through February
- January – February: Core regular season; Section competition heats up
- February – early March: Section (regional) tournaments across all 11 sections; CHSAA Archdiocesan Tournament in NYC
- Mid-March: Far West Regionals for Classes AA and A
- March 20–23, 2026: NYSPHSAA State Championships — Boys at Visions FCU Arena, Binghamton; Girls at Hudson Valley Community College, Troy
- Note: NYC Catholic schools (CHSAA) and public schools (PSAL) run parallel to NYSPHSAA and can participate in the Federation Tournament alongside public school champions
AAU/Select Basketball Season
Here’s what surprises many New York families: AAU tryouts — especially in the NYC metro — often start in late January and February while the high school season is still happening. Major programs like NY Rens and NY Gauchos set rosters early because they’re competing on national circuits. The pressure to “decide now” is real but often manufactured.
- January – March: Tryouts begin (yes, during school season); top programs fill fast but rosters aren’t locked
- March – April: Season launches as high school season ends; spring tournament circuits begin
- April – June: Hoop Group circuit, spring showcases; college coaches active
- June – August: Peak summer season — NY Rens on Nike EYBL; travel to Dallas, Las Vegas, Indianapolis, and Orlando for national tournaments
- August: Season winds down; fall training begins
- NYC metro circuits: NY Gauchos, NY Rens (EYBL), Pro Skills Basketball NYC, Extreme Hoops (Westchester)
- Long Island circuits: LI Select, Nassau Pride, various club programs
- Upstate circuits: Regional AAU associations in Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse areas
Basketball Camps
- May – June: Early summer camps begin; university camps open registration
- June – July: Peak camp season across New York
- Syracuse University Basketball Camp (JMA Wireless Dome — one of the largest on-campus arenas in the country)
- St. John’s University Basketball Camp (Queens)
- University at Albany Basketball Camp
- Fordham University Basketball Camp (Bronx)
- Hofstra University Basketball Camp (Long Island)
- Private trainer camps throughout NYC metro, Westchester, Long Island
- Breakthrough Basketball runs camps in upstate markets
- August: Final summer opportunities before fall training season begins
Year-Round Training
- September – November: Fall skill development — private trainers are busiest preparing players for November school tryouts; NYC trainers often booked weeks out
- November – March: The overlap season — school games, AAU tryouts, and camps all happening. NYC families feel this pressure acutely. Upstate families have more breathing room.
- Anytime: NYC metro and Long Island have year-round indoor training access; upstate NY has reliable access in major cities (Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, Albany)
Planning Timeline, Not Pressure Timeline
This calendar shows when programs typically run in New York — not deadlines you must meet. Some families train year-round and compete on EYBL circuits. Others focus only on school season. Some skip AAU entirely and thrive. The goal is understanding what exists and when, so you can make choices that fit your family’s actual goals, budget, and capacity — not what the market tells you those should be.
The New York Reality: Where you live in New York dramatically changes your experience. In NYC, the density of programs is extraordinary — you can access elite trainers, national-circuit AAU teams, and multiple D1 college games all within a few miles. The challenge isn’t finding options; it’s filtering through the noise and hype. In upstate New York — Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, Albany — the market is more manageable but still competitive, and families need to plan for some regional travel for top-level AAU competition. In rural areas of the state, you may be driving to hub cities for quality programs. That’s not a disadvantage; that’s New York geography. Plan accordingly.
Official NYSPHSAA Resources: NYSPHSAA Boys Basketball | NYSPHSAA Girls Basketball | NYSPHSAA Official Site
New York Basketball Training: Understanding Your Options
None of these program types is inherently better than the others. They’re different tools for different needs at different stages of development.
Private Basketball Trainers
One-on-one or small group skill development. NYC metro has an extraordinary concentration of experienced trainers, including many former D1 players and coaches. Upstate markets have quality options but fewer choices.
Best For:
Players with specific weaknesses to address; pre-tryout preparation; year-round skill development without team commitments.
What to Know:
NYC trainer rates run $100–$200+/hour. Upstate typically $60–$100/hour. Some NYC trainers with big social media followings charge a premium that may not reflect results. Ask for parent references, not highlight reels.
Basketball Camps
Day and overnight camps run in concentrated blocks. New York’s college programs — Syracuse, St. John’s, Hofstra, Albany, Fordham — run quality summer camps. NYC-area private camps range from fundamental development to elite invitation-only showcases.
Best For:
Younger players learning fundamentals; immersive skill blocks in summer; players interested in experiencing a college program environment.
What to Know:
NYC-area “elite” camps vary widely in quality. A camp at a major university (Syracuse, Fordham) offers structured development. A trainer’s branded “showcase camp” may be more marketing than development. Ask what a typical day looks like.
Select & AAU Teams
Club teams outside the school system that compete in spring and summer circuits. New York’s AAU ecosystem ranges from the top of the national mountain (NY Rens on Nike EYBL) to local recreational circuits. Most families land somewhere in the middle.
Best For:
Players who want competitive experience against quality opponents; high school players seeking college exposure; players who need more reps than school season provides.
What to Know:
NYC AAU can cost $3,000–$8,000+/season all-in when travel, gear, and fees are included. The top EYBL programs (NY Rens) are by invitation only. Most players need a circuit that matches their actual level — not the highest-profile circuit they can find.
New York High School Basketball Rankings
What New York Rankings Actually Show
New York’s rankings are uniquely complicated because CHSAA (Catholic/private), PSAL (NYC public), and NYSPHSAA (statewide public) programs don’t directly compete in unified brackets. A school ranked #1 in NYSSWA may never play the PSAL champion in a bracket format. Long Island Lutheran frequently plays a national schedule that ranks them among the best programs in the country — they may not appear on NYSSWA charts at all. These rankings capture a competitive snapshot for each system, not a unified state hierarchy. They’re reference points for understanding the landscape, not a ceiling for what any individual player can achieve.
Source: New York State Sportswriters Association (NYSSWA) — 2024–25 Final Season Rankings
Boys Basketball — Class AAA Top 10
| # | School | League | Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Archbishop Stepinac | CHSAA (White Plains) | 26-4 |
| 2 | Thomas Jefferson | PSAL (Brooklyn) | 30-2 |
| 3 | Eagle Academy | PSAL | 25-7 |
| 4 | St. Raymond | CHSAA (Bronx) | 17-13 |
| 5 | St. Francis Prep | CHSAA (Fresh Meadows) | 23-5 |
| 6 | Thurgood Marshall | PSAL | 24-5 |
| 7 | Christ the King | CHSAA (Queens) | 16-13 |
| 8 | Canarsie | PSAL (Brooklyn) | 16-11 |
| 9 | Iona Prep | CHSAA (New Rochelle) | 18-10 |
| 10 | Eagle Academy II | PSAL | 20-7 |
Note: Long Island Lutheran competes in AIS/independent system and is regularly ranked among the top programs nationally (2025-26 preseason #1 in NY); they are not included in NYSSWA’s primary brackets.
Girls Basketball — Class AAA Top 10
| # | School | League | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Christ the King | CHSAA | Queens |
| 2 | Our Lady of Lourdes | Section 9 | Poughkeepsie area |
| 3 | Manhasset St. Mary’s | CHSAA | Long Island |
| 4 | South Shore | PSAL | Brooklyn |
| 5 | Walt Whitman | Section 11 | South Huntington (LI) |
| 6 | Xaverian | CHSAA | Brooklyn |
| 7 | Liverpool | Section 3 | Liverpool (Syracuse area) |
| 8 | Albertus Magnus | Section 1 | Bardonia (Rockland) |
| 9 | Colonie | Section 2 | Capital Region |
| 10 | Brentwood | Section 11 | Long Island |
Early-season 2024-25 NYSSWA girls rankings; Long Island Lutheran girls program also nationally competitive.
A note about New York’s rankings complexity: The state has four major governance structures — NYSPHSAA (public, statewide), PSAL (NYC public schools), CHSAA (NYC Catholic schools), and AIS (private/independent schools like Long Island Lutheran). Each runs its own championship brackets. The Federation Tournament allows champions from different brackets to compete, but most seasons the systems operate in parallel. Understanding which bracket a school competes in matters when you’re evaluating the competitive context of a given program or player’s achievement.
New York College Basketball Programs
College Basketball Is One Possible Outcome
New York has 22 NCAA Division I programs — more than most states — plus dozens of D2, D3, NAIA, and NJCAA programs. That range means the path to playing college basketball in New York is real at multiple levels. But the goal of training should be development, not just reaching a specific destination. Understanding the landscape helps families set realistic timelines and goals without creating pressure that short-circuits the joy of the game.
NCAA Division I Programs
| School | City | Conference | Men’s Basketball | Women’s Basketball |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Syracuse University | Syracuse | ACC | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| St. John’s University | Queens | Big East | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Fordham University | Bronx | Atlantic 10 | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Columbia University | Manhattan | Ivy League | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Manhattan College | Bronx | MAAC | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Wagner College | Staten Island | NEC | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| LIU | Brooklyn | NEC | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| St. Francis College | Brooklyn | NEC | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Hofstra University | Hempstead | CAA | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Stony Brook University | Stony Brook | America East | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Iona University | New Rochelle | MAAC | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Marist College | Poughkeepsie | MAAC | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| University at Albany | Albany | America East | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Siena College | Loudonville | MAAC | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Cornell University | Ithaca | Ivy League | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Colgate University | Hamilton | Patriot League | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Binghamton University | Vestal | America East | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| University at Buffalo | Buffalo | MAC | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Canisius College | Buffalo | MAAC | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Niagara University | Lewiston | MAAC | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| St. Bonaventure University | St. Bonaventure | Atlantic 10 | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
| Army / West Point | West Point | Patriot League | Men’s Hoops | Women’s Hoops |
Other College Levels
NCAA Division II
Adelphi University (Garden City), Mercy University (Dobbs Ferry), NYIT (Old Westbury), Queens College CUNY (Flushing), Roberts Wesleyan (Rochester), Dominican University NY (Orangeburg)
NCAA Division III
NYU (Manhattan), Hamilton College (Clinton), Vassar College (Poughkeepsie), RPI (Troy), Union College (Schenectady), Clarkson University (Potsdam), Hobart College (Geneva), St. John Fisher (Rochester)
NJCAA / Community Colleges
Nassau Community College (Garden City), Monroe Community College (Rochester), Onondaga CC (Syracuse), Hudson Valley CC (Troy), Suffolk County CC, Dutchess CC (Poughkeepsie), multiple CUNY schools across NYC
Understanding the Division Landscape
D1 gets the attention but provides the fewest roster spots. New York’s D2, D3, NJCAA, and community college programs offer real competitive basketball with more accessible paths for most players. A player who dominates at Monroe Community College (Rochester) can still transfer to a D1 program. The CUNY schools across NYC provide affordable four-year programs with competitive basketball. The NJCAA community college route is often overlooked but creates genuine opportunities that jump-starting careers and opening D1/D2 doors afterward.
How to Evaluate New York Basketball Training Programs
We don’t tell you which programs to choose. We help you know what to ask — and the questions that matter in New York’s market are different from what matters in other states.
Questions for Private Trainers
- In NYC’s market, trainers often market their NBA/D1 connections. Ask: who are two players you’ve trained who are now playing college basketball, and can I speak to their families?
- What does your typical session look like at my child’s skill level — fundamentals, game-speed reps, or film review?
- How do you track progress over time? What’s the feedback loop with the player?
- What’s your cancellation policy, and how full is your schedule? A trainer with 60+ clients often can’t give the attention they’re promising.
Questions for AAU/Select Teams
- In New York’s market, many teams promise EYBL-level exposure when they run local circuits. Ask: which specific tournaments do you attend in 2025, and list the college coaches who attended those events last year?
- NYC AAU all-in costs vary from $1,500 to $8,000+. What is the total all-in cost — fees, gear, travel, hotels — for the full season?
- What is the practice structure? A team that only plays games without structured practices is not a development program — it’s a tournament team.
- How many players from this team in the last three years received college scholarships at any level — D1, D2, D3, or NJCAA?
Questions for Camps
- NYC has many branded “elite exposure camps” targeting young families. Ask: is this a skills development camp or a showcase? Those are different things with different value for different ages.
- What is the camper-to-coach ratio? Anything over 12:1 limits individual instruction significantly.
- For college-run camps (Syracuse, St. John’s, Hofstra): is the head coach involved, or is this run entirely by grad assistants?
- What does a typical day’s schedule look like — time breakdowns between instruction, drills, and games?
New York-Specific Red Flags
- 🚩 EYBL promises for young players: The NY Rens EYBL program is real and elite. But many NYC programs claim “EYBL-level” connections for players 12 and under — that’s a marketing term, not a program level.
- 🚩 Instagram-driven training decisions: NYC produces the most social media basketball content in the country. A trainer with 100K followers is not inherently better than a trainer with 500. Ask for parent references, not follower counts.
- 🚩 Transfer pressure to “elite” high schools: NYC families are often told their child must transfer to Stepinac, Christ the King, or Long Island Lutheran to be recruited. Most college coaches recruit players — not just schools. Evaluate this claim carefully before uprooting your family.
- 🚩 Multi-year commitment demands: Any program asking for a multi-year, non-refundable commitment upfront deserves significant scrutiny, especially in a market as fluid as NYC’s.
New York Training Costs: What to Expect
A note on NYC pricing: The NYC basketball market is expensive — this is just reality. When evaluating cost, the question isn’t whether a program is affordable (many aren’t), but whether the expected return on investment matches what you’re actually paying for. A $2,000 private trainer package that produces measurable skill improvement is worth considering. A $5,000 AAU team that plays 8 tournaments against overmatched competition is not, regardless of the name on the jersey.
New York Basketball Training by City & Region
New York’s basketball markets couldn’t be more different from one another. What’s true for a player in Brooklyn has almost nothing to do with what’s true for a player in Buffalo. Understanding your regional context matters before evaluating any statewide claims.
New York City Metro Region
Brooklyn
Pop. 2,679,620
The heartland of NYC basketball history. Coney Island produced Stephon Marbury (Abraham Lincoln HS). Thomas Jefferson HS (PSAL) finished 30-2 in 2024-25 and ranks #2 in the state. Canarsie consistently ranks among the PSAL’s best. Brooklyn basketball training options →
The Bronx
Pop. 1,297,660
Home to Fordham University (D1, Atlantic 10) and Manhattan College (D1, MAAC). Tiny Archibald (DeWitt Clinton HS) and Rod Strickland (Truman HS) both came from the Bronx. St. Raymond consistently ranked among the state’s elite boys programs. Bronx basketball training →
Queens
Pop. 2,177,805
Home to St. John’s University (D1, Big East) and Archbishop Molloy HS (Kenny Anderson, Kenny Smith, Kemba Walker alumni). Christ the King Regional consistently ranked among the nation’s elite programs — Lamar Odom and Kiyan Anthony both played here. Queens basketball training →
Manhattan
Pop. 1,694,263
Rucker Park in Harlem remains the most legendary outdoor basketball venue in the world. Columbia University (D1, Ivy League) is located here. The densest concentration of private trainers in the state — and some of the most expensive. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar attended Power Memorial in Manhattan. Manhattan basketball training →
Staten Island
Pop. 492,925
Home to Wagner College (D1, NEC). St. Peter’s Boys HS regularly competes in CHSAA basketball. The borough often serves as a quieter entry point to NYC’s basketball ecosystem for families seeking less intensity than the other four boroughs. Staten Island basketball training →
Suburban NYC / Long Island
Long Island (Nassau / Suffolk)
Combined ~2.8M
Long Island Lutheran (Glen Head) is regularly a top-5 national program, competing at the Jordan Brand Classic and City of Palms. Hofstra University (Hempstead, D1 CAA) and Stony Brook University (D1 America East) provide D1 options. Nassau CC and Suffolk CC provide NJCAA pathways. Section VIII (Nassau) and Section XI (Suffolk) run separate brackets. Long Island basketball training →
Yonkers / Westchester
~1M combined
Archbishop Stepinac (White Plains) finished 26-4 and ranked #1 in New York for 2024-25. Iona University (New Rochelle, D1 MAAC) and Iona Prep give this region both prep and college options. Extreme Hoops runs one of the state’s stronger AAU programs for Westchester, Putnam, and Dutchess County. Westchester basketball training →
Capital Region
Albany
Pop. ~101,000
University at Albany (D1, America East) and Siena College (D1, MAAC in nearby Loudonville) give the Capital Region two D1 options. Green Tech Charter School regularly ranks among the state’s top programs. Christian Brothers Academy and Albany Academy are strong private school options in Section II. Hudson Valley CC (Troy) provides NJCAA opportunities. Albany basketball training →
Central New York
Syracuse
Pop. ~145,000
Home to Syracuse University (ACC, plays in the JMA Wireless Dome — largest on-campus arena in NCAA at 35,000+ capacity). Carmelo Anthony won the 2003 national championship here as a freshman. Liverpool and Cicero-North Syracuse consistently rank among Section III’s best programs. Onondaga CC provides a local NJCAA pathway. Syracuse basketball training →
Binghamton
Pop. ~45,000
Binghamton University (D1, America East) anchors the Southern Tier’s college options. Visions Veterans Memorial Arena hosts the NYSPHSAA Boys State Championships through 2027, making it New York’s premier high school basketball destination each March. Section IV competition based here. Binghamton basketball training →
Western New York
Buffalo
Pop. ~280,000
University at Buffalo (D1, MAC Conference) and Canisius College (D1, MAAC) give Western NY two D1 programs. The Monsignor Martin Athletic Association governs Catholic school basketball here. Hall of Famer Bob Lanier is from Buffalo. Section VI competition; Niagara University (D1 MAAC) is 20 minutes away in Lewiston. Buffalo basketball training →
Rochester
Pop. ~210,000
Section V basketball hub with strong programs at McQuaid Jesuit, Rush-Henrietta (consistently ranked statewide), and Aquinas Institute. Monroe Community College provides an NJCAA pathway. St. Bonaventure University (D1, Atlantic 10) is two hours away in Allegany — a realistic commute for visits. Strong regional AAU infrastructure. Rochester basketball training →
Getting Started with New York Basketball Training
Know Your Market
Before evaluating any program, understand which region of New York you’re in. An NYC family and an Albany family face entirely different market dynamics, costs, and program availability. A program that’s “elite” in one context may be overpriced relative to what’s available locally in another.
Match Level to Program
New York has programs at every competitive level — from recreational AAU to the national EYBL circuit. One of the most common mistakes in New York’s basketball culture is placing players in programs beyond their current level. Good development happens in the right environment, not just the most expensive or prestigious one.
Use Our Evaluation Tools
We’ve developed free evaluation guides for trainers, camps, and AAU teams — built around the questions that actually separate good programs from good marketing. Download them before making any financial commitment to a program.
Ready to Evaluate New York Basketball Programs?
Our free trainer evaluation guide helps New York families ask the right questions before committing to any program — in NYC or anywhere in the state.




