Oklahoma Basketball Training – Trainers, Teams, & Camps
Oklahoma offers hundreds of basketball trainers, camps, and select teams across the OKC metro, Tulsa, and beyond. 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 Directory Exists
Oklahoma basketball training has grown rapidly, especially in the Oklahoma City and Tulsa metro areas. With the OKC Thunder bringing NBA-level basketball culture to the state and programs like Oklahoma Swarm, Pro Skills Basketball, and Team Griffin Academy building national reputations, families have more choices than ever — and more confusion about how to navigate them.
This page doesn’t rank trainers, camps, or programs. Instead, it provides a framework for understanding what’s available across Oklahoma — from the 4 NCAA Division I programs to the 11 junior colleges, from the OKC metro’s crowded AAU scene to the more limited options in rural western Oklahoma. The goal is to help your family make informed decisions based on your child’s goals, your budget, and your location.
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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 in Edmond might not fit another family’s goals, budget, or learning style in Lawton or Muskogee.
Oklahoma 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.
High School Season (OSSAA)
- October 1: First organized practice allowed by OSSAA
- November 1: Games begin for non-football schools and junior high
- November 20: Games begin for football schools — this staggered start is unique to Oklahoma
- December–January: Regular season plus five invitational tournament weeks
- February 12–28: District, regional, and area playoffs across all eight classifications (6A through B-II)
- March 3–14: State tournaments at Jim Norick Arena (OG&E Coliseum), Oklahoma City — smaller classes play first, 5A/6A finals close out mid-March
AAU/Select Basketball Season
Here’s what surprises many families: AAU tryouts often start in late January and February — while the high school season is still happening. Programs like Oklahoma Swarm in Edmond and Pro Skills in OKC begin forming rosters early because they want teams set before spring tournaments begin.
- January–March: Tryouts happening (yes, during school season)
- March–April: Season launches immediately after state tournaments end
- April–May: Spring tournament season — regional events across Oklahoma and north Texas
- June–July: Peak summer tournaments — top teams travel to Dallas, Las Vegas, and national events
- August: Season winds down, transition to fall training
Basketball Camps
- May–June: Early summer camps start
- June–July: Peak camp season across Oklahoma
- University of Oklahoma Basketball Camps in Norman
- Oklahoma State Basketball Camps in Stillwater
- Oral Roberts University camps in Tulsa
- University of Tulsa camps
- Private trainer camps throughout OKC and Tulsa metro areas
- Late July–August: Final summer opportunities before fall training begins
Year-Round Training
- August–September: Fall skill development season — private trainers are typically busiest preparing players for the October 1 practice start
- 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 OKC and Tulsa. Smaller cities like Lawton, Stillwater, and Enid have more limited but growing options.
Planning Timeline, Not Pressure Timeline
This calendar shows when programs typically run in Oklahoma — 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 Oklahoma Reality: If you’re in the OKC metro or Tulsa area, you’ll have access to most training options locally. If you’re in smaller communities like Enid, Lawton, Muskogee, or the Panhandle, you’ll be driving to access AAU tournaments and specialized training. That’s not a failure — that’s Oklahoma geography. The state’s population is heavily concentrated in two metros, and training infrastructure follows. Plan accordingly, and don’t let distance discourage your player’s development.
For official OSSAA season dates: OSSAA Basketball Page | OSSAA Official Site
Types of Basketball Training Programs in Oklahoma
None of these is inherently better than the others. They’re different tools for different needs, and many Oklahoma families use a combination.
Private Trainers
Best For: Individual skill development, position-specific work, players preparing for school tryouts, or those wanting focused attention on weaknesses.
What to Know: Oklahoma’s trainer market is most concentrated in the OKC and Tulsa metros. Rates vary widely — from $40/hour for newer trainers to $100+/hour for established names. Group sessions are more affordable. Ask about coaching credentials and whether they’ve trained players who went on to college programs.
Basketball Camps
Best For: Exposure to different coaching styles, making new basketball connections, structured multi-day skill development, and players exploring whether they want to pursue competitive basketball.
What to Know: Oklahoma’s four D1 programs all run summer camps, offering exposure to college-level coaching. Private camps from organizations like Pro Skills Basketball provide additional options. Day camps are more affordable; overnight camps at OU or OSU offer immersive experiences. Download our camp selection guide.
Select & AAU Teams
Best For: Competitive game experience outside of school season, college exposure, learning to compete against unfamiliar opponents, and players who want higher-level competition.
What to Know: Oklahoma’s AAU scene ranges from nationally competitive organizations like Oklahoma Swarm (9 national titles) and Legynds Basketball Club to local recreational travel teams. Costs vary from $500 for local-only teams to $3,000+ for programs traveling nationally. Be realistic about what level fits your player. Download our AAU/select team evaluation guide.
Oklahoma High School Basketball Rankings
Oklahoma uses eight classifications (6A through B-II) based on school enrollment, creating competitive balance across the state’s 482 member schools. Rankings shown are from the current 2025-26 season — the OSSAA playoff season is currently underway as of late February 2026.
What Rankings Actually Tell You
These rankings help understand the competitive landscape in Oklahoma — they don’t define where your child should aim. A player from an unranked school can still reach college basketball. Dale has won four consecutive 2A state titles, and Okarche completed an undefeated season in Class A — proof that elite programs exist at every classification level. Rankings are reference points, not ceilings.
Boys Basketball — 2025-26 Top 10 (All Classifications)
| # | School | City |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Union | Tulsa |
| 2 | Owasso | Owasso |
| 3 | Edmond North | Edmond |
| 4 | Dale | Dale |
| 5 | Douglass | Oklahoma City |
| 6 | Choctaw | Choctaw |
| 7 | Weatherford | Weatherford |
| 8 | Carl Albert | Midwest City |
| 9 | Crossings Christian | Oklahoma City |
| 10 | Deer Creek | Edmond |
Source: SI High School Power 25, 2025-26 season | View complete rankings
2025 Boys State Champions
6A: Owasso | 5A: Booker T. Washington | 4A: Douglass | 3A: Oklahoma Christian | 2A: Dale (4th straight) | A: Okarche (undefeated) | B: Calumet
Girls Basketball — 2025-26 Top 10 (All Classifications)
| # | School | City |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | El Reno | El Reno |
| 2 | Choctaw | Choctaw |
| 3 | Bethany | Bethany |
| 4 | Putnam City West | Oklahoma City |
| 5 | Edmond North | Edmond |
| 6 | Tahlequah | Tahlequah |
| 7 | Idabel | Idabel |
| 8 | Lincoln Christian | Tulsa |
| 9 | Edmond Memorial | Edmond |
| 10 | Dale | Dale |
Source: SI High School Power 25, 2025-26 season | View complete rankings
2025 Girls State Champions
6A: Putnam City West | 5A: Booker T. Washington | 2A: Oklahoma Bible Academy | A: Cyril | B: Hammon
For OSSAA’s official rankings system: OSSAARankings.com
College Basketball Programs in Oklahoma
Oklahoma offers 34 college basketball programs across four levels — from OU in the SEC and Oklahoma State in the Big 12 to 11 junior colleges spread across the state. Understanding all the options matters because most college basketball players don’t play Division I.
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. With 34 programs in Oklahoma alone, there are more opportunities than most families realize — especially at the D2, NAIA, and junior college levels.
NCAA Division I Programs
| School | City | Conference | Links |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of Oklahoma | Norman | SEC | Men’s | Women’s |
| Oklahoma State University | Stillwater | Big 12 | Men’s | Women’s |
| University of Tulsa | Tulsa | AAC | Men’s | Women’s |
| Oral Roberts University | Tulsa | Summit League | Men’s | Women’s |
NCAA Division II Programs
| School | City | Conference |
|---|---|---|
| Cameron University | Lawton | Lone Star Conference |
| University of Central Oklahoma | Edmond | MIAA |
| East Central University | Ada | Great American Conference |
| Northeastern State University | Tahlequah | MIAA |
| Northwestern Oklahoma State | Alva | GAC |
| Oklahoma Baptist University | Shawnee | GAC |
| Oklahoma Christian University | Edmond | Lone Star Conference |
| Rogers State University | Claremore | MIAA |
| Southeastern Oklahoma State | Durant | GAC |
| Southern Nazarene University | Bethany | GAC |
| Southwestern Oklahoma State | Weatherford | GAC |
NAIA Programs
| School | City | Conference |
|---|---|---|
| Bacone College | Muskogee | Sooner Athletic Conference |
| Langston University | Langston | Sooner Athletic Conference |
| Mid-America Christian University | Oklahoma City | Sooner Athletic Conference |
| Oklahoma City University | Oklahoma City | Sooner Athletic Conference |
| Oklahoma Panhandle State | Goodwell | Sooner Athletic Conference |
| USAO | Chickasha | Sooner Athletic Conference |
| Oklahoma Wesleyan University | Bartlesville | KCAC |
| Southwestern Christian University | Bethany | Sooner Athletic Conference |
NJCAA / Junior College Programs
Oklahoma’s 11 junior college basketball programs are some of the most overlooked development paths in the state. JUCOs offer two-year programs where players can develop skills, improve academics, and earn a scholarship to a four-year school. Programs like Connors State and Northeastern Oklahoma A&M have sent players to D1 programs.
| School | City |
|---|---|
| Carl Albert State College | Poteau |
| Connors State College | Warner |
| Eastern Oklahoma State College | Wilburton |
| Murray State College | Tishomingo |
| Northeastern Oklahoma A&M | Miami |
| Northern Oklahoma College – Enid | Enid |
| Northern Oklahoma College – Tonkawa | Tonkawa |
| Redlands Community College | El Reno |
| Rose State College | Midwest City |
| Seminole State College | Seminole |
| Western Oklahoma State College | Altus |
Understanding Division Levels
D1 offers the highest level of competition and the most athletic scholarships. D2 balances competitive athletics with academics and offers partial scholarships. NAIA schools are typically smaller private institutions that can offer athletic scholarships. Junior colleges provide a two-year development pathway — particularly valuable for players who need to improve academically or athletically before transferring to a four-year program.
Evaluating Oklahoma Basketball Training Programs
Oklahoma’s basketball training market varies significantly between the crowded OKC/Tulsa metros and the rest of the state. These questions and red flags are specific to what families actually encounter here.
Questions to Ask Trainers
- In a market where OKC and Tulsa trainers can charge $75–$100+ per hour, ask: what specific progress benchmarks do you track, and how do I know my kid is improving?
- If a trainer claims connections to OU, OSU, or Tulsa programs, ask: which specific college coaches have you placed players with in the past three years?
- For trainers working with rural Oklahoma families driving an hour or more, ask: do you offer video follow-up sessions or homework between in-person visits?
- What is your approach to players who also play football or other sports — do you accommodate the staggered November 20 basketball start for football players?
Questions for AAU/Select Programs
- Oklahoma Swarm advertises 130+ college placements and 9 national titles — but what level of team within the organization will your child actually play on? The top team’s results won’t be your kid’s experience.
- For programs that travel to Dallas, Kansas City, or Las Vegas: what is the all-in cost including tournament fees, travel, hotels, and meals? Many Oklahoma families are surprised when a “$1,200 season” becomes $3,000+ with travel.
- How do you handle the overlap between AAU tryouts (January–February) and the OSSAA high school playoff push? Do your coaches respect school-team commitments?
- Does the program offer local-only options for families who can’t travel? Some Oklahoma AAU programs have competitive and developmental tiers — ask which fits your player.
Red Flags in Oklahoma’s Market
- Guaranteed D1 exposure claims: Oklahoma has 4 D1 programs. Any program promising “D1 exposure” should name exactly which college coaches attend their events — and most can’t.
- “Next Trae Young” marketing: Trae Young came through Norman High School and the Legynds/Mokan Elite system. Using his name to sell your training program is a red flag, not a credential.
- Pressure to skip school ball: OSSAA school basketball remains the primary pathway for most Oklahoma players. Any trainer or AAU program that discourages school participation is prioritizing their business over your child.
- No local references: In Oklahoma’s tight-knit basketball community, legitimate programs can point to specific local high school coaches and families who vouch for them. If they can’t, ask why.
- Hidden travel costs: OKC-area programs that “only” play in Dallas tournaments don’t mention the 3-hour drives, hotel nights, and restaurant meals that add up fast for Oklahoma families.
Typical Oklahoma Training Costs
Want help evaluating specific programs?
Oklahoma Basketball Training by City
Oklahoma’s basketball infrastructure is concentrated in two metros — OKC and Tulsa — but meaningful programs exist across the state. Here’s what each major city offers.
Oklahoma City
Pop. 697,000
The state’s basketball epicenter, home to the OKC Thunder and the deepest training market in Oklahoma. Douglass High School carries one of the state’s proudest basketball traditions (2025 4A champs). Pro Skills Basketball, RSE Basketball, and Team Griffin Academy (Blake Griffin’s program) are all based here. The OKC metro also hosts the OSSAA state tournaments at Jim Norick Arena. Oklahoma City basketball training →
Tulsa
Pop. 414,000
Oklahoma’s second basketball hub with a rich tradition. Booker T. Washington (2025 5A champs) and Union are perennial 6A powers. John Starks is from Tulsa. Two D1 programs — University of Tulsa and Oral Roberts — offer local college exposure. Holland Hall, Edison Prep, and Victory Christian add private-school competition depth. Tulsa basketball training →
Norman
Pop. 130,000
Home of OU basketball and where Trae Young played at Norman North High School before becoming an NBA All-Star. Norman HS is a consistent 6A competitor. Being an OU town means access to university camps and a basketball culture shaped by SEC competition. Norman basketball training →
Broken Arrow
Pop. 118,000
Tulsa’s largest suburb and a 6A basketball powerhouse — Broken Arrow was a 2025 state tournament contender. Players benefit from the broader Tulsa-area training infrastructure while competing in one of the state’s toughest 6A districts alongside Union, Owasso, and Bixby.
Edmond
Pop. 97,000
A basketball hotbed north of OKC. Edmond North, Edmond Memorial, and Deer Creek consistently rank among the state’s best 6A programs. Josh Richardson (NBA) is from Edmond. Oklahoma Swarm (9 national AAU titles, 130+ college placements) is headquartered here. University of Central Oklahoma and Oklahoma Christian University provide D2 options. Edmond basketball training →
Lawton
Pop. 92,000
Southwest Oklahoma’s basketball hub and home to Cameron University (D2, Lone Star Conference). Lawton High School has been a strong 5A contender (2025 state tournament participant). Fort Sill’s military community adds population turnover that brings players from diverse backgrounds. Training options are more limited than OKC/Tulsa but growing.
Moore
Pop. 63,000
OKC south suburb where Moore and Westmoore high schools both competed in the 2025 6A state tournament. Players access the OKC metro’s full training infrastructure. The Moore-Westmoore rivalry is one of Oklahoma’s most intense at the 6A level.
Midwest City
Pop. 60,000
The Mid-Del area (Midwest City, Del City, Carl Albert) is one of Oklahoma’s most basketball-dense corridors. Carl Albert, Del City, and Midwest City all made the 2025 5A state tournament — three schools from the same district. Rose State College offers an NJCAA development path. Tinker Air Force Base adds to the community’s diversity.
Stillwater
Pop. 49,000
Home of Oklahoma State University and Gallagher-Iba Arena, one of the most storied venues in college basketball history. OSU basketball camps provide direct access to Big 12-level coaching. Jalen Montonati, two-time Oklahoma Gatorade Player of the Year from nearby Owasso, committed to OSU, highlighting the pipeline from northeast Oklahoma to Stillwater.
Enid
Pop. 48,000
Northwest Oklahoma’s basketball hub and hometown of NBA 4x All-Star Mark Price. Northern Oklahoma College in Enid offers an NJCAA basketball pathway. Training options are more limited than the metros, but Enid’s basketball tradition runs deep — players here often travel to OKC for higher-level AAU competition.
Muskogee
Pop. 36,000
Eastern Oklahoma basketball hub where the OSSAA was originally organized in 1911. Bacone College offers NAIA basketball. Muskogee-area players often access Tulsa’s training scene, about an hour northwest. The 5A program here competes in a region that includes strong Tahlequah and Fort Gibson programs.
Bartlesville
Pop. 37,000
Northeast Oklahoma city with Oklahoma Wesleyan University (NAIA basketball). Bartlesville High School competes in 5A. The city is about 45 minutes from Tulsa, giving families access to the larger metro’s training options while maintaining a smaller-community feel.
Getting Started with Oklahoma Basketball Training
There’s no single “right” path. The best starting point depends on your child’s age, experience level, goals, and where you live in Oklahoma. Here’s a simple framework:
Assess Where You Are
What does your player need most right now — fundamental skills, competitive game experience, or college exposure? Be honest about current ability level. A player working on ball-handling basics needs a different program than one preparing for OSSAA playoff competition.
Research Your Local Options
Use this page as a starting point. Talk to your child’s school coach — Oklahoma’s coaching community is connected enough that high school coaches usually know which local trainers and AAU programs they trust and which ones they don’t.
Start Small, Evaluate, Adjust
Try a single session or attend an open gym before committing to a full season. Watch how the trainer or coach interacts with players. The right fit matters more than the most expensive option. You can always expand later.
Ready to find the right fit?




