Connecticut Basketball Training: Trainers, Camps & Teams
Private basketball trainers, camps, and AAU select teams across the Constitution State — from Fairfield County to Eastern CT, from UConn’s backyard to the Naugatuck Valley.
Connecticut offers 300+ training options, multiple AAU programs, 6 D1 colleges, and UConn — one of the most storied programs in college basketball history. That’s a lot of options — and not all answers.
This page exists to give you context, not direction — helping your family ask better questions before making any decisions about basketball training in CT.
Why This Directory Exists
Connecticut’s basketball landscape is compressed and intense. You can drive from Bridgeport to New London in two hours, but within that small geography you’ll find some of the most competitive high school basketball in New England, a college landscape anchored by UConn’s two consecutive national championships, and AAU programs that compete on regional and national circuits. Families navigating this environment deserve honest information — not hype about which programs are “best.”
Connecticut’s proximity to New York City — particularly in Fairfield County — creates real pressure. Families in Ridgefield, Stamford, and Greenwich are adjacent to one of the most intense youth basketball markets in the country. That doesn’t mean everyone needs to compete at that level. What it means is you need to understand what environment you’re choosing and why — not because someone said you should.
This page doesn’t rank trainers, endorse camps, or call any program the “best.” We organize what exists, explain the landscape, and give you the questions and frameworks to find what actually fits your child and your family. That’s our role here.
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 right trainer for a Fairfield County family pursuing national AAU exposure is likely different from what works for a family in Willimantic just looking for skill development. Neither is wrong. Context makes all the difference.
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Connecticut Basketball Season Calendar: When Everything Actually Happens
This timeline exists to help you plan thoughtfully, not to create panic about deadlines. Connecticut’s basketball calendar is layered — high school, AAU, and camps all overlap in ways that can feel overwhelming if you don’t have a map. Here’s the map.
High School Season (CIAC)
The Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) governs high school athletics for virtually all public and parochial schools in the state. Basketball runs as a winter sport.
- Mid-November (~November 18): First practice allowed by CIAC — winter sports begin
- Late November / Early December: First games begin across CIAC member schools
- December–February: Regular season — your school team’s primary competition window
- Late February: CIAC tournament qualifying rounds begin
- Early-to-Mid March: CIAC tournament semifinals and bracket play
- Mid-March (typically March 15–17): CIAC State Championship Finals at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville — both boys and girls championships held the same weekend
The CIAC uses 5 divisions (Division I through Division V) for tournament play, determined by enrollment, strength of schedule, and power points. Division I schools automatically qualify; Divisions II–V must win 40% of regular season games. Check current CIAC tournament information at CIACSports.com.
AAU/Select Basketball Season
Here’s what surprises many Connecticut families: spring AAU tryouts often start in January and February — while the CIAC high school season is still happening. Programs form rosters early because spring tournaments begin almost immediately after state championships end in March.
- September–October: Fall AAU tryouts begin (CT Northstars, other programs run October evaluations)
- September–November: Fall AAU season — regional league play
- January–March: Spring tryouts happen — yes, during the CIAC season. Connecticut Elite, CT Northstars, High Rise Basketball and others run evaluations during this window
- April–June: Spring tournament season launches after CIAC state championships; teams typically practice twice weekly and play weekend tournaments
- June–July: Peak summer tournament season; CT programs travel to Hoop Group events in NJ/PA, New England AAU, UA Rise, ZGXL, and Select circuits
- August: Season winds down; fall preparation begins
Key Connecticut AAU organizations include Connecticut Elite Basketball (22+ year history, Under Armour partner), CT Northstars (29 years, longest-running boys and girls program in CT), CT Spartans Elite, and Connecticut Basketball Academy (CBA). The dominant regional tournament circuit is Hoop Group; national-level CT teams compete on UA Rise and similar platforms.
Basketball Camps
- June: Early summer camps start; college programs begin hosting day and overnight camps
- June–July: Peak camp season across Connecticut
- UConn Basketball Camps (Storrs) — in especially high demand given the program’s back-to-back 2023/2024 national championships
- Yale Basketball Camps (New Haven) — D1 Ivy League exposure
- Quinnipiac, Fairfield, Sacred Heart, and CCSU all run summer programs
- Breakthrough Basketball runs camps in multiple CT locations
- Private trainer camps throughout Fairfield County, Greater Hartford, and New Haven
- July–August: Final summer camp opportunities before fall training ramps up
Year-Round Training
- September–November: Fall skill development season — private trainers are typically busiest preparing players for CIAC tryouts in mid-November
- November–March: The overlap season — CIAC practices, AAU tryouts, and individual training all happening simultaneously. This is when families in CT feel most stretched.
- Anytime: Private training is available year-round, with the highest concentration in Fairfield County, Greater New Haven, and Greater Hartford
Planning Timeline, Not Pressure Timeline
This calendar shows when programs typically run in Connecticut — not deadlines you must meet. Some families train year-round with private coaches. Others focus only on school season and skip AAU entirely. Some participate in fall leagues but not spring travel teams. The goal is understanding what exists and when, so you can make choices that fit your family’s goals, schedule, and budget — not because a program’s marketing created urgency.
The Connecticut Reality: Connecticut is a small state — 5,543 square miles — and that compactness is actually an advantage. Most families are within a reasonable drive of AAU tournaments, college camps, and private trainers. The significant divide isn’t geographic, it’s competitive level. Fairfield County programs (FCIAC) operate in close proximity to NYC’s intense basketball ecosystem, which means exposure pressure is real and constant. Programs in Eastern Connecticut — New London, Windham, Putnam — are further from that intensity, which can be a feature, not a bug, depending on what your family is looking for. There’s no single right answer. Understand the environment before you choose one.

Connecticut Basketball Training Program Types
Three main program types exist — none is inherently better. Each serves different needs at different stages of development.
Private Trainers
Best For:
Players who want individualized attention on specific skills — shooting mechanics, ball handling, footwork. Also valuable during the CIAC season when team practice doesn’t allow individual development time. Good for players preparing for CIAC tryouts in November.
What to Know:
CT has a significant private training market, especially in Fairfield County and Greater New Haven/Hartford. Quality varies widely — credentials, playing background, and coaching philosophy matter more than marketing language. Rates typically range from $60–$150/hour for individual sessions in CT markets. Download our free trainer evaluation guide before hiring anyone.
Basketball Camps
Best For:
Players who want concentrated skill work in a fun environment, younger players building foundational habits, and families who want exposure to college-level coaching without full-year commitments. Connecticut’s 6 D1 programs all offer camps — unique in a small state.
What to Know:
UConn camps carry prestige and are in high demand. But a camp is a snapshot — it doesn’t guarantee exposure to college coaches or recruitment. Understand whether a camp is a skills development program or an evaluation camp. They’re different products. Day camps (lower cost, commuter-friendly) work well for younger players; overnight camps (higher cost, more immersive) can be meaningful for high schoolers. Download our camp selection guide.
AAU / Select Teams
Best For:
Players seeking competitive team experience outside of the CIAC season, high school players pursuing college exposure on recognized circuits (Hoop Group, UA Rise), and families ready for travel, tournament weekends, and full-season commitment.
What to Know:
Connecticut AAU ranges from local recreational leagues through the CT Basketball Conference to national exposure programs competing on Hoop Group and UA Rise circuits. These are fundamentally different products at different costs — $500 to $5,000+ per season depending on travel level. Understand which circuit and which tournaments before committing. Download our AAU evaluation guide.
Connecticut High School Basketball Rankings
Rankings as Reference Points
These rankings show the competitive landscape in Connecticut — they don’t define where your child should aim. A player from an unranked school can still earn a D1 scholarship. A player at the #1 ranked school still needs to earn their own opportunities. Use rankings to understand competitive context in CIAC leagues, not as a measure of a young player’s potential.
Source: CIAC official power rankings (casciac.org), mid-season 2024-25. Rankings reflect wins, losses, and opponent quality (power points system).
Boys Basketball — Top 10 (2024-25)
| # | School | City | Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Notre Dame | West Haven | 20-0 |
| 2 | Ridgefield | Ridgefield | 19-1 |
| 3 | Kolbe Cathedral | Waterbury | 19-1 |
| 4 | Notre Dame | Fairfield | 18-1 |
| 5 | East Catholic | Manchester | 18-2 |
| 6 | Morgan | Clinton | 18-2 |
| 7 | Cromwell | Cromwell | 18-2 |
| 8 | Manchester | Manchester | 18-2 |
| 9 | Innovation | New Britain | 18-2 |
| 10 | Windsor / NW Catholic | Windsor / W. Hartford | 17+ wins |
Girls Basketball — Top 10 (2024-25)
| # | School | City | Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | East Hampton | East Hampton | 20-0 |
| 2 | Sacred Heart Academy* | Hamden | 19-1 |
| 3 | Holy Cross | Waterbury | 19-1 |
| 4 | St. Joseph | Trumbull | 18-1 |
| 5 | Innovation | New Britain | 17-2 |
| 6 | Simsbury | Simsbury | 17-3 |
| 7 | Conard | West Hartford | 17-3 |
| 8 | Glastonbury | Glastonbury | 16+ wins |
| 9 | Middletown | Middletown | 16-2 |
| 10 | Northwest Catholic | West Hartford | 16+ wins |
*Sacred Heart Academy won 2025 Class LL state championship. View complete CIAC girls rankings
CIAC Tournament Note: Connecticut uses 5 tournament divisions (D-I through D-V). Strong programs appear across all divisions. A D-IV or D-V state champion is just as legitimate as a D-I champion — the divisions separate by school size and competitive level, not by overall merit. Don’t assume a smaller-division school provides less competitive training or exposure.
Connecticut College Basketball Programs
College Basketball: One Possible Outcome
College basketball is one possible outcome of youth development — not an expectation. Connecticut’s landscape is dominated by UConn, which can create an outsized sense that “making it” means playing for the Huskies. The reality: there are 15+ programs across all divisions in CT, dozens more in neighboring states, and thousands of players who have fulfilling basketball journeys that don’t involve D1 or UConn. Understanding the landscape helps you set realistic timelines — not create pressure.
NCAA Division I Programs
NCAA Division II Programs
- Southern Connecticut State University (New Haven) — Northeast-10 Conference; men’s and women’s basketball
- Post University (Waterbury) — Northeast-10 Conference; men’s and women’s basketball
- University of New Haven (West Haven) — In transition to D1; active D1 NEC member expected 2028-29
NCAA Division III Programs
- Trinity College (Hartford) — NESCAC
- Wesleyan University (Middletown) — NESCAC
- Connecticut College (New London) — NESCAC
- Eastern Connecticut State (Willimantic) — Little East Conference
- Western Connecticut State (Danbury) — Little East Conference
- Albertus Magnus College (New Haven) — GNAC
- Saint Joseph University CT (West Hartford) — GNAC
- Mitchell College (New London) — North Atlantic Conference
- University of Hartford (West Hartford) — Conference of New England (transitioned from D1 Sept. 2025)
- U.S. Coast Guard Academy (New London) — NESCAC
Understanding Division Levels
D3 programs like Trinity College (Hartford) and Wesleyan (Middletown) are part of the NESCAC, which is nationally recognized as the most competitive D3 conference in the country. NESCAC basketball is genuinely high-level competition with no athletic scholarships. For the right student-athlete, D3 offers meaningful college basketball without the scholarship-or-nothing pressure. Don’t dismiss a division level based on the number alone.
How to Evaluate Connecticut Basketball Programs
Rather than ranking programs, we help you ask better questions. Connecticut’s basketball market has specific pressure points — here’s what to watch for.
Questions for Private Trainers
- What is your playing and coaching background, and how does it apply to working with players at my child’s level?
- How do you structure sessions — skills, game situations, or both?
- Do you work with CIAC coaches or are you completely separate from the school program?
- How will you measure and communicate progress over time?
- What does a typical 3-month engagement look like, and when would you say a player is ready to move on?
Questions for Basketball Camps
- Is this a skills development camp or an evaluation camp — are college coaches present as evaluators, and at what level?
- What is the ratio of instruction time to game time?
- Who specifically is coaching — the college staff, or hired counselors?
- What age and skill level is this camp designed for?
- What do campers take home from this experience beyond just games played?
Questions for AAU/Select Programs
- Which specific circuit are you on — Hoop Group regional, NEAAU, UA Rise, ZGXL — and what does that actually mean for college exposure at my child’s age?
- In Connecticut’s market, what is the all-in cost for the season including Hoop Group entry fees, travel to NJ/PA, hotels, and meals?
- How many practices per week are required, and how does that interact with CIAC school obligations?
- For high school players: which specific college coaches attended your tournaments last season — not “D1 coaches were there,” but which schools?
- What happens to my child’s spot if they’re injured during the school season?
Connecticut-Specific Red Flags
- Programs that claim “UConn connections” or that their coaching staff has relationships with Dan Hurley’s staff — without being specific about what that connection actually looks like for a youth player
- Fairfield County programs promising “national EYBL exposure” for 8th graders without specifying whether they actually participate in EYBL Scholastic or are running Hoop Group regional events (these are very different products)
- Prep school post-grad pitches that promise D1 recruitment without addressing a student’s actual academic profile and what specific D1 schools they’ve placed players at recently
- AAU programs that pressure families with urgency about “roster spots filling fast” during the CIAC regular season — this is a tactic, not a legitimate deadline
- Any program that can’t give you a clear, itemized cost breakdown before you commit — Connecticut’s AAU market is expensive enough that you deserve transparency upfront
- Trainers who guarantee outcomes (“I’ll have your son hitting 40% from three in 6 weeks”) rather than explaining their methodology and the work required from the player
Connecticut Basketball Training Pricing (General Ranges)
- Private trainer (individual session): $60–$150/hour; Fairfield County rates trend toward the high end
- Small group training (2–4 players): $30–$80/player per session
- Day basketball camp (1 week): $200–$450 for college programs; $150–$300 for independent camps
- Overnight basketball camp (1 week): $600–$1,200 depending on school and amenities
- Local/recreational AAU (CT Basketball Conference): $300–$600 per season, minimal travel
- Regional AAU (Hoop Group circuit): $1,200–$2,500 all-in including fees and travel to NJ/PA tournaments
- National AAU (UA Rise, EYBL Scholastic): $3,000–$6,000+ including travel to multiple regional and national events
Not Sure Where to Start?
Our free trainer evaluation guide walks you through every question to ask before hiring anyone in Connecticut.
Connecticut Cities: Basketball Training by Area
Connecticut’s geography is compact but its basketball culture varies meaningfully by region — from the NYC-adjacent intensity of Fairfield County to the prep school pipelines of Eastern CT. Here’s what to know about each major area.
Bridgeport
Pop. 148,654
Connecticut’s largest city and a longstanding producer of NBA talent. Warren Harding HS and Bassick HS compete in the FCIAC — two programs with deep basketball tradition. Charles Smith, who went #3 overall in the 1988 NBA Draft, came from Warren Harding; John Bagley, the #12 pick in 1982, is another Bridgeport product. St. Andrew’s School in Bridgeport adds a prep school dimension. Strong urban league culture alongside the FCIAC.
Stamford
Pop. 135,470
Located 30 miles from Manhattan, Stamford sits at the intersection of Connecticut and New York basketball markets. That proximity elevates the expectations and the noise. Brien McMahon and Westhill HS compete in the FCIAC. Families here often face pressure to participate in NYC-adjacent AAU programs and national exposure events well before their players are ready. Chris Dudley, who played 16 NBA seasons, grew up in Stamford.
New Haven
Pop. 134,023
Home to Yale Bulldogs basketball (D1 Ivy League), Southern Connecticut State (D2 NEC), and Albertus Magnus (D3 GNAC) — three programs within a small geographic area. Hillhouse HS has produced competitive CIAC teams for decades. Scott Burrell, who was a key contributor on the 1997 Chicago Bulls championship team, came from New Haven. Sacred Heart Academy in neighboring Hamden won the 2025 CIAC Class LL girls championship.
Hartford
Pop. 121,054
The state capital has produced some of Connecticut’s most notable basketball talent. Marcus Camby attended Hartford Public HS before going #2 overall in the 1996 NBA Draft — he later became the 2007 Defensive Player of the Year. Rick Mahorn, who was a key part of the “Bad Boys” Detroit Pistons championship teams, also came from Hartford. Hartford Public and Weaver HS consistently field competitive CIAC programs. Trinity College adds a strong D3 NESCAC program to the area.
Waterbury
Pop. 114,403
The Naugatuck Valley’s basketball hub. Kolbe Cathedral ranked #3 in state boys basketball in 2024-25 — a small Catholic school punching well above its enrollment. Holy Cross ranked #3 in state girls basketball. Both programs compete in the NVL (Naugatuck Valley League), which is consistently one of CT’s most competitive conferences. Ryan Gomes, who played 8 NBA seasons, grew up in Waterbury. Post University (D2 NEC) is also located here.
Norwalk
Pop. 91,184
Birthplace of Calvin Murphy, a Basketball Hall of Famer who played 13 seasons with the Houston Rockets and averaged 17.9 points per game for his career. Brien McMahon and Norwalk HS compete in the FCIAC. Being on the western stretch of Fairfield County means access to both CT’s AAU circuit and NYC-area programs and camps. The training market here is well-developed given the region’s demographics.
Danbury
Pop. 86,518
Connecticut Elite Basketball runs spring AAU evaluations at Immaculate HS in Danbury — making it a significant hub for AAU programming in western CT. The SWC (Southwestern Conference) includes Danbury and several competitive programs. Nearby Ridgefield ranked #2 in state boys basketball in 2024-25. Western Connecticut State (D3 Little East Conference) is headquartered here, adding a college program to the area’s landscape.
New Britain
Pop. 74,135
Home to Central Connecticut State University (CCSU Blue Devils), the most competitive non-UConn D1 program in Connecticut — CCSU competes in the Northeast Conference and went 25-7 in 2024-25. Innovation HS, based in the New Britain area, ranked top-5 in state power rankings for both boys and girls in 2024-25 — an impressive dual distinction for a single school. Gateway to the central CT basketball ecosystem.
West Hartford
Pop. 64,083
A Central Connecticut basketball hub. Conard HS ranked top-5 in state girls basketball (2024-25 power rankings) in the CCC conference. Northwest Catholic has been a consistent powerhouse in both boys and girls basketball. Marcus Camby — the #2 overall pick in 1996 and 2007 Defensive Player of the Year — attended Conard before transferring to Hartford Public. The University of Hartford (now D3 Conference of New England) and Saint Joseph University CT are both headquartered here.
Bristol
Pop. ~60,500
Bristol Central HS is the hometown of Donovan Clingan, who went #7 overall in the 2024 NBA Draft after helping UConn win back-to-back national championships in 2023 and 2024. Clingan averaged 30.3 points, 18.4 rebounds, and 6.2 blocks per game at Bristol Central as a senior — numbers that were extraordinary at any level. St. Paul Catholic HS in Bristol has also competed consistently in CIAC. The city demonstrates that elite player development happens outside the FCIAC powerhouse corridor.
Middletown
Pop. ~47,000
Home to Wesleyan University, one of the strongest D3 programs in the NESCAC — a conference widely considered the best D3 conference in the country. Cromwell HS, just north of Middletown, ranked top-8 in state boys power rankings in 2024-25, competing in the Shoreline League. Middletown HS is a consistent presence in the CCC conference. The Shoreline League, with programs like Morgan (Clinton, ranked #6 state boys) and East Hampton (#1 state girls), runs through this river valley corridor.
New London / Eastern CT
Pop. ~27,000
Kris Dunn, the #5 overall pick in the 2016 NBA Draft, is from New London — a reminder that the “quiet corner” and eastern CT produce elite players. Connecticut College and the U.S. Coast Guard Academy (both D3 NESCAC) are located in New London. Norwich Free Academy (NFA) competes in the ECC conference. Putnam Science Academy, in Putnam (northeast CT), is a nationally recognized prep school basketball program that has won multiple national prep titles and sends players to D1 programs annually — a distinct pathway worth understanding.
Getting Started with Basketball Training in Connecticut
Rather than telling you what to do, here’s a process that helps families make thoughtful choices in Connecticut’s layered basketball market.
Clarify Your Goals First
Before contacting any program, your family needs honest conversations about what you’re actually trying to accomplish. Development? Fun? Making the school team? Playing in college? Each goal points to different programs. Connecticut’s market gives you plenty of options — the risk is choosing an option designed for a different goal than yours. The player who just wants to improve their CIAC game doesn’t need a national AAU program. The player seriously pursuing D1 recruitment does need to understand what circuits matter to the schools they’re targeting.
Research Before You Reach Out
Use this page to understand the landscape in your part of Connecticut. FCIAC families should understand they’re in proximity to one of the country’s most competitive regional markets. Central and Eastern CT families have different options and different travel requirements. Check the season calendar to understand timing conflicts before committing to anything. Look up the CIAC tournament brackets from last season to understand your school’s competitive context. Knowledge before inquiry means better conversations with programs.
Ask Questions, Then Evaluate the Answers
Use the evaluation questions in this guide when talking to trainers, camps, and AAU programs. Pay as much attention to what they can’t answer clearly as to what they can. Good programs welcome direct questions about cost, circuits, player development philosophy, and what success actually looks like for the players they work with. Programs that deflect, oversell, or create urgency are telling you something important. Connecticut’s basketball market has plenty of legitimate programs — you don’t need to settle for vague answers.
Ready to Find Connecticut Basketball Training?
Our directory lists trainers, camps, and AAU programs across Connecticut. Start with our free evaluation guide to know what questions to ask.



