Utah Basketball Training – Trainers, Teams, & Camps
Utah offers hundreds of basketball trainers, camps, and select teams spread across the Wasatch Front 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 Utah Basketball Training Directory Exists
Utah basketball training can feel overwhelming. Between Junior Jazz rec leagues, county Super League teams, invite-only Youngblood League programs, and AAU clubs on Nike, Adidas, or Under Armour circuits, knowing where your player fits — and what’s worth the investment — takes real understanding of the landscape.
This page exists to map that landscape. We’ve gathered verified information about trainers, camps, AAU programs, high school rankings, and college opportunities across Utah — organized in one place so families can plan thoughtfully instead of reacting to the next Instagram ad or gym-lobby pitch.
We don’t rank programs or tell you which trainer to hire. We provide the context you need to make decisions that fit your family — your goals, your budget, and your player’s development timeline. Whether you’re navigating the Wasatch Front’s concentrated training market or looking for options in Southern Utah’s growing basketball scene, our goal is the same: help you ask the right questions before committing time and money.
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. Read our editorial standards and learn how BasketballTrainer.com works.
Utah 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 (UHSAA)
- November 10: First practice and team selection allowed by UHSAA
- November 18: First games begin across all six classifications (1A–6A)
- November–February: Regular season — your school team’s primary focus
- Early–Mid February: State tournament rounds begin (staggered by classification)
- Late February: State championships — 4A at Weber State, 3A at Southern Utah University, 2A at Utah Valley University, 5A/6A at University of Utah’s Huntsman Center, 1A at Salt Lake Community College
AAU/Select Basketball Season
Here’s what surprises many Utah families: AAU tryouts often start in late February and early March — while the high school season is still happening. Programs like Utah Stars Elite, Salt City Hustle, and Mountain Stars want rosters set before spring tournaments begin.
- February–March: Tryouts happening (yes, during school season)
- March–April: Season launches after state tournaments end
- April–May: Spring tournament season — early travel events in Phoenix, Las Vegas
- June–August: Peak summer tournaments — teams commonly travel to Las Vegas, Phoenix, Sacramento, and Denver
- August: Season winds down, some programs continue into fall
Basketball Camps
- May–June: Early summer camps start
- BYU Basketball Camps in Provo
- University of Utah Runnin’ Utes Camps in Salt Lake City
- Utah State Aggies Camps in Logan
- Weber State Wildcats Camps in Ogden
- June–July: Peak camp season across Utah — Southern Utah University camps in Cedar City, Utah Valley camps in Orem, private trainer camps statewide
- Late July–August: Final summer camps before fall training begins
Year-Round Training
- September–November: Fall skill development season — private trainers are busiest preparing players for school tryouts in November. Bantam Basketball leagues and Super League run during this period.
- March–July: The overlap season — AAU practices, spring tournaments, and camps all happening simultaneously. This is when Utah families feel most stretched.
- Anytime: Private training is available year-round along the Wasatch Front and in St. George. The Youngblood League (invite-only, 5th–8th grade) runs winter and spring.
Planning Timeline, Not Pressure Timeline
This calendar shows when programs typically run in Utah — not deadlines you must meet. Some families train year-round across Bantam, Super League, and AAU seasons. Others focus only on school basketball. 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 Utah Reality: If you live along the Wasatch Front — from Ogden through Salt Lake City to Provo — you’ll have access to most training options within a reasonable drive. If you’re in St. George or Cedar City, options are growing fast but you’ll travel north or to Las Vegas for many AAU events. If you’re in rural central or eastern Utah, you’re driving 1–3 hours to reach serious club programs. That’s not a failure — that’s Utah geography. Plan accordingly.
Utah Basketball Training: Understanding Your Options
Different training types serve different purposes. None is inherently better — they’re tools for different needs at different stages.
Private Trainers
Best For: Individual skill development, position-specific work, off-season improvement, players who need personalized attention
What to Know: Utah’s trainer market is concentrated along the Wasatch Front, with growing options in St. George. Typical rates range from $40–$100/hour for individual sessions. Some trainers work out of private gyms, others rent space at facilities like the Karl Malone Training Center in Lehi. Download our trainer evaluation guide
Basketball Camps
Best For: Exposure to different coaching styles, group skill development, summer engagement, younger players exploring the sport
What to Know: Utah’s seven D1 universities all run summer camps, offering a range of price points and intensity. Private trainer camps and national organizations also operate throughout the state. Day camps run $150–$400; residential camps can reach $500–$1,000+. Download our camp selection guide
AAU & Select Teams
Best For: Competitive game experience, team development, college exposure for older players, off-season competition
What to Know: Utah’s AAU scene is growing and tiered. Top programs play on Nike EYBL, Adidas 3SSB, Under Armour, and Puma circuits. County Super Leagues and Bantam Basketball offer local competitive play. AAU season costs range from $1,500–$3,000+ when you include travel to Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Denver tournaments. Download our AAU/select team evaluation guide
Utah High School Basketball Rankings
Utah’s UHSAA organizes basketball across six classifications (1A through 6A), with 138+ member schools competing statewide. Understanding where programs rank provides useful competitive context.
What Rankings Mean (and Don’t Mean)
These rankings help understand the competitive landscape in Utah — they don’t define where your child should aim. A player from an unranked school can still reach college basketball. These are reference points for context, not ceilings for individual potential. Players like Tom Chambers came from Ogden and became a 4-time NBA All-Star — talent develops in many settings.
Boys Basketball — 2025-26 Preseason Coaches Poll
Source: Deseret News Preseason Coaches Poll, November 12, 2025
| Class 6A Boys | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1. | American Fork | 8-17 prev |
| 2. | Davis | 24-3 prev |
| 3. | Bingham | 17-8 prev |
| 4. | Corner Canyon | 18-8 prev |
| 5. | Layton | 21-5 prev |
| Class 5A Boys | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Olympus | 24-3 prev |
| 2. | Timpview | 20-6 prev |
| 3. | Highland | 23-4 prev |
| 4. | Orem | 21-4 prev |
| 5. | Springville | 17-8 prev |
| Class 4A Boys | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Provo | 14-10 prev |
| 2. | Cottonwood | 17-9 prev |
| 3. | Pine View | 17-9 prev |
| 4. | Dixie | 18-8 prev |
| 5. | Juan Diego | 18-6 prev |
| Class 3A Boys | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Morgan | 26-1 prev |
| 2. | Richfield | 20-6 prev |
| 3. | American Heritage | 13-11 prev |
| 4. | Ogden | 11-13 prev |
| 5. | Canyon View | 22-5 prev |
View complete rankings and live standings at Deseret News or UHSAA RPI Rankings.
Girls Basketball — 2025-26 Preseason Coaches Poll
Source: Deseret News Preseason Coaches Poll, November 12, 2025
| Class 6A Girls | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Lone Peak | 20-7 prev |
| 2. | Westlake | 18-7 prev |
| 3. | Syracuse | 20-4 prev |
| 4. | Davis | 17-7 prev |
| 5. | Bingham | 18-8 prev |
| Class 5A Girls | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1. | West | 24-1 prev |
| 2. | Bountiful | 24-2 prev |
| 3. | Pleasant Grove | 9-16 prev |
| 4. | Fremont | 21-4 prev |
| 5. | Wasatch | 21-4 prev |
| Class 4A Girls | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Ridgeline | 28-0 prev |
| 2. | Snow Canyon | 26-1 prev |
| 3. | Dixie | 16-11 prev |
| 4. | Sky View | 17-8 prev |
| 5. | Mountain Crest | 16-10 prev |
| Class 3A/2A/1A Girls (Top) | ||
|---|---|---|
| 3A #1 | Emery | 3 starters returning |
| 2A #1 | Kanab | Rylee Little (Utah commit) |
| 1A #1 | Rich | Defending champ |
View complete girls rankings at Deseret News. Utah also features nationally-ranked prep programs at Wasatch Academy (Mt. Pleasant) and Utah Prep (Hurricane), which compete on the Nike EYBL Scholastic circuit.
College Basketball Programs in Utah
College Basketball Is One Possible Outcome
College basketball is one possible outcome of youth development — not an expectation. Understanding what programs exist across Utah helps families set realistic timelines and goals. From Big 12 programs to NJCAA pathways, there are more opportunities than most families realize — and less urgency than the recruiting industry suggests.
NCAA Division I Programs
| School | City | Conference | Men’s | Women’s |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Utah | Salt Lake City | Big 12 | Men’s | Women’s |
| Brigham Young University | Provo | Big 12 | Men’s | Women’s |
| Utah State University | Logan | Mountain West | Men’s | Women’s |
| Weber State University | Ogden | Big Sky | Men’s | Women’s |
| Southern Utah University | Cedar City | WAC | Men’s | Women’s |
| Utah Valley University | Orem | WAC → Big West (2026) | Men’s | Women’s |
| Utah Tech University | St. George | WAC | Men’s | Women’s |
NCAA Division II
| Westminster University | Salt Lake City | Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference |
NJCAA (Junior College)
Utah has three NJCAA programs in the Scenic West Athletic Conference — an often-overlooked pathway that has produced players like Gary Payton II (Salt Lake Community College). SLCC won the NJCAA men’s basketball national championship in 2009.
| Salt Lake Community College | Salt Lake City |
| Snow College | Ephraim |
| USU Eastern | Price |
Understanding Division Levels
Utah’s college basketball landscape spans two Big 12 programs (Utah, BYU), a Mountain West team (Utah State), Big Sky (Weber State), WAC schools (SUU, UVU, Utah Tech), one D2 program, and three NJCAA programs. Division level doesn’t determine a player’s value — it reflects the school’s size, resources, and competitive tier. Many successful players have used junior college as a development bridge before transferring to four-year programs.
Evaluating Utah Basketball Training Programs
We don’t tell you who to pick. We help you know what to ask. Better questions lead to better decisions — especially in a market like Utah where options range from $0 Junior Jazz leagues to $3,000+ shoe-circuit AAU programs.
For Private Trainers
- Do they train at a dedicated facility or rent gym time at places like the Karl Malone Training Center or county rec centers?
- Have they worked with players who’ve gone on to play at Utah, BYU, Utah State, or other in-state programs?
- What’s the session structure — pure shooting, ball handling, game-situation work?
- Can they provide references from families in your area of the Wasatch Front, Utah County, or Southern Utah?
For AAU/Select Teams
- Which circuit does this team play on — Nike EYBL, Adidas 3SSB, Under Armour Rise/Future, Puma NXT, or local tournaments only? The circuit determines college coach exposure.
- What’s the all-in cost including travel to Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Denver tournaments that most Utah AAU teams attend?
- Does the team play in the Youngblood League, and if so, what has their track record been in that setting?
- How many players from this program have gone on to play at in-state D1 or NJCAA programs?
For Camps
- Is this a development camp (skill-building) or exposure camp (college coaches watching)? Utah’s university camps serve different purposes at different ages.
- What’s the coach-to-player ratio? At a BYU or Utah camp, will your child get meaningful individual feedback?
- For younger players, is Bantam Basketball’s tournament format or a week-long camp format more appropriate for their development stage?
Red Flags in Utah’s Market
- Vague circuit claims: In Utah, some AAU programs market themselves as “elite” or “exposure” teams but play only local Bantam or Super League tournaments. Ask specifically: are you on an EYBL, Adidas, UA, or Puma national circuit, and which events will we attend?
- Guaranteed roster spots: Any program that promises your child a spot without a real tryout is more interested in your money than their development. Programs like Utah Stars Elite and Salt City Hustle have legitimate tryout processes.
- Prep school pressure: Wasatch Academy and Utah Prep are legitimate national programs, but families should understand the $40,000+/year commitment before being recruited. Not every talented 8th-grader needs the prep school path.
- Confusing the Junior Jazz pipeline: Junior Jazz is a great entry-level rec program. But some organizations market themselves as the “next step from Junior Jazz” without providing meaningfully different training. Understand what specifically you’re paying more for.
- Travel cost surprises: Utah AAU programs routinely travel to Vegas, Phoenix, Sacramento, and Denver. If a program quotes you $1,500 for the season but doesn’t include 4-5 weekend tournament trips, the real cost is significantly higher.
Typical Pricing in Utah
Want a Deeper Evaluation Framework?
Our free guides walk you through exactly what to ask and look for.
Utah Basketball Training by City
Utah’s population and basketball infrastructure is heavily concentrated along the Wasatch Front — the corridor from Ogden through Salt Lake City to Provo. Southern Utah is growing fast, while rural communities maintain strong school basketball traditions with less AAU access.
Salt Lake City
Pop. 220,000
Home to the University of Utah (Big 12), SLCC (NJCAA national champs 2009), and West High — preseason 5A girls #1. East High, Highland, and Olympus (boys 5A #1, Gavin Lowe) anchor the city’s competitive scene. Most AAU programs and private trainers are based here. Salt Lake City basketball training →
Provo
Pop. 115,000
BYU’s home base and a basketball hotbed. Provo High is the 4A boys preseason #1 with all five starters returning. Timpview, led by BYU commit Dean Rueckert, is the 5A #2. Utah County’s rapid growth is expanding training options, with Bantam Basketball running year-round tournaments. Provo basketball training →
Ogden
Pop. 87,000
Weber State University’s home and birthplace of NBA All-Stars Tom Chambers and Byron Scott. Ogden High competes in 3A. Weber State hosts the 4A state championship and runs summer camps that serve northern Utah’s basketball community.
St. George
Pop. 106,000
Southern Utah’s basketball hub with Utah Tech University, Pine View (4A boys #3), Dixie (4A boys #4), and Snow Canyon (4A girls #2). Utah Prep Academy in nearby Hurricane competes on the Nike EYBL Scholastic circuit. The warm climate makes it a tournament destination.
West Valley City
Pop. 138,000
Utah’s most diverse city and home to Kearns and Granger high schools. Granger consistently produces competitive basketball talent from a diverse player pool. The city’s proximity to downtown SLC training facilities makes it a natural training base.
Sandy
Pop. 96,000
Home to Dimple Dell Recreation Center — the hub for Super League basketball and Junior Jazz programming in the south valley. Alta High and Jordan High provide competitive 5A/6A basketball. NBA player Scot Pollard grew up in nearby Murray.
Logan
Pop. 55,000
Utah State University’s home in Cache Valley. Ridgeline High School runs one of Utah’s great girls basketball dynasties (chasing a 4-peat with a 28-0 record last season). Sky View and Mountain Crest also compete at the 4A level. USU camps serve a broad northern Utah region.
Layton
Pop. 82,000
Davis County’s basketball center with Layton High (6A boys preseason #5 with a 21-5 record) and Davis High (2024-25 6A boys state champions, now preseason #2). Layton Christian Academy competes as an independent program that won the 2025-26 3A girls state title.
Orem
Pop. 97,000
Utah Valley University’s home, which hosts the 2A state basketball championship at its UCCU Center. Orem High is the 5A boys preseason #4. The rapidly growing Utah County corridor from Lehi through Orem to Provo is producing an expanding base of competitive basketball players.
Lehi
Pop. 93,000
One of Utah’s fastest-growing cities, home to the Karl Malone Training Center which hosts AAU events and training sessions. Lehi HS and Skyridge HS provide competitive 6A basketball. Several AAU programs hold practices and events in the Lehi-American Fork corridor.
Cedar City
Pop. 40,000
Southern Utah University’s home and host of the UHSAA 3A and 4A state tournaments. Canyon View High is the 3A boys preseason #5 and was 2024-25 3A girls state champion. SUU’s camps serve the southern Utah basketball community as the only D1 option south of Provo.
American Fork
Pop. 36,000
American Fork High School is the 6A boys basketball preseason #1 with all five starters returning. Lone Peak HS, also in the area, is the 6A girls preseason #1 chasing a 5th straight state championship led by BYU commit Kennedy Woolston. This corridor is a 6A basketball powerhouse.
Getting Started with Utah Basketball Training
Three steps to approach Utah basketball training thoughtfully rather than reactively.
Understand Your Options
Browse this page to understand what’s available — private trainers, camps, AAU teams, and how they connect. Know the difference between Junior Jazz, Super League, Bantam, Youngblood, and shoe-circuit AAU.
Ask Better Questions
Use our evaluation guides to know what to look for. The right program depends on your player’s age, goals, and your family’s budget and capacity — not someone else’s recommendation.
Plan Thoughtfully
Use the season calendar above to understand timing. Good decisions rarely happen under pressure — whether it’s AAU tryout season, summer camp registration, or school tryouts in November.
Ready to Evaluate Programs?
Download our free evaluation guides and start making informed decisions.




