Houston Coach Kelvin Sampson’s 3 Keys for Building a Basketball Program

Apr 01, 2025 1:54 pm

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In the pressure cooker of March Madness, few programs have established a more distinct identity than the University of Houston men's basketball team under head coach Kelvin Sampson, which is a testament to his elite college basketball development program.  


As the Cougars advance to the 2025 NCAA Tournament Final Four, their success reflects the culture of toughness and resilience that Sampson has meticulously cultivated throughout his 11-season tenure.


This is why nobody can teach basketball coaches how to do so better than Coach Sampson. And that’s exactly what he did in his ‘Kelvin Sampson - Building and Practicing Toughness’ clinic.


We have pulled some of his most powerful lessons about building a tough culture and players and included them for you below. 


1.) Standards

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Standards


At one point in his clinic, Coach Sampson conveyed that standards are one of three keys to building a tough basketball program: 


What Coach Sampson means by this is that a head coach has to set and exemplify the highest possible standards for their team to follow. 


“There are three people who can never have a bad practice: The head coach, the point guard, and the best player,” Coach Sampson said. 


Regardless of whether they want to be or not, the best player is going to be a role model for their teammates, and the example they set is going to be adopted by their teammates when it comes to their toughness and intensity. 


“The greatest ability your best player can have is dependability,” Coach Sampson says to drive this point home. 


Coach Sampson says that while he never wants his players to play with injuries, he needs his players to be able to play with pain. He emphasizes this by saying, “Pain is an opinion. Some people have a high opinion of it, some people have a low opinion of it.” 


2.) Expectations


Coach Sampson’s next key to building a tough basketball team is expectations. 


“Sometimes you’ve got to lose first,” he then said. “Don’t be afraid of losing. Losing is part of the game.” 


This exemplifies Coach Sampson’s larger philosophy of losing some battles along the way to ultimately win the war, which is what the big picture vision is for a program. 


“If you don’t have standards, you can’t have expectations,” he adds. And while every program wants to win their respective championship, there needs to be tangible and achievable milestones to ultimately reach that point. These will depend on where your team is in its development. 


3.) Accountability

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Accountability


The third and final one of Coach Sampson’s keys for building a basketball program is accountability. 


He explains this by discussing that the morning of this clinic, his team was going to run sprints at Houston’s baseball field 6:30 AM. When he got there at 6:15 AM, the entire team was already present, getting stretched and warmed up.


This was an indication that his team has great player leadership, because the team’s leaders scheduled this early stretch. 


“A player-led team is so much better than a coach-led team,” he adds. “If you [coaches] spend all your time coaching attitude and effort, then you’re not coaching basketball.” 


He then adds that the message has to get through at some point. And in order for that to happen, players need to step as leaders and told their teammates accountable to the standards and expectations that have been set. 


Thank you Coach Sampson and THSCA for sharing.



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