Common questions parents, players, and coaches ask
What does a weighted basketball help with?
A weighted basketball is commonly used to challenge ball handling, passing, rebounding control, and controlled strength-oriented shooting work. The goal is better feel, stronger habits, and more focused reps.
Is this mostly for dribbling or shooting?
This ball fits best for dribbling and passing work, and it is also useful for rebounding drills. It can also be used in controlled form shooting to help players work on strength and range development.
What size and weight options are available?
The current product options are Men 29.5" at 3 lbs. and Women 28.5" at 2.75 lbs.
Is this good for youth players?
It can be, but younger players should use it with supervision and good judgment. The added weight is more demanding than a standard basketball, so it is best used in controlled training, not random high-volume reps.
Can my child use this at home?
Yes, many parents use tools like this for driveway, home-court, or gym workouts. Short, focused sessions are usually better than long, sloppy ones.
Does this come with training guidance?
The ball includes access to free training content through the QR code on the ball.
Should a player train with one or two weighted basketballs?
One is plenty for most players. Two weighted basketballs can create a tougher two-ball challenge for advanced dribbling and passing progressions if a player is ready for it.
Will this guarantee more playing time?
No training aid can guarantee playing time. What it can do is help a player get better, more demanding reps so they have a better chance to look ready and confident when opportunity comes.
Give your player more than hope. Give them better reps.
Players usually do not become more confident by accident. Confidence grows when they feel stronger, more prepared, and more in control of the ball. If your player needs that edge in dribbling, passing, rebounding, or strength-based ball work, this weighted basketball is a smart place to start.