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Allison McNeill: Too Much Too Young, What Makes a Great Coach, & We're Pricing People Out
Season 1 · Episode 28

Allison McNeill: Too Much Too Young, What Makes a Great Coach, & We're Pricing People Out

Better Sports Parents · Scott Rintoul

March 24, 20261h 14m

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Show Notes

Allison McNeill is one of the most accomplished figures in Canadian basketball. As a player, she won multiple provincial and national titles before finishing her collegiate career in the NCAA. As a coach, she took over Simon Fraser University's women's program in 1988 and spent 13 years turning it into a perennial national championship contender. She then took the reins of Canada's women's national team, ending a 12-year Olympic absence by guiding them back to the 2012 Games and making them competitive on the world stage. She has coached at every level of the game, from grade twos all the way to the national team, and she still gives back at the youth level today. But here's what Allison will tell you herself: if she were growing up now, she might never have played basketball at all. In this episode, Allison sits down with host Scott Rintoul to share what decades in the game have taught her about what youth sport is getting right and what it's getting badly wrong. She discusses the skyrocketing cost of youth sport, the trap of early specialization, and why sampling multiple sports builds better athletes and better people. Allison also shares what parents and coaches are doing on the sidelines that is quietly stealing the joy from their children's sporting experience. On the coaching side, Allison gets specific about what separates a good youth coach from a harmful one and why playing pedigree matters far less than whether a coach genuinely cares about the kids in front of them. She talks about how she built winning cultures at SFU and the national team, why every player on a roster needs to feel valued, and how the best coaches are the ones who show up for their athletes as full human beings. She also tackles the underrepresentation of women in coaching, and the importance of not letting a child's identity become wrapped up in their sport or their results.

Chapters

00:00 Opening & Introduction

03:44 Why Allison keeps coaching

05:34 The state of basketball in Canada in 2026

06:30 Why youth sport costs have skyrocketed

08:11 Solutions: facilities, nonprofits & government levers

11:50 Travel tournaments vs. what actually develops young athletes

14:16 Allison's multi-sport upbringing

16:48 The danger of early specialization

17:06 How Allison's parents shaped her athletic life

21:57 Over-involved parents

27:42 Creating value for every player on the team

30:08 What basketball gave Allison that other sports didn't

31:29 How to run a youth practice that actually keeps kids engaged

35:15 Everyone plays vs competitive selection

37:14 Select teams, early tiering & the dropout cliff

39:28 What college coaches are actually looking for

43:05 Teaching kids to value roles

45:28 The cost of rushing development

46:17 How to transform a culture

49:50 The coach-parent relationship

52:00 How to spot a great youth coach

57:43 The most effective coaches

1:02:55 Sport as a vehicle for life skills

1:05:15 The lasting imprint coaches leave

1:07:29 Women in coaching

1:10:05 Separating athlete identity from results

Resources

Canadian Basketball Hall of Fame

BC Sports Hall of Fame

Safe Sport Program (Canada Basketball)

Long-Term Athlete Development (LTAD) Framework