Dr. Dish Basketball Blog

Nanterre 92 Doesn't just Build Players During the Season. The Work That Matters Starts Before It.

Written by William Schultz | Apr 30, 2026

The season doesn't build players.

It reveals them.

What a player can and cannot do in February was decided months earlier.

In September. In July. In the quiet weeks when no one is watching and nothing is being tracked.

The players who develop in that window arrive at the season ready.

The players who don't arrive hoping.

Most clubs prepare for the season. The best clubs prepare before it.

That distinction changes everything.

A Different Kind of Preparation

At Pro A level, readiness isn't built during the season.

It's exposed.

The clubs that consistently perform aren't the ones that train hardest when the schedule demands it.

They are the ones that created the conditions for readiness long before the first game mattered.

That is not a motivational observation. It is a structural one.

Players who arrive at pre-season physically sharp and technically ready did not get there during pre-season.

They got there in the window before it.

In individual sessions. In small group work. In structured repetition that most clubs never intentionally build into their calendar.

At Nanterre 92, this isn't a philosophy. It's how the week is built.

You don't fix mechanics in competition. You expose them.

The Problem Most Clubs Don't See Until It's Too Late

Most clubs run structured team sessions.

Coaches design drills with real intention. Players work hard. The session looks productive from the outside.

But inside that session, something is quietly undermining the entire enterprise.

Players are waiting.

In a full squad session with fifteen players, one coach, and one ball — the average player spends more time watching than shooting.

More time standing than moving. More time resetting than developing.

The rep count, the single most important variable in building automatic shooting mechanics, is a fraction of what it needs to be.

Elite shooting is not built on effort.

It is built on volume.

On thousands of repetitions completed correctly, repeatedly, until the movement requires no conscious thought and the body simply executes what it has already done a thousand times before.

A player getting forty quality shooting repetitions per session is not on the same development trajectory as a player getting two hundred.

If reps aren't built in, development isn't happening.

The clubs that understand this don't just train harder. They remove the limits that make reps impossible. They build environments where volume is automatic.

Where Most Training Environments Break

The shift from good training to elite training is rarely about coaching quality.

Most coaches at the professional level are excellent.

That's not where the gap is.

It is about whether the training environment is designed to make high-quality repetition possible, every day, for every player, without burning through court time or coaching attention that belongs elsewhere.

That's where most environments break.

The logistics take over. Ball retrieval. Reset time. Managing the flow of fifteen players through a drill designed for five.

The coach stops developing players. They start managing the session.

That's where infrastructure matters.

With Dr. Dish integrated into Nanterre 92's daily preparation, players move through structured shooting sequences that deliver significantly more game-speed repetitions per session than traditional drills allow.

The machine handles ball return, pass delivery, and drill sequencing automatically.

No ball boys. No ball racks. No waiting.

The pass arrives the moment the previous shot leaves a player's hands.

Coaches are freed from managing logistics. They focus entirely on developing players.

Real-time shot tracking and post-session analytics give coaches a measurable record of where each player's development actually stands, not a feeling about how training went, but a number they can act on.

Pre-season, that data establishes a baseline for every player before competition begins. In-season, it tracks development in real time. Off-season, players train independently development continuing whether or not a coach is present.

The system compounds across an entire year.

Players don't rise in season. They reveal what they built before it.

The Pre-Season Window Is Not a Warm-Up

There is a tendency in professional basketball, even at the highest levels,  to treat pre-season as preparation for the real work rather than as the real work itself.

It is an expensive mistake.

The shooting mechanics a player trusts in the fourth quarter of a decisive game were not formed in that moment.

They were formed in empty gyms. In sessions that felt routine. In repetitions that seemed unremarkable at the time and became automatic through sheer accumulated volume.

The player who executes without thinking in that moment has already been there a thousand times.

Not in that game. In the sessions that prepared them for it completely.

That is what the pre-season window is for.

Not fitness. Not systems. Not tactics alone.

Those matter.

But they are not what separates the players who perform in the moments that define seasons from the players who don't.

What separates them is the work done before anyone was watching.

The reps logged before the schedule demanded them. The habits formed before the stakes arrived. The standard set before anyone was keeping score.

Nanterre 92 understands that.

And it shows ; not in one season, but in the consistency of a club that takes preparation seriously before the pressure makes it necessary.

What This Means for Every Serious Club

The lesson here is not specific to Pro A basketball in France.

It applies to every club, at every level, in every market across Europe that is serious about developing players rather than simply managing them through a season.

The pre-season window is the most underinvested period in European club basketball.

It is also the most important.

The clubs investing in development infrastructure now, building environments where volume is automatic, progress is measurable, and preparation begins before the season creates urgency, are not simply better prepared than their competition.

They are operating inside a fundamentally different development philosophy.

And the gap that philosophy creates opens quietly.

Session by session. Rep by rep. Long before anyone outside the gym knows it is happening.

By then, it's already too late to catch up.



Frequently Asked Questions

Why do serious clubs prioritize pre-season development over in-season training?

Pre-season is when individual mechanics, volume, and physical preparation can be developed without the constraints of a competitive schedule. The shooting confidence a player shows in January was built in July, not during the season. In-season training maintains what pre-season built. It rarely creates something new.

What is Dr. Dish and how does it fit into a professional training environment?

Dr. Dish is a basketball shooting machine and player development platform that automates drill sequencing, delivers game-speed passes anywhere on the court, and tracks every shot with real-time data. At the professional level it solves a specific problem, giving coaches the ability to run high-volume, structured shooting sessions without the logistical overhead that normally limits rep count and coaching focus.

How does Dr. Dish actually change what happens in a training session?

The main change is in rep volume and coaching attention. Without a ball-return system, a significant portion of every session goes to retrieval, resets, and managing player flow. Dr. Dish removes that entirely. Players shoot more. Coaches coach more. The data that accumulates session by session gives both players and coaches an objective record of development over time.

Which professional clubs in Europe use Dr. Dish?

Dr. Dish is used across professional clubs, national federations, and elite academies throughout Europe, including programs in France, Spain, Germany, Italy, Greece, and Turkey. It is the first and only shooting machine formally endorsed by FIBA.

What is the difference between the Dr. Dish Rebel+, All-Star+, and CT+?

All three commercial models share the same footprint and core hardware.

Rebel+ : Programmable and built for efficiency and volume.
All-Star+ : Adds the Training Management System, advanced analytics, and 250+ designed workouts.
CT+ : The flagship model with a 21.5" touchscreen, multiplayer training, offline capability, and on-demand coaching content.

The full commercial lineup is available across Europe through authorized dealers. Visit eu.drdishbasketball.com to find the right machine for your program.