Dr. Dish Basketball Blog

The Polish Basketball Federation Made Dr. Dish Its National Development Standard — Then Showed Its Clubs Firsthand

Written by William Schultz | Mar 10, 2026

Across Poland, something is quietly changing inside basketball gyms.

Before training begins, a Dr. Dish machine sits ready in the corner — drills loaded, shot locations programmed, statistics tracking enabled.

No ball boys. No ball racks. No wasted time between repetitions.

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

This is happening in clubs across the country —  because the Polish Basketball Federation studied how the world's elite programs develop players and decided its clubs deserved to experience that standard firsthand.

That's a very different kind of endorsement.

What Is Dr. Dish?

Dr. Dish is a basketball shooting machine and training system that automates drills, delivers passes anywhere on the court, and tracks every shot with real-time performance data.

It removes the two things that quietly drain most training sessions of their value: ball retrieval and reset time. What remains is pure, continuous, measurable repetition.

Players can complete three to five times more purposeful shooting repetitions in a single session compared to traditional drills. Every make. Every miss. Every location. Recorded automatically, visible to coaches in real time, and stored for long-term development tracking.

The machine runs the repetition. The coach focuses on the player.

That shift — from managing logistics to developing players — is what elite programs have understood for years. It's what the Polish Basketball Federation decided its clubs should understand too.

FIBA’s Endorsement Set the Standard

Before a single machine arrived in a Polish gymnasium, the conversation had already been settled at the highest level of international basketball.

Dr. Dish Basketball is the first and only shooting machine formally approved and endorsed by FIBA — the global governing body for basketball across 213 national federations, recognized by the International Olympic Committee as the sport's sole world authority.

That endorsement was first granted in 2020. It has been renewed continuously since — most recently in 2025 — with a mandate that goes far beyond a logo. It includes active collaboration on training methodology, coaching curriculum, and educational content built specifically for national federation use.

The clearest expression of that partnership came at the FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup Coaches Clinic in Lausanne — where Dr. Dish delivered live training demonstrations to more than 250 international coaches from across the global basketball community.

Not a presentation.

A demonstration.

Machine on the court. Players moving through structured drills while shot data populated in real time on the screen beside them.

When the global governing body builds that kind of platform around a training tool — and integrates it into coaching education worldwide — national federations rarely debate whether it belongs in their system.

They focus on how to get it there.

Poland focused. Then acted.

The Federation Didn't recommend it. they proved it.

Working in close partnership with Tripl3 Shot — one of Dr. Dish's dedicated European distributor — the Polish Basketball Federation organized a national demonstration tour.

The machines didn't sit in a showroom. They were transported directly to clubs, to the courts where coaches and players train every single day.

Coaches who attended didn't leave with a brochure.

They left understanding what their training environment was missing — and what it could become.

For every player walking through their gym doors, from the youngest academy player finding their shot for the first time to the senior squad preparing for the biggest games of their season.

Adoption followed quickly.

What the Clubs Experienced

SMS PZKosz Łomianki was among the first programs to bring Dr. Dish onto their training floor following the federation showcase.

What their players encountered wasn't simply a ball-return machine. It was a fundamentally different rhythm of training.

Drills ran continuously. Passing sequences combined mid-range, three-point, and free throw work within a single session. No stoppages. No resets. No player pulled out of the flow to chase a missed shot across the floor.

The young guard who used to get forty minutes of standing in line and twenty minutes of actual shooting was now getting forty minutes of shooting with real-time feedback on every single rep.

That's not an incremental improvement.

That's a different development trajectory entirely.

NLO SMS PZKosz Władysławowo followed. Then more conversations opened. More programs began asking the question every serious development organization eventually confronts — not whether they can afford to invest in their training infrastructure, but whether they can afford not to.

A Full Season of Development. One System.

The question federation coaches ask most consistently isn't what does it do.

It's how does it fit into everything we already do — across an entire year.

Pre-season. Players rebuild shooting mechanics with high-volume, precisely tracked repetitions. Coaches enter the competitive season with a measurable baseline for every player — not a feeling, a number.

In-season. The CT+'s multiplayer mode tracks up to five players simultaneously during team sessions. Leaderboards display live in the gym. The Digital Remote lets a single coach manage the entire drill from their phone without ever losing sight of their players' movement and mechanics.

The session keeps moving. The data keeps accumulating.

Off-season. Players pre-download their most-used drills and train independently — without Wi-Fi, without a coach present. Stats sync automatically when the machine reconnects.

Development doesn't pause between seasons.

It compounds.

Year over year, the Training Management System stores a permanent record of every drill, every session, every trend across a full career. Federation staff can track development across their entire club ecosystem. Player progress stops being something coaches estimate at the end of a season.

It becomes something they can see building in real time — session by session, from the first day of pre-season to the last game of the year.

When a Federation Sets a Standard, It's Not a Suggestion

National federations exist to raise the floor of the game within their borders.

The Polish Basketball Federation looked at what FIBA had formally validated. They looked at what FC Barcelona Bàsquet, ALBA Berlin, and the France Women's National Team had already built into their daily training environments.

They saw the same system at the center of elite development programs across the continent.

And they decided that a player in Łomianki or Władysławowo deserved access to the same standard as a player in Barcelona or Berlin.

So they didn't send a circular.

They loaded the machine into a van, drove it to their clubs, and put it on the court.

The clubs that embraced it aren't simply better equipped than they were six months ago.

They are operating inside a different development philosophy — one where repetition is structured, progress is measured, and the distance between where a player is today and where they could be is no longer a matter of opinion.

It's visible. Session by session. Rep by rep.

The programs investing now are building something the clubs still waiting will spend years trying to match.

That gap opens quietly.

And it opens fast.

Interested in bringing Dr. Dish to your federation, club, or academy program?

Contact our European team:

Visit: eu.drdishbasketball.com

Follow @drdishbball.eu

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