Dennis Schröder has played for eleven NBA teams. He's owned one German club the entire time.
German NBA guard and Basketball Bundesliga club owner Dennis Schröder made a deliberate choice about his players' development environment — and it reflects something bigger happening across European club basketball.
Dennis Schröder built his career the hard way.
From Braunschweig to the NBA. From local club player to World Cup Champion and MVP. From prospect to Olympic flag bearer for his country.
But what matters just as much as where he's been — is what he chose to build when he came home.
Before the NBA. Before the World Cup. Before the Olympics.
There was a gym in Braunschweig. A young player with something to prove. And a drive so deep that no obstacle — no early doubt, no ceiling, no prediction about what a German kid from a mid-sized city could realistically accomplish — could stop it.
That belief wasn't born on draft night. It was built in training. Rep by rep. Drill by drill. Day after day in a club system that, like most across Europe, asked its players to develop on a lean budget and an unforgiving calendar.
Schröder knows exactly what it costs to build something from that foundation. Which is why, as owner of Basketball Löwen Braunschweig — now competing in the Basketball Bundesliga, Germany's top professional league — he made a very deliberate decision about the training environment his players would walk into every single day.
He chose Dr. Dish.
At the center of Basketball Löwen's facility now sits a Dr. Dish Shooting Machine — not simply as a rebounder, but as a complete development platform.
Schröder has trained in NBA facilities with access to world-class resources. He understands the difference between equipment that looks impressive and infrastructure that actually accelerates development. When you've seen the best, you stop settling for anything less.
Here's what that decision brings to Braunschweig every training day:
Efficient volume. Players take significantly more shots per session without adding court time or coaching staff. In a club environment where schedules are dense and every minute matters, that efficiency isn't a nice-to-have. It's a competitive edge.
Objective feedback. Live stats, zone-by-zone shooting breakdowns, and post-workout heat maps give coaches measurable, actionable insight into player progress. Not impressions. Not instinct. Data.
Integrated skill development. Shooting, ball handling, agility, conditioning, and post-entry passing built into structured workouts on one connected platform. Complete players aren't built by training one skill at a time — and the CT+ doesn't ask them to.
Built-in accountability. Multiplayer tracking, competitive leaderboards castable to any screen in the facility, and automated coach reporting. Standards don't drop when the coaching staff turns away. The culture sustains itself.
Over one million shots. Every day. That's the scale of what deliberate, structured repetition looks like when it's built into a program.
This isn't about replacing coaching. It's about giving coaches better tools — so the development they're working toward actually compounds.
European basketball develops its players through the club model. From youth academy to professional roster, clubs are where talent either crystallizes into something elite or quietly fades before it reaches its potential.
That system produces extraordinary players. But it almost always operates under real pressure: limited court availability, lean coaching staffs, and competitive calendars that leave little margin for inefficiency. This is exactly why training infrastructure matters so much in the European context — not as a luxury, but as a multiplier.
FC Barcelona Bàsquet integrates it. Alba Berlin builds with it. The French Women's National Team trains on it. Over one million shots are saved on Dr. Dish machines every single day — across NBA facilities, D1 programs, and a growing number of professional clubs across Europe. And now Basketball Löwen Braunschweig — led by one of the most accomplished European players in NBA history — has made it central to how they develop players at the professional level.
That's not a marketing moment. That's a signal about where European club development is headed.
Talent is the spark. Repetition is the fuel. Intentional, tracked, competitive, accountable repetition — the kind that builds habits so deep they show up when the game is on the line and there's no time to think.
Schröder's ability was always there. What separated him was the commitment to the work — every drill, every rep, every morning when the easy choice was to do less. Now he's building that same culture in Braunschweig, with the same standards he held himself to on the way up.
The players who will define European basketball in the next decade are already in a gym somewhere. The question is whether your club is giving them the right environment to grow.
What is Dr. Dish and how is it used in professional basketball? Dr. Dish is a basketball shooting machine and player development platform used by professional teams, college programs, and elite clubs worldwide. It automates ball return and passing while tracking real-time shooting statistics — enabling players to complete significantly more deliberate repetitions per session than traditional workouts allow.
Which European professional clubs use Dr. Dish training machines? Dr. Dish is used by several leading European programs including FC Barcelona Bàsquet, Alba Berlin, and the French Women's National Team. Basketball Löwen Braunschweig, owned by NBA player Dennis Schröder, has also integrated the Dr. Dish into its professional training facility.
What is the difference between the Dr. Dish Rebel+, All-Star+, and CT+? All three commercial models share the same physical footprint and core hardware. The Rebel+ is a fully programmable option designed for clubs prioritizing volume and efficiency on a defined budget. The All-Star+ adds the Training Management System, advanced analytics, and access to 250+ professionally designed workouts. The CT+ is the flagship model, featuring a 21.5" touchscreen, multiplayer mode, offline capability, dynamic leaderboards, and on-demand training with Pro coaches and trainers.
The Dr. Dish commercial lineup — Rebel+, All-Star+, and CT+ — is available across Europe through authorized dealers. Whether you're running a youth academy, a semi-professional club, or a Bundesliga program — there's a Dr. Dish built for your environment.
eu.drdishbasketball.com | @drdishbball.eu