Kids Basketball Coaching in Waterloo & Zetland: A Parent's Guide
Your Kid Lives in an Apartment. They Need Somewhere to Play.
If you live in Waterloo or Zetland you already know the deal. Over 90% of dwellings in both suburbs are apartments. Your kid doesn’t have a backyard. There’s no driveway to dribble on. The local parks are shared with dogs, joggers and picnickers, and good luck finding a basketball hoop at any of them.
This is one of Australia’s fastest-growing urban precincts. The Green Square corridor is projected to reach 63,000+ residents. The Waterloo Metro station opened in 2024. New apartments are going up constantly. Young families are moving in. But the infrastructure for kids sport hasn’t kept pace.
Sydney already has a well-known court shortage. Around 150,000 players across the state don’t have anywhere to play. In apartment-dense suburbs like Waterloo and Zetland, that shortage hits hardest. Your kid wants to play basketball but there’s nowhere close to home to actually do it.
That’s the starting point for a lot of families in this area. And the good news is NCIE Redfern is right on your doorstep.
If you’re a parent in Waterloo, Zetland, Green Square, Beaconsfield or nearby and you’re looking for basketball coaching for your kid, this is a guide to what’s available and how it all fits together.
What’s Available for Kids in the Area
Domestic club basketball: Sydney Comets
The Sydney Comets are the closest domestic basketball association. They’re based in Alexandria on Maddox Street, a short trip from Waterloo and Zetland. They run junior domestic competitions on Saturdays across age groups from U10 through to U18, boys and girls. Seasons run three times a year. If your kid already knows the basics and wants to compete, domestic comp is a great place to be.
The Comets also run rep teams (representative basketball) that compete across NSW in the Waratah Junior Leagues. Rep is the next level up from domestic: harder training, higher standard, away games against other associations. Trials happen once a year, typically August to November.
Learn to Play
The Comets’ entry-level program runs at Perry Park and Comets Stadium in Alexandria. It’s $115 per term for 9 weeks of 45-minute sessions. Levels go from Rookie (ages 5-8, beginners) through to Tip-Off (ages 8-13, guided competition games) and there’s an All Girls stream too.
It’s a solid starting point. The question most parents hit is: what comes after?
School basketball
Green Square Public School opened in 2025 with purpose-built community spaces and sports courts. It’s a brand new school still building its community, and basketball will likely be part of that as it grows. Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Waterloo is a small, tight-knit Catholic primary just a few minutes from NCIE.
Most primaries and high schools in the area offer some form of basketball. The quality and structure varies between schools depending on who’s running it. The thing to look for with any program, school or otherwise, is whether you can see who’s coaching your kid, what principles they follow and whether your kid is actually improving. Some school programs are excellent. Some are more about participation than development. It’s worth asking around.
The gap
The Comets are one of the best basketball organisations in Sydney. They develop players well and their coaching is strong. The gap isn’t quality. It’s capacity.
When 100+ kids rock up to rep trials and many of them are genuinely capable, the Comets can only take on so many. To maintain quality coaching the numbers have to be managed. That means a lot of kids who could have made reps miss out through no fault of their own.
Here’s where the math starts to matter. A kid in the Comets rep program is training twice a week (1.5 hour sessions) with quality coaches plus playing a game on weekends. A kid who missed out might train once a week and play one game, and they’re not getting the same level of focused coaching between games. Over a term, over a year, that gap compounds. Those kids have just as much potential to take the game as far as they want. What’s limiting their growth isn’t them. It’s the lack of services available to them. They’ve been let down not by their own ability but by the fact that there simply aren’t enough places for kids to develop properly.
That’s why Inner Game exists. It’s a place where kids with real potential who might otherwise be left out have the opportunity to keep growing. Focused small-group training, 1-on-1 coaching, ball handling, footwork and movement for the kids who love the game, show up and want to keep improving whether they made reps this year or not.
NCIE Redfern Is Closer Than You Think
This is the thing most Waterloo and Zetland parents don’t realise until they look it up. NCIE is a 5-minute drive from Zetland and you can walk there from Waterloo in about 10-15 minutes. It’s on George Street in Redfern, just the other side of the train line.
For families in the Green Square area, it’s closer than most weekend sport venues parents end up driving to across Sydney. And once you’ve done the trip once, it stops feeling like a trip.
A few things make NCIE work particularly well for families coming from the apartment belt.
An actual indoor court. When you live in an apartment, your kid has zero space to practise at home. That makes the quality of their training venue even more important. NCIE has a proper indoor court that’s well-lit, clean and available year-round. Your kid can go hard, take a tumble and slide instead of tearing up their knees on concrete. For apartment families who don’t have a driveway or backyard to fall back on, this is the place where basketball actually happens.
Dedicated small-group environment. NCIE’s indoor court runs our Skills Classes and Holiday Camps with a 12:1 cap on every session. That’s a hard cap, not a marketing line. Your kid gets real coaching time, not 3 minutes of attention in a group of 20.
On the commute. NCIE sits right between the southern suburbs and the CBD. If you work in the city or North Sydney, dropping your kid at a holiday camp on the way to work and picking them up on the way home is a straight line, not a detour. During school holidays when you’re doing this five days a week, the convenience adds up fast.
More than just basketball. NCIE is a full community facility. Swimming pool, gym, sauna, cafes on George and Regent Street a minute’s walk away. Drop your kid at their session, do your own thing for an hour, come back to a sweaty kid who’s learned something. It’s a setup that works for parents, not just kids.
How Inner Game and the Comets Work Together
The Comets run competitions, rep programs and team training. Inner Game gives kids who aren’t in that ecosystem yet a place to develop at the same level. The two aren’t alternatives. They complement each other.
Your kid plays comp on Saturdays. That’s maybe 30-40 minutes of game time, shared across the whole team. The rest of the week, what are they doing to improve? The individual skills, the footwork, the decision-making under pressure. That’s what Inner Game works on. The things that make your kid a better player when they step into any team environment.
For kids who are aiming for rep trials, Inner Game gives them focused development time to build the habits and skills that move them toward the level they want to play at. And for the kids who tried out and didn’t make it this year, it’s a place to keep growing so they’re ready when the next opportunity comes.
(On that note: Inner Game is planning to enter teams into the Comets competition itself once we have the numbers. If that’s something you’d want your kid to be part of, get in touch and I’ll keep you in the loop.)
What Parents Should Actually Look For
If you’re seriously invested in your kid’s development, not just looking for somewhere to park them for an hour, here’s what separates a real program from a babysitting-with-basketballs operation.
1. A coach who coaches the person, not just the player
Plenty of coaches know basketball. Fewer know how to work with a 6 year old who’s never touched a ball, or an 11 year old girl who’s worried she’s not good enough. The good coaches read the kid, not just the play.
2. Small groups with a real cap
If 20 kids are sharing one coach, your kid gets about 3 minutes of actual coaching. Ask what the group cap is. Ask what happens when they hit it. At Inner Game it’s 12 kids to 1 coach per court, enforced. We turn bookings away before we stretch past it.
3. A movement-first approach
Most programs skip straight to the ball. Inner Game teaches movement first, basketball second. Kids learn how to land, change direction, stop on balance and accelerate under pressure. When those foundations are right, the ball-handling and shooting improve on top of them. Skip this step and you end up with kids who can do drills but can’t actually play the game.
4. WWCC and real coaching experience
A valid Working With Children Check and police clearance is non-negotiable. Every adult working with kids in NSW needs one. If a program can’t confirm this immediately, walk away. But beyond that, ask about real coaching experience. Not just playing experience. Some of the best players in the world aren’t necessarily great coaches. Coaching kids is a completely different skill. Have they coached for years? Do they understand how a 6 year old learns differently to a 12 year old? Can they actually teach the game, not just demonstrate it? Now if you find a coach who has real coaching ability AND genuine playing experience, you’ve hit the jackpot. They get it from both sides.
5. Real game context, not just line drills
For the little ones we absolutely isolate skills to help build those little muscles of theirs. But when kids reach a certain age and capability, and I’ve seen 7 year olds who are more than ready, we want them experiencing game-like situations that force creative thinking. The game presents a problem, the kid finds a solution and that solution becomes a skill they own because they discovered it themselves. That’s the constraints-led approach and it’s how we run a lot of our sessions through 3 on 3 small-sided games.
The research backs it up. In 5v5 youth basketball, 1-2 dominant players handle the ball 60-70% of the time. The rest are essentially spectators in their own game. In 3x3, every player gets roughly 2x more ball touches, 2-3x more shot attempts and 30-50% more successful actions per session. There’s nowhere to hide. Every kid is forced to handle, make reads, defend and shoot. If you want to go deeper into the science behind 3x3 in youth development, this post breaks it all down.
That’s Where Inner Game Basketball Comes In
We’re a youth basketball coaching program based at NCIE Redfern, just minutes from Waterloo and Zetland, and we have all of the above. A coach who understands kids and how they learn. Basketball classes capped at 12 kids per coach. A movement-first approach to kids sports. WWCC certified with over 5 years of coaching experience combined with over a decade of playing experience. And a pathway to playing.
What “Inner Game” actually means
The name isn’t branding. It’s the coaching philosophy.
Basketball has an outer game (shooting, dribbling, plays, the score) and an inner game (decision-making, problem-solving, emotional regulation, handling pressure, reading a game instead of just reacting to it). Most programs coach the outer game and not much else. We coach both, deliberately.
Kids learn how to make decisions under pressure instead of panicking. They learn how to reset after a bad play instead of carrying it into the next one. They learn how to perform when the heat is on instead of shrinking from it. These are the things that separate a kid who has skills from a kid who can actually play. And they carry over off the court into school, friendships and the rest of their lives.
Basketball is the vehicle. The inner game is what we’re really building.
The programs
Weekly Skills Classes at NCIE: term-based weekend sessions for kids aged 4-14. Small groups split by age and ability. Girls-only streams available. This is where most of our kids start.
School holiday camps at NCIE: 4-day holiday camps in the school holidays, ages 5-14, all levels welcome. Book 3 days, get the 4th free. The fastest way to find out if your kid loves basketball.
Private 1-on-1 coaching: for kids who want the fastest possible progress or who need extra help building confidence before joining a group. For Waterloo and Zetland families these would take place at the Alexandria Park Community School outdoor courts on weekends. I only take on a handful of private clients at a time so spots are limited. If this is something you’re interested in, get in touch sooner rather than later.
Private group sessions: bring 2 to 4 friends and we’ll coach them as a group at the Alex Park Community School outdoor courts on weekends. Same as private coaching, spots are limited. Get in touch if you want to lock something in.
Who This Is For
If you’re a parent who sees sport as more than just exercise. If you value fun, learning things the right way and helping your kid thrive as they grow. If you believe basketball can teach your child something about themselves and the world around them. Inner Game is for you. Your kid gets coached the same way a rep player gets coached. Same standards, same attention, same quality. Regardless of their level.
If you live in Waterloo, Zetland, Green Square, Beaconsfield, Rosebery, Alexandria, Redfern or any of the surrounding suburbs, NCIE is closer than most people think. It’s a 5-minute drive from Zetland or a 10-15 minute walk from Waterloo. Once you’ve done the trip once, it stops feeling like a trip.
What’s Coming: Huntley Street Recreation Centre
The basketball landscape in this part of Sydney is about to change. The Huntley Street Recreation Centre, a $25 million City of Sydney project, is opening in 2026 with four brand new indoor multipurpose courts. It’s walking distance from both Green Square and St Peters stations.
For families in the apartment belt this is a big deal. Four new indoor courts in the middle of the growth corridor, built to serve exactly the community that’s been underserved. When it opens, basketball in this pocket of Sydney will have more court access than almost anywhere else in the inner city.
We’re watching this closely. More courts means more opportunity for development programs, and Inner Game’s model works best in venues that support small-group, focused training.
How to Get Started
The easiest way is to book a free trial. No commitment. Your kid comes along to a Skills Class, gives it a proper go and you decide afterwards. Most parents know within one session whether it’s a fit.
If you’d rather test the water with a holiday camp first, check out our next camp.
Or if you’ve got questions about your kid’s level, whether private coaching or group is right or how we handle different ages, just get in touch and I’ll get back to you personally.
More reading for Waterloo and Zetland parents:
- Kids basketball coaching in Alexandria: a parent’s guide
- Kids basketball coaching in Redfern: a parent’s guide
- Why 3x3 basketball builds better players than 5v5 ever could
- What age should my child start basketball?
- What size basketball should I get my kid?
- Why so many girls quit basketball and how to keep her playing