Twelve Nights of Games.
That's twice what most summer programs give you. More chances to find your shot. More chances to lead. More chances to leave the gym better than you walked in.
Every great player has a summer that made them. This is that summer. Six weeks. Twelve nights. Real games. Right here in Mason.
The summer the work started to show. The summer they stopped being one of the kids and became the kid.
The summer they got tougher. Faster. Smarter. Hungrier.
Two nights a week. Tuesdays and Thursdays. From July 21 to August 27.
Every session is live. Full speed. Real reps. Real shots. Real moments.
You walk in. The lights come on. You play.
That's it.
That's twice what most summer programs give you. More chances to find your shot. More chances to lead. More chances to leave the gym better than you walked in.
You face the players you'll see all winter. You start summer as one of them. You finish summer better than them.
All inside Courts4Sports in Mason. The home gym. The real one. Easy to find. Easy parking. Right off I-71.
Show up and put in work, we see it. Bring it every night, we know.
Players don't level up from random reps. They level up from coaches who've competed at the highest levels of the sport — World Championships, Olympic-level National Teams, nationally ranked programs. For 12 nights this summer, your son gets these coaches.
A world-champion coach, trainer, and former professional player. Rob brings the standards and habits that made the highest-level locker rooms in the sport actually work — and your son will feel them by night one.
Former pro player and elite-level coach. Master coach who's spent a career turning physical talent into match-ready skill — the voice your son needs the moment a swing has to actually convert.
Coach for Puerto Rico's National Team — indoor and beach. Brings the Olympic-level training methods used to prepare players for international competition straight onto the floor at Courts4Sports.
Director of Volleyball and elite-level coach of the nationally ranked Cincy Elite 17-1. Knows precisely what nationally competitive players look like — because she builds them. Your son's summer is in her line of sight.
They've played it. Coached it. Trained it. Built it. Now they're handing it to your son.
— Twelve nights · $175 · No equivalent in the region
Spots are first come, first served. We cap every group so every player gets real reps.
$175 all-in. One price. No add-ons. That covers all 12 nights — roughly $14.58 per night for live, grade-grouped, refereed-style game play at our 53,000-square-foot home gym.
For context: most position camps run $150–$300 for 2–4 days. Most boys club summer programs run $200–$500. The Competition Circuit gives you 24 total hours of court time at the lowest price-per-rep in the region.
What you don't pay extra for: No USAV or OVR membership required. No tournament travel fees. No uniform fee — bring your own gear. No referee surcharges.
No — and this is exactly where new players grow fastest. Boys volleyball was only sanctioned by OHSAA in 2022, so most of the players you'll see here picked the sport up in the last two or three years. Your son won't be the only one learning.
Grade-grouped play means he'll face boys his own age and stage — not 17-year-old club veterans. The format is built around touches and competitive reps, which is the fastest way to develop. If your son has the basics down — pass, set, swing, serve — he belongs here.
Almost never. The Circuit runs Tuesday and Thursday evenings (5:30–7:30 for middle school, 7:30–9:30 for high school) — specifically scheduled to clear morning football lifts, basketball open gyms, and most lacrosse and soccer summer practices.
This is built for the multi-sport athlete. Two structured nights a week is enough to keep your son's volleyball game sharp without forcing him to choose. Most of our players show up after another practice — and that's the point.
No. Boys volleyball's OHSAA season runs in the spring — by the time the Circuit starts on July 21, the high school season is fully closed. Summer development play is exactly when OHSAA expects players to grow their game outside school.
The Circuit is structured as a development competition, not a roster team — so the OHSAA volleyball "three-player limit" on non-school teams doesn't apply here. Your son's eligibility for fall and spring is unaffected.
If your high school coach wants confirmation, have him reach out — every coach we've ever talked to has signed off.
Yes — and this is non-negotiable for us. Every group is capped so we can run multiple courts simultaneously and keep rotation tight. With six hardwood courts available, no player is sitting out a full set waiting to come in.
If your son shows up, he plays. That's the whole format.
Caps are first-come, first-served. The 7th–8th group and HS groups historically fill the fastest — if you know you want in, lock the spot now.
Players arrive 10 minutes early. Doors open, courts are set, brand of ball is out. We do a brief dynamic warm-up and a focused 10-minute skill block — serve receive, hitter approaches, defensive footwork — whatever the night calls for.
Then it's games. Real, fast, full-rotation games. We rotate teams every 25 minutes so your son sees three or four matchups in a single night. Coaches are courtside the whole time, calling out reads, pulling players aside for a 30-second correction, and pushing the tempo.
Out by the scheduled end time. No long lectures. No standing around. Two hours of volleyball that actually counts.
Court shoes (non-marking), athletic shorts, a t-shirt or jersey, knee pads, and a water bottle. That's it.
If he has a favorite ball he likes warming up with, bring it. Otherwise, we provide all match balls.
It happens — it's summer. Miss what you have to miss. Show up to what you can. The Circuit is designed for real life: most players will miss one or two of the twelve nights and that's completely fine.
The flat $175 rate accounts for it. We don't pro-rate, but we also don't punish you for it. The math still works out to better value than virtually any other option in the region, even if your son makes nine of twelve nights.
Yes — absolutely. Courts4Sports has full bleacher seating around every court, plus a viewing mezzanine. Bring a chair if you want, bring siblings, bring friends. Parking is free and easy, right off I-71.
If you'd rather drop and run, that's fine too. We've got it covered for the full two hours.
It's not officially a tryout — but our coaches see everything. The Circuit ends August 27. Cincy Elite club tryouts for the 2026–2027 season run shortly after. If your son shows up, competes, and gets visibly better across twelve nights, that travels.
Several of last summer's circuit standouts ended up on Cincy Elite National-track teams the following season. No promises — just the truth that work gets noticed.
Full refunds are available up to 14 days before the first night (so by July 7, 2026). After that, registrations are non-refundable but transferable to another player at the same grade level.
If we cancel a night for any reason — facility, weather, anything — we add a makeup or credit to next summer. Your money's safe.
Perfectly. The Power Series runs July 13–17 as a five-day intensive — sand and indoor work, technique-focused. The Competition Circuit picks up July 21 with twelve nights of live game application.
Players who do both go from technique-loaded to game-tested in a single summer. It's the cleanest stack we offer. Many parents register for both.
Caps fill before answers do. Register now — we'll handle anything else over email.