FWIW, Ill share something that helped me out a lot later in my basketball career. In lighter practices and scrimmages you can learn to pick and choose when you jump in traffic, and more importantly, dont land right where you jumped if you dont have to. I learned this way too late in my career or I couldve saved myself several bad ankle injuries from coming down on peoples feet around the rim, but once you start practicing it and get used to it, your chance of injury gets less and less. Learn to jump quickly in traffic, high when you need to but always at angles or with momentum carrying you somewhere safe, the more you practice the more aware you become of it, and the less likely you are to come down on someones foot and ruin half to all of your season.
+1 to this! As my training made me jump higher , i wanted to ME on any jump. Its stupid... you must somehow learn to jump only as much as you need.
If you boxed your oponent out , no reason to sky the defensive rebound , keep boxing out and pick the ball from the ground.
If you see your teammate at the same situation , no need to go there and grab the reb in the sky. Let the ball go down and your teamate pick it.
You are outside , a teamate shoots... no need to cut and jump for the offensive rebound , there will be 6-8 people , 12-16 foots in the paint waiting for you to land on them.
And so many similar situations...
But then again , when it's competition you forget it all and go 110%. You just have to learn to go smarter , as smart as you can anyway.