Up Close with Koby Brea: Elite Shooting, Hidden Layers, and the NBA Blueprint
Corey Tulaba pulls back the curtain inside Koby Brea's private pre-draft workout in Los Angeles—film study, shooting mastery, and the disciplined reps defining his NBA transition.
I recently had the chance to catch Kentucky wing Koby Brea burn through a private pre-draft workout at Loyola Marymount in Los Angeles. The day started outside the lines, as Brea and trainer Zach Gonzalez sat down to dissect tape. Gonzalez clicked through clips from his Lakers tenure—sets designed to spring shooters free, and actions that turned spacing into scoring. Brea watched intently, studying the precise angles and timed movements that create NBA-quality looks.
When they moved to the court, the connection between film and workout became clear. Brea began with methodical dribble work—sixty to eighty controlled reps from baseline to halfcourt, each bounce of the ball emphasizing the tight handle he'd honed growing up in New York. The ball stayed low, the changes of direction crisp. While creativity was the goal, this wasn't strictly showtime; it was the unglamorous foundation of building an NBA skillset.