I am trying a find a reference to/proof of the following result:
Let $(M, g)$ be a compact Riemannian manifold. Then there is $b$ so that the following holds: for any $r>0$, there is a covering $\mathscr U$ of $M$ by open geodesic balls of radius $r$ so that (i) every member of $\mathscr U$ intersects at most $b$ other members of $\mathscr U$, and (ii) the collection $$ \mathscr U_{1/2} = \{ B(a, r/2) : B(a, r) \in \mathscr U\}$$ still covers $M$.
Without condition (ii), it is a consequence of Besicovitch Covering Theorem. However, (ii) cannot holds in the general form (e.g. $r$ is not constant) as was shown in the MO post Stronger version of Besicovitch covering theorem.
I am guessing the fact that the radius is constant (or bounded by below by some positive constant) would be sufficient. The above theorem is used quite frequently: in p.16, start of proof of Proposition 4.3 in Sacks and Uhlenbeck - The existence of minimal immersions of 2-spheres, the last paragraph in p.390 of Choi and Schoen - The space of minimal embeddings of a surface into a three-dimensional manifold of positive Ricci curvature, and a more recent occurrence: p.23 of Chen and Warren - Compactification of the space of Hamiltonian stationary Lagrangian submanifolds with bounded total extrinsic curvature and volume, where they cited the Besicovitch Covering Theorem.