Parent Development & Recruiting Academy
The Parent Development & Recruiting Academy (PDRA) is a structured, coach-led educaton series designed to equip parents with the knowledge, language, and tools to confidently support their child through the middle school and high school basketball journey.
PDRA is delivered as a 12-class cohort made up of two six-week, one-hour modules. Each module focuses on one of the 12 most common challenges parents face--ranging from evaluating team and training environments to navigating communication, adversity, exposure, and the realities of college recruiting. The goal is simple: help parents become an asset to their athlete's experience, development, and long-term opportunities.
Throughout the academy, parents will learn how to:
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Support player development without overstepping the coach's role
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Make better decisions about teams, training, and competitive environments
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Communicate professionally with coaches and programs
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Protect their athlete's confidence and reputation during adversity
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Understand recuriting pathways and what college coaches actually value
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Build an actionable family plan that supports long-term success

Every class includes practical tools (templates, checklists, and decision frameworks) so parents leave each session with clear next steps they can apply immediately. By the end of PDRA, families will have a stronger plan, stronger communication, and a healthier, more productive approach to the basketball journey.
approximately 784 people. Growing up in a place with limited access and resources shaped my perspective early—and instilled in me a deep belief that opportunity must be intentionally created for young people, not assumed.
I am the youngest of six children, raised by two pastors who built our home on faith, discipline, and strong values.
While my parents did not have the financial means to pay for college educations, they were intentional about providing us with healthy environments, a strong foundation in God, and access to mentors—especially coaches—who believed in us. In a town as small as Faison, those relationships mattered. Through athletics, doors opened for me that I never could have imagined as a child, and those opportunities forever changed the direction of my life.
Those early experiences shaped my calling. I am living proof that faith and sports can coexist to transform individuals, strengthen families, and impact entire communities. What I was given through sports and mentorship became the foundation for everything I would later build.
I went on to earn an athletic scholarship and play college basketball at University of Richmond—an opportunity that would not have been possible without athletics. That scholarship opened doors to higher education, leadership development, and a future that otherwise would have been out of reach for me. It reinforced my belief that when young people are given access, structure, and belief, sports can become a powerful pathway to opportunity and long-term success.
I later went on to coach for more than 17 years at the collegiate level, including stops at University of Virginia, Western Kentucky University, University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Clemson University. Coaching at these institutions allowed me to compete at the highest level and work with elite athletes, but more importantly, it gave me a front-row seat to how mentorship, accountability, and belief shape young people far beyond the game.
During my time as a college coach, I began to notice a troubling shift. Many athletes were losing hope in their future. They struggled to see pathways forward and began turning to unsafe spaces to fill the void—spaces that did not push them to become more than what they could physically see. Watching this unfold made one thing clear to me: intervention had to happen earlier.
In 2016, God placed a clear vision on my heart—to create a safe, structured environment through sports where children could belong. An environment families could trust. A place that reinforced the values being taught at home while teaching life skills that extend far beyond the field or court. The goal was never just to develop athletes, but to develop people in a faith-driven setting that builds character, confidence, and hope.
In 2018, that vision became a reality in Anderson, South Carolina. What began with just 8 families and 9 children looking for an environment where their kids could thrive grew to 133 children in just 12 months. The impact on the community was undeniable. Academic achievement among participating students improved by 35%, confidence increased, and young people began to believe that life-changing opportunities were possible for them.
Hope Sports Academy was born out of that transformation.
Before Hope Sports Academy existed, many children—especially those from communities like the one I grew up in—faced a lack of safe places, unstructured time, limited access to mentorship, positive role models, and spaces where they truly felt they belonged. Hope Sports Academy exists to change that reality.
What makes Hope Sports Academy different is simple but powerful: we develop people. Sports are our platform, but character, mentorship, faith, and life skills are our mission. We help young people excel in the classroom, gain confidence in who they are, and begin to dream beyond their circumstances.
By investing in the whole child, we believe families are strengthened, communities are transformed, and futures are changed.
This work is deeply personal. It is faith-driven. And it is rooted in the belief that every child—whether from a town of 784 people or a major city—deserves access to a safe space where they are challenged, supported, and reminded that their life has purpose.
The Player Development Model: What Coaches Evaluate at Middle School vs. High School
Families will understand how middle school coaches, travel coaches, and high school coaches, trainers, and skill instructors evaluate athletes differently at each stage of development and what players must show as they grow.
The Family Action Plan: 90-Day Development Blueprint and Accountability System
Families will create a clear 90-day plan that aligns school coaches, travel coaches, trainers, academic expectations, and family support so the athlete can grow with structure and consistency.
August 23rd, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Recruiting Landscape & Pathways: Level, Role, and Fit
Parents will learn how recruiting works across different levels of basketball and how to evaluate the right pathway based on ability, position, role, academic fit, and long-term opportunity rather than hype
August 30th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Player Marketing Essentials: Film, Player Profile, and Measurables That Matter
Families will learn how to present an athlete the right way through game film, school and travel performance, player profiles, verified measurables, and honest information that coaches can trust
September 13th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Visits, Relationships, and Evaluation: What Coaches Watch Live
Families will learn what college coaches notice when they watch athletes in middle school feeder settings, travel events, high school games, training sessions, and live periods, including behavior on and off the floor
September 27th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Managing Adversity: Playing Time, Transfers, Injuries, and Mental Resilience
Parents will learn how to respond wisely when athletes face challenges with coaches, trainers, roles, playing time, team fit, injuries, setbacks, or possible transfers across school and travel environments
October 4th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Managing Adversity: Playing Time, Transfers, Injuries, and Mental Resilience
Commitment, Eligibility, and Next Steps: Decision-Making, Academics, and a 12-Month Plan
Families will learn how to make sound decisions about commitments, academic readiness, eligibility, offseason development, team choices, and the next 12 months of support around the athlete.
October 11th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Comment, Eligibility, and Next Steps: Decision-Making, Academics, and a 12-Month Plan
Families will learn how to make sound decisions about commitments, academic readiness, eligibility, offseason development, team choices, and the next 12 months of support around the athlete.
Phase 2
Phase 1
Cohort 2
Managing Adversity: Playing Time, Transfers, Injuries, and Mental Resilience
Parents will learn how to respond wisely when athletes face challenges with coaches, trainers, roles, playing time, team fit, injuries, setbacks, or possible transfers across school and travel environments.
The Family Action Plan: 90-Day Development Blueprint and Accountability System
Families will create a clear 90-day plan that aligns school coaches, travel coaches, trainers, academic expectations, and family support so the athlete can grow with structure and consistency.
Outreach Systems: Emails, Calls, Camp Strategy, and Follow-Up
Outreach Systems, Emails, Calls, Camp Strategy, and Follow-Up Without Overreaching
Parent Leadership in Athletics: Roles, Standards, and Sideline Discipline
Parents learn how to lead well by supporting their athlete, respecting coaches and officials, and maintaining the right behavior at middle school games, travel events, high school contests, workouts, and all other team settings.
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June 28th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
High Performance Habits: Training, Recovery, Nutrition, and Academic Consistency
Families will learn the daily habits athletes need across school teams, travel schedules, training sessions, and home life to improve performance through strong workouts, recovery, nutrition, discipline, and academics.
August 9th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Phase 2
Recruiting Landscape & Pathways: Level, Role, and Fit
Parents will learn how recruiting works across different levels of basketball and how to evaluate the right pathway based on ability, position, role, academic fit, and long-term opportunity rather than hype.
August 30th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Visits, Relationships, and Evaluation: What Coaches Watch Live
Families will learn what college coaches notice when they watch athletes in middle school, feeder settings, travel events, high school games, training sessions, and live periods, including behavior on and off the floor.
September 27th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
The Player Development Model: What Coaches Evaluate at Middle School vs. High School
Parents learn what coaches look for at each stage of development, including skill level, effort, attitude, coach ability, decision-making, physical growth, and long-term potential from middle school through high school.
July 12th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Communication & Character: Building a Recruitable Reputation
Parents and athletes will learn how communication, attitude, body language, accountability, and respect for all coaches, teammates, trainers, and officials help build a strong reputation over time.
August 16th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Player Marketing Essentials: Film, Player Profile, and Measurables that Matter
Families will learn how to present an athlete the right way through game film, school and travel performance, player profiles, verified measurables, and honest information that coaches can trust.
September 13th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Managing Adversity: Playing Time, Transfers, Injuries, and Mental Resilience
Parents will learn how to respond wisely when athletes face challenges with coaches, trainers, roles, playing time, team fit, injuries, setbacks, or possible transfers across school and travel environments.
October 4th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Comment, Eligibility, and Next Steps: Decision-Making, Academics, and a 12-Month Plan
Outreach Systems: Emails, Calls, Camp Strategy, and Follow-Up Without Overreaching
Parents and athletes will learn how to communicate with college coaches in a respectful and organized way through emails, calls, camp planning, and follow-up that reflects maturity and preparation.
September 20th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Competitive Environment Selection: Choosing Teams, Coaches, and Trainers for Long Term Growth
Parents will learn how to choose the right middle school program, travel team, high school opportunity, trainer, and supplemental coach based on long-term development instead of hype, pressure, or short-term visibility.
August 2nd, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
June 28th,
The Family Action Plan: 90-Day Development Blueprint and Accountability System
Families will create a clear 90-day plan that aligns school coaches, travel coaches, trainers, academic expectations, and family support so the athlete can grow with structure and consistency.
August 23rd, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
Commitment, Eligibility, and Next Steps: Decision-Making, Academics, and a 12-Month Plan
Families will learn how to make sound decisions about commitments, academic readiness, eligibility, offseason development, team choices, and the next 12 months of support around the athlete.
October 11th, 6 PM - 7:15 PM
June 28th, 6 PM - 7:15
Our Founder
Daryl Oliver bio.

Audra Smith
Chief Executive of Programming
Vice President of Play4Kay
Jeremy Duckworth
Treasurer
Chief Executive Officer,
Central Alabama Redevelopment Alliance
Monica Drake
Director of Community Engagement,
Pinnacle Financial Partners
Daryl L. Oliver SR.
Chief Executive Officer
Chief Executive Officer,
Digital Fulcrum
Brian Wilson
Vice Chair,
Owner Guglhupf Bakery & Restaurant
Anthony Oliver
Board Chair
Estimating/Senior Project Manager,
Joiner Fire Sprinkler
