Findlay Prep was a highly regarded boys' basketball preparatory program in Henderson, Nevada, active primarily from 2006 to 2019. Founded by Cliff Findlay, a prominent Las Vegas automobile dealer, it operated as an independent entity hosted by Henderson International School, prioritizing the recruitment and development of elite out-of-state prospects through a national travel schedule rather than conventional local high school participation.[1][2]The program amassed an enviable record, including early dominance with 116 wins against 5 losses and back-to-back ESPN RISE national championships, culminating in three overall national titles such as the 2012 ESPN National High School Invitational.[3][4][5] Findlay Prep served as a direct conduit to elite college and professional basketball, producing 17 NBA players and featuring 12 McDonald's All-Americans among its alumni.[1]Its operational structure, resembling a semi-professional touring team with minimal emphasis on traditional academics or districtaffiliation, generated significant controversy, including NCAA designation as "non-scholastic" and critiques for undermining the integrity of high school sports by functioning more as a talent aggregator than an educational institution.[6][7] The program dissolved abruptly in 2019 after its host school shuttered campuses due to plummeting enrollment, though a short-lived revival attempt occurred in 2020 without long-term success.[2][8]
History
Founding and Early Development
Findlay Prep was established in 2006 in Las Vegas, Nevada, by Cliff Findlay, president of the Findlay Automotive Group and a former standout basketball player at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV).[1][8] As a local businessman with a background in the sport, Findlay sought to address the absence of advanced basketball development programs in Southern Nevada, creating an academy focused on combining academic rigor with elite athletic training to position prospects for Division I college scholarships.[9] The initiative drew from Findlay's vision of offering talented youth a structured environment to hone skills without the distractions of traditional high school settings, initially funding housing for players in a five-bedroom property he purchased for $425,000.[10][11]In its formative years, the program operated as a standalone basketball entity without a conventional high school campus, with student-athletes pursuing accredited coursework through partnerships while the team barnstormed a national schedule against premier opponents.[12] Led by head coach Michael Peck from inception, Findlay Prep posted dominant early results, including just three losses across its first three seasons by 2010, which helped cultivate a reputation for producing polished recruits.[13] This rapid ascent was bolstered by Findlay's financial backing, enabling recruitment of top national talent and facilities access, setting the stage for sustained competitiveness.[14]
Expansion and Peak Performance
Findlay Prep's basketball program expanded rapidly after its 2006 founding by attracting top national and international recruits to its Henderson, Nevada, base, transitioning from reliance on post-graduate players to a self-sustaining high school roster that competed at elite levels.[1][15]This growth culminated in the 2009 season, when the Pilots posted a perfect 33-0 record—their first without post-graduates—en route to the national No. 1 ranking and an ESPN RISE national championship.[15][10]The program reached its peak from 2008 to 2013, securing three national championships (2009, 2010, 2012) at events like the National High School Invitational, a runner-up finish in 2008, and nine semifinal appearances across those years, while compiling an overall record of 116-5 by early 2011.[16][4][10]Sustained success stemmed from rigorous training and player development under coaches like Michael Peck, yielding 14 NBA draftees—including No. 1 overall pick Anthony Bennett in 2013 and champion Tristan Thompson—and up to 17 professional players overall by the mid-2010s.[16][1]Findlay Prep's 11 straight national tournament invitations through 2018 reflected its expanded footprint as a premier prep destination, prioritizing basketball excellence over traditional scholastic enrollment.[16][5]
Closure and Aftermath
In May 2019, Findlay Prep announced it would not field a basketball team for the 2019-20 season, effectively suspending operations due to the termination of its partnership with Henderson International School, the accredited private institution that had provided academic support and legitimacy to the program since the high school's own closure in 2010.[17][16] Robbie Findlay, director of operations for the sponsoring Findlay Automotive Group, indicated a potential long-term shutdown, citing the need for a strategic pause amid operational challenges. This followed years of scrutiny over the program's scholastic status, including a 2013 NCAA designation as "non-scholastic," which had already complicated player eligibility but did not immediately halt activities.[6]The suspension disrupted several elite recruits, including five-star prospect Dior Johnson, who had committed to the program and expressed plans to play there before transferring elsewhere.[17] Other players, such as Caleb Asberry and Jalen Harris, faced abrupt relocations, highlighting vulnerabilities in post-prep pathways for national independents reliant on tenuous academic affiliations.[1] Despite producing 17 NBA draftees over its run, the closure underscored broader issues in prep basketball, where programs like Findlay operated in a gray area between high school athletics and semi-professional development, often prioritizing recruitment over traditional enrollment.[1]By December 2020, after an 18-month hiatus, Findlay Prep resumed basketball operations, fielding a team for national competition under renewed sponsorship, though at a diminished scale compared to its peak years of undefeated seasons and top national rankings.[8] The revival included limited enrollment and a focus on out-of-state talent, but it did not restore the program's prior dominance, as competing academies and AAU circuits had absorbed much of the elite pipeline.[8] Long-term, the episode contributed to evolving NCAA rules on prep eligibility, emphasizing verifiable academic progress over independent scheduling.[5]
Program Structure
Academic Framework
Findlay Prep maintained its academic operations through a partnership with Henderson International School, an accredited private institution in Henderson, Nevada, where student-athletes attended classes without the program possessing its own dedicated curriculum, classrooms, or full administrative structure for education.[1][18] This arrangement, established after the host school's high school program closed following the 2009-2010 academic year, enabled Findlay Prep's approximately 12-15 basketball players to receive instruction in core subjects from certified high school teachers shared with other students.[19]Instruction occurred in small classes, typically limited to five students per session, allowing for individualized attention tailored to meet graduation requirements and NCAA core course progress standards.[20] The curriculum prioritized college-preparatory coursework in subjects such as English, mathematics, science, and social studies, with a structure designed to fulfill the NCAA's 16 core course credits and minimum GPA thresholds for Division I eligibility.[21] Program officials reported a 100% success rate in qualifying participants for NCAA Division I scholarships from its inception in 2006 through at least 2013, attributing this to focused academic planning amid a demanding basketball schedule that included national travel.[21]Despite these measures, the academic framework drew criticism for subordinating education to athletic recruitment and development, as the program's lack of independent scholastic infrastructure raised questions about instructional rigor and oversight.[22] Independent analyses described it as effectively a basketball team housed within a nominal educational shell, with minimal evidence of comprehensive academic engagement beyond eligibility compliance.[23] The dependency on an external accredited host persisted until the partnership dissolved in 2019, exacerbating operational challenges.[24]
Basketball Operations and Facilities
Findlay Prep's basketball operations centered on intensive player development tailored to prepare athletes for Division I college basketball, featuring a structured regimen of strength and conditioning, skill-specific drills, and competitive play. The program employed a coaching staff that included head coach Mike Peck from 2006 to 2012, who compiled a 125–7 record, followed by Todd Simon as head coach, with assistants such as Andy Johnson for practice facilitation and player development, Brett Price as athletic director, Michael Smalley, and former NBA player Jerome Williams.[25][26] Training emphasized up-tempo, defense-oriented play with a 4-out-1-in offensive scheme, daily integration of strength work into the school schedule, and preseason early-morning conditioning sessions, exceeding typical high school intensities while focusing on ball handling, shooting, and passing fundamentals; the team averaged 85 points per game across its national schedule.[27]The competitive operations involved a demanding travel-heavy calendar against top national opponents, contributing to a 189–13 overall record since 2007 and three national championships as a Nike Elite Youth Basketball School.[21][27] Player development extended over nine months annually, with individualized instruction and team practices designed to yield 100% placement of graduates into NCAA Division I programs, supported by Nike sponsorship for elite apparel and equipment.[27]Facilities were shared with the Henderson International School on a 14-acre campus at 1165 Sandy Ridge Avenue in Henderson, Nevada, providing a dedicated gymnasium with an NCAA-regulation three-point line, a renovated weight room outfitted with Bigger-Faster-Stronger equipment updated in 2006, a Findlay-specific locker room, and an adjacent outdoor court for additional training.[28][27] The gym's proximity to dormitories enabled seamless access for routines, supplemented by $2 million in NFL-quality field turf for conditioning and an on-site pool, all under NIPSA accreditation to support the program's operational needs.[28][27]
Achievements and Successes
Competitive Records
The Findlay Prep Pilots basketball team achieved an overall record of 378–43 from the program's inception in the 2006–07 season through its suspension in 2019, yielding a winning percentage of .898.[16][29]The program captured three national titles at the ESPN RISE National High School Invitational (NHSI), defeating Quality Education Academy 79–58 in the 2009 championship en route to a 30–0 undefeated season.[30] In 2010, Findlay Prep defended its NHSI crown with a 61–57 victory over Montverde Academy in the final.[31] The Pilots claimed their third NHSI title in 2012, rallying from an 18-point deficit to beat Montverde Academy 86–83 in overtime.[4]Findlay Prep maintained extended dominance, including a 54-game winning streak spanning the 2011–12 and 2012–13 seasons before a semifinal loss to St. Benedict's Prep in the 2013 NHSI.[32] The 2012–13 campaign ended with a 35–1 mark, underscoring the program's consistency against elite national competition.[32] Multiple seasons featured top national rankings, such as ascending to No. 1 in USA Today Super 25 and MaxPreps Xcellent 25 polls after a 16–0 start in late 2009.[33]
Player Pipeline to Professional Levels
Findlay Prep's basketball program facilitated a direct pipeline to professional levels by providing elite competition, specialized coaching, and national exposure during a postgraduate year, enabling players to secure Division I college scholarships and NBA draft positions. From its inception in 2007 until its abrupt closure in 2019, the program produced 17 players who advanced to the NBA, alongside more than 70 recipients of Division I scholarships, demonstrating a high conversion rate from prep participation to professional contracts.[1] This success stemmed from a rigorous schedule against top national opponents, which honed skills and attracted scout attention, often propelling athletes from under-the-radar high school prospects to lottery picks or high draft selections.The typical pathway involved incoming players, many transferring from traditional high schools, spending one year at Findlay Prep to refine athleticism, basketball IQ, and physical conditioning under coaches like Mike Peck, who emphasized NBA-caliber fundamentals. This year frequently resulted in immediate college commitments to power-conference programs, followed by one-to-two college seasons before NBA entry via the draft or undrafted free agency. For instance, Anthony Bennett transitioned from Findlay Prep to UNLV in 2012, earning Big West Freshman of the Year honors before becoming the No. 1 overall pick by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the 2013 NBA Draft.[1] Similarly, Tristan Thompson, after a standout prep season in 2008–09, committed to the University of Texas, where he averaged 13.1 points and 7.8 rebounds as a freshman, leading to his selection 4th overall by the Cavaliers in 2011.[34]Other alumni exemplified diverse routes to the pros, including international development or G League stints prior to NBA rosters. Avery Bradley, following his 2008–09 Findlay tenure, enrolled at the University of Texas and was drafted 19th overall by the Boston Celtics in 2010, later becoming a defensive specialist across multiple teams. P.J. Washington progressed from Findlay Prep in 2016–17 to the University of Kentucky, where he contributed to Final Four appearances, earning a 2019 first-round selection by the Dallas Mavericks. Bol Bol, son of late NBA player Manute Bol, used his 2017–18 prep year to boost his draft stock before entering the 2019 NBA Draft as the 44th pick by the Miami Heat, though his path included overseas play and G League assignments. These trajectories underscore Findlay's role in bridging high school talent gaps, with alumni collectively logging thousands of NBA games by 2019.[1][35]
Notable NBA Alumni
Findlay Prep Years
College
NBA Draft/Entry
Career Highlights
Anthony Bennett
2011–12
UNLV
2013, No. 1 (CLE)
Rookie of the Year contender; played 4 NBA seasons
This table highlights select players whose professional longevity and achievements reflect the program's efficacy in talent maturation, though outcomes varied based on individual work ethic and market demands.[34][1]
Controversies and Criticisms
NCAA and Scholastic Status Disputes
In September 2013, the NCAA designated Findlay Prep as a "non-scholastic" entity under Bylaw 13.1.7.8.1-(a), which applies to teams that do not compete for state or regional championships, thereby restricting college coaches from attending the program's practices and limiting in-person evaluations at games to certified scholastic events only.[36][37] This ruling, which also affected Huntington Prep, stemmed from Findlay Prep's national travel schedule and lack of participation in Nevada state playoffs, despite its limited membership in the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association (NIAA) as a non-competing entity.[38][39]The non-scholastic label sparked disputes over the program's legitimacy as a high school, with critics arguing it functioned more like an AAU or post-graduate team in disguise, prioritizing basketball recruitment over traditional scholastic integration, as students attended classes at the separate Henderson International School while living in team housing.[6][23] Program officials countered that the designation unfairly questioned their academic rigor, citing a reported 100% NCAA qualification rate for players seeking Division I eligibility, supported by consistent approvals from the NCAA Eligibility Center despite the unconventional structure.[40] No widespread player ineligibility resulted, as transcripts from affiliated schools were accepted by the NCAA Clearinghouse, enabling seamless transitions to college programs for recruits like those who earned Division I scholarships annually.[23]The controversy highlighted broader tensions in prep basketball between national showcase programs and state-sanctioned scholastic athletics, but Findlay Prep maintained operations without formal NCAA sanctions on player certifications, though the recruiting restrictions prompted affiliations like NIAA membership to mitigate perceptions of non-traditional status.[6][41] Ultimately, the label did not derail the program's pipeline, as evidenced by its production of eligible NBA-bound talents prior to closure in 2019, underscoring that while structurally disputed, the scholastic outputs met NCAA academic thresholds.[40]
Academic Legitimacy and Recruitment Practices
Findlay Prep operated academically through an affiliation with Henderson International School, a K-8 private institution in Henderson, Nevada, where its 12 basketball players attended classes alongside younger students while living in supervised off-campus apartments.[6][22] Program officials reported a collective team GPA of 3.68 and a 100% NCAA Division I eligibility rate for its graduates, with coaches overseeing compliance to maintain academic standards.[6] However, the structure featured limited daily class time—often confined to midday sessions—amid intensive basketball schedules that included extensive travel for national tournaments, prompting questions about the rigor and priority of coursework relative to athletic development.[22]In September 2013, the NCAA designated Findlay Prep as a "non-scholastic" entity, barring college coaches from conducting in-person recruiting visits on site due to its incomplete integration with state scholastic governance, including quasi-membership status in the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association (NIAA) rather than full affiliation.[6][38] This ruling highlighted structural concerns, as the program lacked traditional high school elements such as a full student body or campus dormitories, positioning it closer to a standalone athletic academy than a conventional secondary school.[6] Defenders, including school faculty, emphasized verifiable grades and assignments, but critics from rival programs labeled it a "diploma mill" or AAU extension, arguing it undermined genuine scholastic legitimacy by funneling resources primarily into basketball.[6]Recruitment practices centered on aggressively scouting and enrolling top national and international prospects, with no players hailing from Nevada itself; all were transfers from distant states or abroad, drawn by promises of elite competition and NBA exposure.[22] Founded in 2006 by automotive dealer Cliff Findlay, the program covered per-player tuition of about $17,000, room and board at $20,000 annually, and tournament travel subsidized by corporate sponsors like Nike, effectively subsidizing relocation for athletic purposes.[22] Examples include forwards Rashad Vaughn from Minnesota and Craig Victor from Louisiana, who transferred specifically for advanced training under coaches like Jerome Williams.[6] Such methods drew ethical scrutiny for creating "basketball factories" that disrupted traditional community-based education, encouraged serial school-hopping among prospects, and potentially inflated professional aspirations at the expense of holistic development, as noted by coaches like Bob Hurley.[6][22]
Notable Alumni
Findlay Prep alumni have achieved prominence in professional basketball, with the program producing 17 players who have appeared in NBA games as of 2019.[1]
Tristan Thompson (class of 2010), drafted 4th overall by the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2011, won NBA championships in 2016 and 2020, and accumulated over 11,000 points and 7,000 rebounds across 13+ seasons with multiple teams including the Cavaliers, Lakers, and Bulls.[9][34]
Kelly Oubre Jr. (class of 2014), selected 15th overall by the Atlanta Hawks (traded to Portland) in 2015, has played for teams including the Wizards, Suns, Warriors, and 76ers, averaging 11.6 points per game over nine seasons through 2024.[42][34]
Avery Bradley (class of 2008), drafted 19th overall by the Boston Celtics in 2010, appeared in 680 regular-season games across 12 NBA seasons with teams like the Celtics, Pistons, and Lakers, known for his defensive prowess.[9][34]
Anthony Bennett (class of 2010), the No. 1 overall pick by the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2013, played four NBA seasons across five teams despite early career challenges.[9]
P.J. Washington (class of 2017), drafted 12th overall by the Charlotte Hornets in 2019, has averaged 11.3 points and 5.3 rebounds per game through five seasons, currently with the Dallas Mavericks.[43]
Dillon Brooks (class of 2014), selected 45th overall by the Houston Rockets in 2017, known for his defensive intensity, has played for the Grizzlies, Rockets, and Rockets again, contributing to playoff runs.[44]
Bol Bol (class of 2018), drafted 44th overall by the Miami Heat (traded to Nuggets) in 2019, has appeared in 62 NBA games for the Nuggets and Suns through 2024.[1]
Legacy and Broader Impact
Findlay Prep's model of concentrated basketball development, housing elite recruits from across the United States and internationally under one roof, established a template for subsequent athletic academies focused on professional pipelines rather than comprehensive secondary education. By 2019, the program had produced 17 NBA players, including Anthony Bennett, selected first overall in the 2013 draft, demonstrating its efficacy in elevating under-the-radar or international talents to Division I colleges and professional leagues.[1][23] This approach prioritized high-level competition and specialized coaching, yielding a near-perfect placement rate into NCAA Division I programs, with early alumni like those in 2012 already featuring four NBA professionals.[45]However, the program's emphasis on athletics over scholastic rigor drew NCAA scrutiny, culminating in 2013 restrictions barring college coaches from in-person evaluations at Findlay Prep and similar "non-scholastic" entities like Huntington Prep, due to concerns over academic legitimacy and eligibility certification.[38] These measures reflected broader regulatory responses to prep schools operating as de facto travel teams, which blurred lines between amateur education and semi-professional training, influencing subsequent NCAA policies on high school verification and recruitment monitoring.[6] Findlay's abrupt 2019 closure, triggered by its host school's consolidation amid declining enrollment, stranded remaining prospects and underscored the fragility of such ventures, prompting discussions on sustainable pathways for elite youth athletes beyond traditional high schools.[17][1]In the landscape of youth basketball development, Findlay Prep accelerated the shift toward prep academies as key intermediaries in the talent pipeline, enhancing visibility for recruits but also amplifying criticisms of diluted academic standards and pay-for-play dynamics facilitated by boosters.[46] Its legacy thus embodies both the efficiencies of targeted athletic investment—evident in its national invitational titles and NBA outputs—and the causal pressures leading to heightened oversight, as regulators sought to preserve competitive equity in college sports.[47]