Next Level Sports College Coach Evaluation
One of the best ways to get better is by getting an evaluation by a current college coach. With the Next Level Sports College Coach Evaluation you can now submit your film to the college coach of your choice. From there the coach will send you a write up including your strengths and weaknesses, drills you can do to improve, what division the coach feels you can play at, and more for $400. There is also an option to go over the evaluation with the coach who wrote it for an additional $100.
Meet The Coaches
Coach Minor
Brant Minor is in his sixth year at Pacific University
Minor in his first season on the sideline with the Boxers helped the team post a 7-18 record and 4-12 in Northwest Conference play, with the program seeing their first ever NWC "Freshman of the Year" as Nick Drynan earned the honors.
Away from Pacific, Minor has established Max Hoops (MaxHoops.com) which runs camps, clinics and showcases around the country. In the summer of 2018, Minor hosted “The Exclusive” a fifty team NCAA certified tournament in Las Vegas. Plus, he has been involved in basketball camps throughout the country including Duke, Gonzaga, Oregon, and Tennessee, in addition to camps throughout the Northwest. “Having the opportunity to work with two of the top coaches of all time in Pat Summit & Coach K, has been an amazing experience," Minor said. "I have seen firsthand the passion and pride they both bring to coaching.”
Prior to joining the Pacific staff, he was assistant coach at Southern Oregon University for five years. He helped lead the Raiders to an ever-increasing win totals in each of his seasons in Ashland. Minor played a key role in the recruitment of 2010-2011 "Cascade Conference Newcomer of the Year" Jordan Highland, who was a first team all CCC performer and also received NAIA All-America recognition. He also helped lured to Southern Oregon, two other standouts - David Sturner, the 2012-2013 CCC newcomer of the year and a four time All-American selection, Eric Thompson.
Before Southern Oregon University, he worked with the women's program at the University of Portland’s women's basketball team and men's team at Warner Pacific. He was involved in the coaching and management of the Oregon Stars, a traveling AAU basketball team that competed nationally. The Oregon Stars gave high school players the opportunity to compete against some of the top talent in the country. Then, he later helped start The Southern Oregon Showcase, a fall basketball league in Grants Pass. By 2011, the league boasted over 70 participants, each provided with the opportunity to play against high level competition in the months leading up to the high school season.
As a student-athlete, Minor played two years of NCAA Division I basketball at the University of Portland after a being a three-time all-conference selection at Grants Pass high school where he also earned all-league honors in soccer.
Minor was also active in the nationally recognized Center for Entrepreneurship. Minor’s business plan for his basketball camps received first place at the University of Portland’s Legacy Challenge Business Plan Competition.
Minor received his Master’s degree in Business Administration from Southern Oregon University in 2014, and earned his bachelor's degree from the University of Portland from the Pamplin School of Business. He currently resides in King City with his wife Nicole and daughter, Maggie.
Coach Churnac
Xavier Churnac, one of the college's Residence Directors, is entering his third season as head men's basketball coach at JCC after being named head coach in 2019. His teams’ have made the Region 3 DII Final Four in 2019, quarter finals in the 2020, and championship game during the 2021 season. Prior to the 2018-2019 season before Churnac was the interim head coach, he was an assistant coach for the program under current Director of Athletics and Recreation, George Sisson.
Churnac has been with the program since 2015, where he has coached one NJCAA All-American and 12 Region III All-Conference players. The program has been to the Region 3 Conference Final Four three times, including the championship game in 2016 in that span.
During his time here at JCC, Churnac has served as a counselor at a number of prestigious college basketball camps, including Ohio State, Maryland, West Virginia, Syracuse, Michigan State, and Notre Dame in the summers.
Prior to coaching, Churnac played one season of semi-pro basketball with the Erie Hurricane of the PBL. He later played one season for the Jamestown Jackals of NABL, winning the division championship and making it to the national championship game in 2018 in his offseason as an assistant coach for JCC.
Churnac played two seasons here at JCC from 2010-2012. He served as a two-year captain finishing First Team All-Region, leading the team in scoring, and led Region 3 in three-pointers made. Churnac then went on to Edinboro University of Pennsylvania on an athletic scholarship.
Churnac also assisted Bryan Hodgson, current Assistant Men's basketball Coach at The University of Alabama, as an assistant coach for I-90 Elite AAU Basketball Team in the spring of 2011 & 2012.
Born in Kingston, Jamaica, Churnac moved to the U.S. when he was five years old. He grew up in East Harlem, N.Y. with his mother Judith and sister Yoshan. He attended the HS of Art & Design where he served as captain of the basketball team from 2008-2010. He also earned All-City honors as a senior and led the team in scoring and rebounding.
Coach Churnac, 27, received a B.S. in Communications from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania in 2014 and an AAS in General Studies from Jamestown Community College in 2012.