
Coach Ushearnda Stroud and Fope Ayo

Senior Fope Ayoio reveals that she will be a Wolverine.

WNBA star Aliyah Boston
of the Indiana Fever (left) and Taina Mair, senior star player at Duke
University, are two of the most famous graduates from coach Ushearnda
Stroud’s AAU program.
This is the story of two women, Fope Ayo and Ushearnda Stroud. The 6-foot, 5-inch Fope (pronounced Fo-pay) Ayo is rated the number one high school female basketball player in Massachusetts (number 45 in the United States). Ushearnda (pronounced U-shearn-da) Stroud is one of the top high school and AAU basketball coaches in America. The two women have known each other for years. Both of their families attend the All Peoples Church in Reading. Growing up, Fope was not interested in basketball. She wanted to be a dancer.
In step one of her basketball transformation, according to a recent podcast, Fope explains an encounter with a basketball recruiter after a Walmart visit. “In the summer of sixth grade, I go out in the Walmart aisle, and I see (this man) and he’s really tall, and he says, ‘Do you play basketball?’ And I was thinking, ‘Oh my gosh, another basketball question.
I hear this all the time.’
He said, ‘My name is Scott Hazelton, and I’m the coach of the Mass
Rivals.’” He asked me if I wanted to try a couple of skills and drills
and see if I liked it. And my dad was like, ‘Oh, you’re going!’ And I’ve
been on Rivals ever since.”
Step
two happened one Sunday in 2020 when coach Stroud (with a coaching
resume that would rival that of many in the Naismith Basketball Hall of
Fame) took a look at the frame of young dancer Fope and decided, in her
words, “It’s now or never. It’s time to see if this young dancer could
become a basketball player. That was the moment that I decided to see if
she would take the challenge to play the game I love. It
was the year of COVID 19. My Amateur Athletic Union team was scheduled
to play in a national tournament. I told Fope that I wanted her to just
‘run’ up and down the court as fast and hard as she could, from the
moment I put her into the game until the moment I took her out. And that
is exactly what she did. She ran her heart out for every second she was
on the court, from the first minute of the first quarter until the last
minute of the fourth quarter. She wasn’t worried about scoring,
rebounding, etc. — she was focused on doing what was asked of her. I
knew from that moment that she would be a special player once we taught
her the skills needed to play the game.”
Coach
Stroud knows of what she speaks — and has a track record of success to
back up her thinking when it comes to recognizing basketball talent.
Raised and educated in Germany (“I’m not fluent in the German language,
but if you drop me in Ramstein, I can speak it well enough to make my
way around”) where she played collegiately and
professionally before coming to the United States, receiving her
bachelor of science degree from Sacred Heart University.
The
Georgia native would gain a reputation as a top-flight “teacher of the
game” with many of her recent athletes continuing their academic and
basketball careers at prestigious schools such as the University of
Connecticut, which is the reigning NCAA Division 1 National Champion.
The Huskies are currently undefeated and ranked number one in the Associated
Press Poll. Boston College, Marquette, Syracuse, Providence, Dartmouth,
Holy Cross and Brown are among the top colleges that have players from
coach Stroud’s nest.
WNBA
star Aliyah Boston of the Indiana Fever and Taina Mair (senior star
player at Duke University) are two of the most famous graduates from her
AAU program.
“I
remember traveling from my home in New Hampshire to Worcester, Mass., to
train Aliyah, but it was Taina who brought me special distinction while
I coached at the Brooks School [from 2018-2025]. It was a dream
coaching that 2021-22 team that went undefeated for the first time in
school history, winning the NEPSAC Class B title and ISL championship,
the first and only time that has happened in 40 years. It was my second
championship team, the first coming in 2019-2020. Taina has continued
her great play at Duke, becoming only the third player in school history
to score 1,000 points and 500 assists.”
When
asked what places Fope Ayo in the class of Aliyah Boston and Taina
Mair, coach Stroud simply states: “Fope has their drive, competitive
spirit, will to win, and is one of the most coachable players I have
ever seen. Her special feeling for her education and community makes her
a rarity among today’s athletes. While being heavily recruited by South
Carolina and Stanford universities, this young woman met with the top
officials of those schools, including former U.S. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, who told Fope that she would be honored to be her
academic advisor should she choose to attend Stanford, before deciding
to attend the University of Michigan this coming fall.
“During other college recruiting trips she asked questions of college presidents and other top
officials about critical issues in ‘today’s life,’ not basketball. Every
person who spoke with her came away impressed by her compassion for
others. Her Nigerian-immigrant parents [mother Funke — pronounced
Foon-kee — is a retired lawyer, and father Faloran, an engineer] are
doing an incredible job of raising Fope and her younger sister Fiyin
[pronounced Feehan], who are both star players on this year’s Austin
Prep women’s basketball team — 9-7 record as of this writing.
While
the major attention centers around 6-foot, 5-inch Fope (who averages 24
points, 17 rebounds, and three blocked shots a game), coach Stroud is
of the opinion that the 6-foot, 2-inch Fiyin is a star of the future.
“She
may wind up being better than her older sister. That is the true joy of
coaching: to help develop players who go on to make a contribution to
this life. I am blessed to have a player like Fope Ayo.”
And
the Michigan prospect is blessed to have a coach like Ushearnda Stroud.
The Ayo/Stroud Connection: A divine union that was literally forged in
All People’s Church in Reading.