The Mission
TAP.IN Hoops is dedicated to providing high-level basketball training programs that focus on real player development, confidence, and discipline.
I work with youth and high school athletes who want to sharpen their skills, improve their decision-making, and build habits that translate to game performance.
Our training is structured, intentional, and detail-driven. Every athlete is coached with purpose, accountability, and standards that push them to grow on and off the court.
The goal is simple: develop complete players through consistent training, strong fundamentals, and a mindset built on preparation, effort, and belief.
COACH KEV

Coach Kev
My name is Kevion Chapman, and basketball has been a major part of my life for as long as I can remember.
I played basketball through high school and had opportunities coming out to play at the D3, D2, and NAIA levels. At the time, I chose not to take those offers. Instead, I enrolled at the University of North Texas (UNT), believing a bigger opportunity would come if I waited.
That decision taught me one of the biggest lessons of my life.
After a year at UNT, I got back in the gym, got back in shape, and earned another opportunity—this time at Dallas Christian College. Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to play a full season due to transcript issues tied to financial debt from UNT. That door closed before it ever really opened.
I share this part of my story for a reason.
Basketball doesn’t always go how you plan it. Talent alone isn’t enough. Decisions, timing, discipline, and follow-through matter just as much. My message to young athletes is simple: take the opportunities in front of you, stick it out when things get hard, and never stop working—even when the path looks different than you imagined.
Today, I give back to the game by training and developing players. I love basketball, I study it deeply, and I take pride in teaching it the right way—skill development, game understanding, confidence, and preparation that actually translates to real games.
My goal isn’t just to make players better on the court. It’s to help them avoid mistakes I made, maximize the opportunities they have, and grow as athletes and people.