TELVIN HODO
Youth basketball coach, teacher
It was a chance encounter during his freshman year at
Morehouse College that changed the direction of his
life.
Telvin Hodo, a Troup High graduate, was in the Morehouse
College gym nearly 10 years ago when a local
middle-school basketball team came in to use the facility.
Hodo took an interest in the team and volunteered to help
out, a decision that led to an intense interest in coaching
and guiding young people that continues to this day.
“I didn’t have any coaching experience,” Hodo said. “It
stopped me on a dime. This is what I want to do. Even
teaching kids that weren’t necessarily going to get playing
time, but seeing the joy the game brought to them, it was
like, ‘I can do this. This is fun.’”
Hodo not only coached the team, but he served as a
mentor to the players.
“I’d sit behind the bench, and talk, and (the head coach)
invited me to his class, and I spent four or five days in his
class,” Hodo said. “I’d come in and sit, talk and help the
guys out. It really gave me a sense of purpose of what I
need to do in life.”
That valuable, life-altering experience of helping with
the basketball team stayed with Hodo, and when he returned
to Troup County after graduating from Georgia,
he began his own travel basketball team, the West Point
Kings. Hodo’s hope was to not only teach the sport, but to
provide some inspiration and motivation to young men in
the area, to let them know they could achieve their goals.
“Once I got to LaGrange in 2016, I started it,” Hodo
said. “I had upwards of 20 young men at one point. I look
to mentor, tutor, help them make better decisions, talk
through things.”
While Hodo remains committed to the West Point
Kings, he also makes an impact on young people as a math
teacher.
Hodo’s message to all of the young people he works with,
whether it’s the players on his travel team or his students,
is that there is a path to success, whether it’s in athletics or
not.
“You can be here (in college),” Hodo said. “They see, it’s
possible. I’m like, OK, that’s the goal. Let’s go do it.”
— Story by Kevin Eckleberry, photo by Jenna Oden
TWENTY UNDER FORTY • 11