How Chadrack Mpoyi found a second family at Crean Lutheran
The warm smiles coming from Chadrack Mpoyi are plentiful these days. After forcefully dominating the paint and protecting the rim in Crean Lutheran wins, the imposing big man beams as teammates, classmates and supporters congratulate him. He offers a hug in return.
Mpoyi says heβs having fun each game in his one season of high school basketball in the U.S., the 6-foot-11 African enjoying a meteoric rise to become one of the top West Coast centers in this yearβs class. A virtual unknown coming from Congo two summers ago to attend school in Orange County, Mpoyi saw his recruitment skyrocket and lead to him signing with Minnesota. He scored 14 points during Crean Lutheranβs 59-52 win over JSerra in the Southern Section Division 1A championship game Saturday. The Saints (26-7) qualified for for the CIF Southern California Regional that begins Tuesday, extending Mpoyiβs senior season.
In a way, it all happened so quickly, by leaps and bounds. Within a week of arriving in June 2024 on a student visa, Mpoyi was donning the Saintsβ jersey and playing in a tournament in Corona in preparation for the NCAA evaluation period when college coaches can watch recruits play in person. By that August, he claimed an offer from Washington. The following summer, he had about two dozen offers.
Still, Mpoyiβs swift emergence came amid a rather inauspicious beginning to his journey. He left his father, mother and siblings to pursue a basketball opportunity on another continent. He tried seeking international student transfer eligibility with the highly regarded Crean Lutheran program, but the CIF Southern Section ruled he couldnβt play on the varsity team in the 2024-25 season. Heβd be sitting out.
Chadrack Mpoyi saw the Crean Lutheran community support him before he was ever able to play in an official game for the Saints.
(Diamond Leung / For The Times)
And soon after that β¦
βMy mom passed away,β Mpoyi said quietly, declining to discuss it much further.
The Crean Lutheran community responded by wrapping its arms around the teenager with the 7-foot-5 wingspan. A second family β a prominent Orange County one β stepped forward to open its doors to Mpoyi and form a stateside support system.
βAnd he blended in beautifully,β said Stacy Jones, the mother of his host family.
Crean Lutheran is named after John Crean, the recreational vehicle pioneer and philanthropist with a rags-to-riches story. As a child, Crean and his family left North Dakota at the start of the Great Depression and settled in Southern California as they barely scraped by, and his Irish immigrant father was in poor health. As an Orange County businessman, Crean ultimately became the founder and chief executive of Fleetwood Enterprises, a Fortune 500 company with annual revenue surpassing $3 billion. His foundation donated $10 million after his 2007 death to help establish Irvineβs first Christian high school.
The school has made it a well-worn path for international students to come for a faith-centered education in one of the newer planned residential communities in the city. And boysβ basketball coach Austin Loeb, through his connection to the Luol Deng Foundation, has facilitated the addition of several players from the former NBA All-Starβs native South Sudan. Theyβve stayed with host families and gone on to play at the college level. The Saints currently include two Sudanese players in senior forwards Jacob Majok, who has signed with UC Riverside, and Will Malual.
βItβs a ministry as well [as] an opportunity to get kids that come from nothing and give them this,β Loeb said in Crean Lutheranβs gym after a Saints win.
Mpoyi is the first player from Congo to play for Crean Lutheran. He arrived with the ability to speak three languages β French, Swahili and Lingala.
Crean Lutheran guard Caden Jones recalled how the team communicated with the new kid as Mpoyi joined a trip to Santa Barbara for a summer tournament the week after he arrived.
βThrough Google Translate,β said Jones, a dual-sport standout who also stars at quarterback for Crean Lutheran. βEvery food place we went to, he wanted a cheeseburger or pizza. By the end of it, we just knew what he wanted so we didnβt have to ask him.β
Jonesβ mom, Stacy, upon first spotting Mpoyi wearing the Crean Lutheran jersey, wondered who was the player sitting by himself.
βNobody was talking to him,β Stacy recalled. βNobody offered him water or anything. We went to him and said, βDo you need water or a protein bar?β He didnβt speak English. He didnβt know what we were talking about. So we just went and got it, and we asked the coach, βWhatβs going on with this kid?ββ
Mpoyi was limited not only by the language. Heβd been playing basketball only a few years, after he started watching videos of Hakeem Olajuwon, an NBA star from Nigeria, so he also had more to learn on the court.
βHe traveled every other possession,β said Loeb, who served as Crean Lutheranβs top assistant coach last season. βIβm not kidding.β
Eventually, Stacy learned about Mpoyiβs living situation off campus and found it to be unsatisfactory for him.
βThe coach says, βDo you mind? Can you just take him for a couple weeks until I can find a host family?ββ Stacy recalled. βAnd so we did, and then β¦ we couldnβt give him away.β
Chadrack Mpoyi greets Stacy Jones, right, the mother of his host family, after leading Crean Lutheran to a win at Cypress.
(Diamond Leung / For The Times)
She laughed and smiled.
Said Caden: βJust being with him every day, heβs like a brother to me now. I love him to death.β
Stacy never got a chance to speak with Mpoyiβs mother, but she could tell they were very close. She understood that his momβs life revolved around church and raising nine kids, Mpoyi being the baby of the family.
Less than three months after he left his hometown of Likasi, his mother died.
βItβs pretty sad and incredible,β Loeb said. βHis mom had cancer and when this opportunity came about for him to come over to the U.S., she didnβt tell him because she thought he would stay. Once he was here, she told him she was sick, but he didnβt know how quick it would be. Talk about putting your kids above yourself.β
Mpoyi was neither able to travel back home nor play in high school basketball games as an outlet. As Mpoyi mourned, the team had to encourage him to step outside of the house to clear his mind, said Caden, who extended empathy beyond the hospitality inside of it. Mpoyiβs faith deepened.
βI was driving him to school β he wanted to go to school, and put his hand on my arm, and he says, ββ¦ I really want to get baptized in honor of my mom,ββ Stacy Jones said, her voice shaking. βAnd I just lost it.β
A month after losing his mother, Mpoyi was baptized at chapel held in the school gym. Wearing a Crean Lutheran hoodie, he bowed his head in front of the whole school, including teammates and coaches, and received a standing ovation.
Stacy, who had arranged a French-speaking pastor, also surprised Mpoyi with a letterman jacket, with his momβs favorite picture and Bible verse custom-printed on the back.
βIt was just cool to see him continuing his faith and how happy inside he was to take the journey,β Caden said.
Cadenβs father, Steve, is the global chairman and chief executive of Allied Universal, the private security provider for many Fortune 500 companies, and he oversees the third-largest private employer in North America. The only companies with more employees are Walmart and Amazon.
Crean Lutheran teammates Chadrack Mpoyi and Caden Jones, waiting to check into a game, say they are like brothers after living together.
(Diamond Leung / For The Times)
Stacy, his wife, is a philanthropist who has joined him in raising $13 million in the last seven years for victims of human trafficking by supporting Veraβs Sanctuary, an Orange County residential drug rehabilitation center for young women.
Together they opened the doors of their home to Mpoyi and later signed on for guardianship. Mpoyi didnβt know the family well upon arriving to the gated community of Coto de Caza, but adapted β and grew in more ways than one.
Stacy said she enlisted an English instructor who also spoke French and that Mpoyi picked up the language in two weeks. βHeβs a sponge,β she said. βHe just absorbs everything. Heβs wicked smart.β
Mpoyi said it was hard, but in four or five months, Loeb described a night-and-day difference in his English-speaking ability and marveled at the progress, noting that he carries a grade-point average above 3.0. Stanford would join the schools offering him a scholarship.
The Joneses were especially busy during the fall of 2024 raising two sons as elite athletes as well. Caden was a four-star quarterback when he suffered a season-ending knee injury that September before bouncing back as a junior by throwing for 30 touchdowns and more than 3,000 yards to draw heavy recruiting interest. Carter Jones flipped his commitment from California to Arizona that October after developing into a three-star linebacker at Crean Lutheran, and he formed a tight bond with Mpoyi before leaving for college.
With the new dynamics, what was it like in that household?
βWe are a very physical family,β Stacy said. βLots of hugs.β
Said Caden: βA lot of food. We eat a lot.β
And with the team, Loeb said what made Mpoyi special was how he connected, explaining, βHe loves people so much and he cares about them. Heβs a natural leader.β
Sidelined last season, Mpoyi dedicated himself to lifting weights and adding muscle. That part he could control, according to Loeb, who credited Mpoyi for sticking with the plan. With Crean Lutheranβs strength program β and having access to some weights at the Jones home β he went from 195 pounds to about 245. The transformation of his body enabled him to transform his game as he progressively improved his combination of physicality and skill.
βI can do several things,β said a smiling Mpoyi, who watches video of another 6-11 talent, NBA great Kevin Garnett, before games. βI can dunk on people, and then I can face up.β
Said Loeb: βWhen he came over, he was more of like a stretchy forward. I wanted to turn him into a more traditional big right now because that would help him to be successful. But he still has the mobility to get out and guard and still be physical. Heβs learning the game, and he has really good touch.β
And perseverance, for which Loeb nominated Mpoyi for the Naismith High School Basketball Courage Award. Loeb believes the trait comes from Mpoyiβs strong faith.
Steve Jones, who wrote a book about achieving more in business and life titled, βNo Off Season: The Constant Pursuit of More,β sees the same.
βAll people see is this giant 7-foot kid,β Steve said. βWhat people donβt see is how hard of a worker he is.β
Midnight neared as Steve, dressed in Crean Lutheran gear, visited with Arizona football staffers at the Saintsβ basketball game at the Nike Extravaganza in Santa Ana. They watched Caden hoop with Crean Lutheran fighting for a spot in the Open Division playoff field, as thereβs interest in having him join his older brother on the Wildcatsβ football team. Caden, a 6-foot-3 point guard, also has received basketball offers from Washington and UC Santa Barbara.
Aside from running a global company that does about $23 billion in annual revenue out of its Irvine headquarters, Steve, a former college football player at Cal Poly whose father played for Bear Bryant, also oversaw the recruitment process for Mpoyi last summer and looked out for his best interests.
Forced to sit out last season, Mpoyi developed into a three-star prospect while playing for All In Elite on the Under Armour circuit and in summer high school events. Mpoyi and Crean Lutheran traveled to Mesa, Ariz., last June and captured a bracket title at Section 7, an event crawling with college coaches. Minnesota offered the following week, and Loeb counted 23 offers over the summer.
βI wanted to make sure no one took advantage of him,β Steve said. βI wanted to make sure he found the right fit. I wanted to make sure that coaches really wanted him for the right reason, that it was the right offense for him.β
Crean Lutheran coach Austin Loeb has watched Chadrack Mpoyi fight to overcome obstacles after he arrived from Congo.
(Diamond Leung / For The Times)
That ended up being in the bruising Big Ten with Minnesota. After the 19-year-old signed with just five years of playing experience, Coach Niko Medved said in a statement in November: βChadrack has an incredible upside, has a great motor and is athletic. One of the first things we noticed was how well he moves for his size and his ability to move his feet and protect the rim.β
Itβs Stacy who has taken on the difficult task of trying to track down Congolese documentation as she works with Minnesotaβs compliance department to help Mpoyi meet NCAA eligibility requirements.
Mpoyi not only acknowledges that the Joneses have supported him but also has shown protective instincts with the family. When theyβre walking around, heβll wait and make sure sheβs nearby, Stacy said.
βHeβs very humble and I know he comes from small beginnings but he never lets you know it,β she said. βWe live in a nice house, and they ask him all the time, whatβs it like to live with the Joneses? And heβs like, what are you talking about? He doesnβt engage with those kinds of conversations. How much money do they have? Like, why are you asking? Does it matter?
βHeβs a gift.β
βHeβll be in our lives forever,β said Steve, who envisions holidays in which Mpoyi is able to come back from college to their home. βItβs like heβs turned into our son. I donβt know if we originally thought that was going to happen. When you say, βCan someone live at your house for a little bit,β you say βYes.β
βItβs like we have a third son forever.β