
Team Sports Consulting Group
Building a championship culture starts at the top and for some, it starts with recruiting the help and expertise from the Team Sports Consulting Group.
Travis Davidson is the VP of Business Development and someone who understands what it takes to build that championship culture at any level. Every team is different. Every player is different. Understanding how to personalize a program for each team to help them reach their goals is the factor that separate TSCG from the field.

“I believe most coaches would agree that you cannot take a one-size-fits-all approach to coaching teams full of uniquely individual players. These players are psychologically unique and have all been shaped by their infinitely different upbringings. What we do is give them the tools they need to customize their approach to each athlete and shape their team approach to align with psychological trends within the group,” said Davidson.
Current Bishop Kelley baseball coach and former MLB player Parker Frazier has used the services of TSCG and understands the team dynamic but there is always room for improvement.
“It gives me a better understanding about how my player operates. It helped me understand more about myself. I can operate with each individual player different,” coach Frazier said. “The biggest thing I took away from using TSCG was I know how my players handle and react to stress and I understand who my vocal leaders are and who isn’t.”
“ ”Bixby High School’s Dean Wilson said TSCG has helped with the challenges of taking over a program in his first season at BHS.

“We use the ProScans a lot of different ways. It gives us great insight about how our players tick and the subtle ways we can positively influence their development that we’d otherwise miss or overlook. We’ve put together hitting/defense groups, competition teams and more, composed of players with similar or opposite traits, depending on the atmosphere we want to create,” Wilson said. “It has been especially beneficial in taking over a new program, because it shrinks the learning curve as far as getting acquainted with the person behind the player. Having to put together rosters, lineups and doing so with guys we’ve known for, in some cases, just a couple months can be challenging, so having a head start on knowing what we can expect allows us to work from a pre-existing template and build from there rather than do guesswork as to the person we’re dealing with and miss out on valuable developmental time.”
Davidson said TSCG approaches Athletic Directors in a different manner.
“Athletic Directors and coaches value different things, so they require different approaches. Now, the middle of the AD/Coach Venn Diagram is plenty stout, but an Athletic Director might want to speak more about revenue generation, operational implementation. NIL impact, and cross-sport opportunities. A Coach wants to hear more about stress identification, on-field application, and energy drain. The people in these roles are tasked with developing the player and the person, so they value our process because it gives these kids the tools to be better teammates, students, friends, and family members,” said Davidson.


