Parents and kids showed up at A.C. Reynolds High School in Asheville on July 1 expecting a real football camp day with Carolina Panthers wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan. What they found instead was a dead end: empty fields, no organizers, and no camp.
The event had been promoted months earlier by FlexWork Sports Management as a youth football camp where boys and girls ages 6-16 could work with McMillan, take photos and receive free gear. Tickets were priced at about $100, and plenty of families made the trip with that promise in mind.
Some came from long distances. Some took time off work.
At least 20 people were estimated to have waited at the school before heading home.
McMillan, according to the reporting, had no part in planning the camp. Organizers only asked him to appear, and he was unable to attend. A FlexWork representative later said the cancellation had actually happened back in February.
The school’s staff, meanwhile, said they were not looped in the way they should have been. Reynolds High School coach Chandler Greer said he first heard about the camp from a flyer.
His staff tried reaching FlexWork Sports several times and got no response. Greer also said the school never approved the gathering, and that a dead period on the NCHSAA calendar would have blocked use of the facility anyway.
Some families got last-minute emails, but those messages tried to move registrations to a different Xavier Legette camp that had already taken place weeks earlier in Charlotte. Others heard nothing at all. Even after the cancellation, confirmation emails still pointed parents to the original McMillan event.
“We’re really disappointed about the lack of information and communication,” Alyssa Kowalski, who brought her son to the camp from South Carolina, said. “You have all these children that are looking forward to seeing these players they look up to. It’s very unfortunate you’re letting their dreams go to waste.”
The backlash didn’t stop there. One popular account called on McMillan to choose better partners, while much of the blame landed on the organizers for what looked like a complete management breakdown. FlexWork Sports, which runs athlete-led camps nationwide, has staged similar events with other stars without this kind of fallout.
For parents, though, the problem is still unresolved. Weeks later, many were still waiting on refunds, and no public statement had addressed the money or the communication failures.
Attendees wanted more than apologies. They wanted their cash back and better safeguards for the future.
The episode also put McMillan in an awkward spot. He earned Offensive Rookie of the Year honors in 2025 and quickly became a key piece for Bryce Young and the Panthers, so fans expected a cleaner community effort from someone with that kind of profile. He continued offseason training with the Panthers and focused on Year 2 improvements after a strong rookie campaign, but the camp mess kept hanging over the online conversation.
For now, the story is still about frustrated families, unanswered questions, and a youth camp that never happened.
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