College Sports
BREAKING: Grace Anne & Lauren announce return to Mizzou Gymnastics
It was repeatedly hinted at the team’s banquet on Saturday that news was coming about “some returners” on Monday. And when the seniors were called up to talk about the season and two were conspicuously absent (well, one was at her brother’s graduation, I was told), it sent excited whispers through the room. My table […]

It was repeatedly hinted at the team’s banquet on Saturday that news was coming about “some returners” on Monday. And when the seniors were called up to talk about the season and two were conspicuously absent (well, one was at her brother’s graduation, I was told), it sent excited whispers through the room.
My table asked Shannon, “So…. ummm… we noticed that [person] wasn’t up there with the seniors. Does that mean…?!” To which he gave us a shrug and was basically like, “Well, I guess you’ll have to see….”
This coach is always keeping things from me, you guys. NOT COOL. (I kid.)
Fellow gymthusiast Nate Salsman and I had thought the return of one of them — we’ll call her Achilles Twin 1 — was very likely to happen, as her Senior Day festivities didn’t seem too… final, I guess you could say. And I tkept thinking, you transferred out here for your final year of gymnastics just to have an injury halt your career and then call it quits? Without us getting to watch her beautiful gymnastics? I hated to see it. The other — we’ll call her Achilles Twin 2 — we were less certain about. Until about a month ago, I started seeing some beam videos pop up on her IG stories, and it got me wondering, is she coming back, too? Why else is she on the beam? Just for funsies? After all, Helen Hu decided on a return not long after hopping up on a beam and doing a routine just for funsies last summer, so seeing someone back on an apparatus again will forever spark curiosity.
Well, as promised, on Monday the news dropped that Lauren Macpherson (Achilles Twin 1) and Grace Anne Davis (Achilles Twin 2) will return to Mizzou Gymnastics on their final year of eligibility. It has massive positive repercussions for this team.
But first, I encourage you to check out their cute lil’ video. Such personality, the Mizzou Gym team.
Welcome to Club Grandma, Lauren and Grace Anne.
Lauren Macpherson and Grace Anne Davis are returning to Mizzou gymnastics for the 2026 season
#MIZ pic.twitter.com/wOEzGldMHj
— Mizzou Gymnastics (@MizzouGym) May 5, 2025
Lauren Macpherson
Welcome back, Lauren! The last time we saw Lauren Macpherson compete was December’s Black & Gold meet where she won the all-around, scoring a 9.90 on beam, and 9.85s on vault (with a stick!), bars and floor. Her upcoming season was looking so promising, which is why Mizzou fans and the gymternet alike were traumatized to learn that she would be out all season after observing her wheeling around on a scooter during Week One’s Beauty & The Beast meet. An achilles injury. Yikes.
But she’s back and she’s healed, and we are EXCITED.
Rather than redo this whole thing, I thought I’d save some time by copy/pasting some of my transfer piece from over the summer. You can check it out in its entirety here.
Welcome to the family!
First Team All-Mountain West (All-Around & Beam)
Second Team All-Mountain West (Floor)
Mountain West Beam Specialist of the Year#MIZ pic.twitter.com/ZgiBvdP3KD
— Mizzou Gymnastics (@MizzouGym) June 19, 2024
When San Jose State grad transfer Lauren Macpherson committed back in June of 2024, the gymternet was screaming about what a good pickup this was. Macpherson, a 5-foot-1 grad student from Gilbert, Ariz., arrived in the offseason from San Jose State, where she earned First Team All-Conference seven times and Second Team honors three times in both the Mountain Pacific (MPSF) and the Mountain West conferences, while also qualifying for NCAA Regionals three times as an all-around competitor. The 2024 Mountain West Beam Specialist of the Year was also awarded First Team All-Mountain West in All-Around and Beam and Second Team honors on floor, and now looks to make some noise now as a part of the vaunted SEC.
CGN Analysis when she committed:
“Lauren Macpherson was such a steady competitor for San Jose State during her four years, and I for one am excited to see her at Missouri and to finally get recognition for what she brings to gymnastics.” -Savanna
With the loss of 4/6 of the no. 4 ranked bars squad and 3/7 of the no. 11 ranked beam team, adding another 9.925 bars (9.830 NQS) and 9.95 beam worker (9.905 NQS, 1st in Mtn W) into the mix is seismic. LMac also is a good FX’er, scoring a 9.925 twice (9.880 NQS), so that’s also an option, though not quite as needed due to the very deep floor rotation that only contained two graduates (Joci & Amari).
In my Too Early Beam Lineup Predictions in August, I touted LMac as the new “Beam Queen,” as she scored under 9.825 just twice in 2024 (9.775, 8.975— a fall in the NCAA Regional Round I), and the rest of the time? Consistent as hell. She scored five 9.825, two 9.85, a 9.875, 9.90, two 9.925, and a 9.950 in late February 2024.
In my Too Early Bars Lineup Predictions, I also fully expected to see her in bars lineups, recording two 9.90 scores and a career-high 9.925 to go with four scores 9.80 and above in the 2024 season.
A few fun skills Lauren incorporates is a Tkatchev (Jocelyn Moore’s high-flying skill that always wows the announcers for its enormous height), as well as a blind full turn into a FTDT (full-twisting double tuck) dismount. You can watch here.
Grace Anne Davis
The wearer of the tiger slippers returns (and my vote for the Spirit Award)! Nate and I watched Grace Anne in multiple intrasquads absolutely KILLING it on vault, and that was one of many reasons we were stunned to learn of her achilles injury. She was looking phenomenal. Per my research-laden Too Early Vault Preview, GAD was a regular in the vault lineup in 2024, recording 11 scores at 9.80 or better, including four at 9.85 or better, while earning just two at 9.775 or lower (9.775 & 9.65 once each). Historically speaking, Davis showed improvement in 2024, as she tied her 9.875 career high set in 2022 against #3 LSU, and her NQS and average were both career highs. She’s got a ton of power, and if the achilles is a go, I expect to see her in at least some lineups, though I can’t say for certain if she’ll be a mainstay in 2026.
Beam was the best of GAD’s events, and the one I’m most excited about. From my August Too Early Beam Preview, I talked about how Grace Anne reached career-highs on beam in 2024 across the board and was one of the Tigers’ most consistent beamers over the last two years. In 2024, GAD earned four scores of 9.90 or above, a couple 9.85s, a trio of 9.80s and five scores 9.75 or below, only one of which was a fall. In fact, Grace Anne has recorded just two falls in the past two years of competition!
Here’s a snippet of Davis’s routine, which features college gymnastics’ best gainer full off the side of the beam.
Combined with the surprise (to us, anyway) commitment of Illinois grad transfer Makayla Green, whom I wrote about on Sunday evening, this team suddenly got a helluva lot deeper. And that’s saying something as they already had a lot of depth.
Here’s how the roster stacks up as of right now. We do expect to see another transfer or two, though the number of transfers I think will ultimately depend upon what’s decided in the House settlement, which is currently at odds due to.. you guessed it.. roster management. Should the expected number hold up, then they’ve got one spot left, barring any other roster defections (both Kylie Minard and Courtney Woods previously announced their intent to transfer).
:no_upscale()/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/25983015/gym.png)
Stay tuned for more Gym news here at Rock M. I suspect we’ll be hearing more news very soon.
WELCOME BACK, LAUREN AND GRACE ANNE!!!! #MIZ
College Sports
Union Men’s Hockey Unveils 2025-26 Schedule
Story Links Men’s Hockey 2025-26 Schedule SCHENECTADY, N.Y. – The Union College men’s hockey team unveiled its 2025-26 schedule on Wednesday afternoon, highlighted by 18 regular-season games and one exhibition contest at the brand-new M&T Bank Center as well as the program’s second trip […]

SCHENECTADY, N.Y. – The Union College men’s hockey team unveiled its 2025-26 schedule on Wednesday afternoon, highlighted by 18 regular-season games and one exhibition contest at the brand-new M&T Bank Center as well as the program’s second trip across the pond for the annual Friendship Four in Belfast.
“We are incredibly excited for the 2025-26 season and cannot wait to be back in front of our fans at our new home,” said head coach Josh Hauge. “The M&T Bank Center is a huge step forward for the future of Union Hockey, and we look forward to getting into the building and taking to the ice for the first time. We also have an incredible opportunity to head to Northern Ireland for the Friendship Four, which will be a great experience for our student-athletes and staff as well as our fans.”
The 2025-26 schedule comprises 34 regular-season games and two exhibitions, with the team’s 22 ECAC Hockey matchups complemented by 12 competitive non-conference contests – including seven of the 12 to be played in Schenectady.
The new season gets underway on October 3 with an exhibition at Colgate University, followed the next day by the first men’s game at M&T Bank Center against Army West Point on Saturday, October 4 at 5 p.m.
Following a weekend series at Mercyhurst University on October 10-11, Union will not leave the Capital Region for over a month thanks to seven home games and the back-end of a weekend home-and-home with Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. The home stretch starts with two games against Niagara University on October 17-18 before a home date with RPI to end October and an away matchup in Troy to start November. ECAC play continues the following weekend with North Country rivals Clarkson University and St. Lawrence University on November 7-8 before closing out the time at home with non-conference games against UMass Lowell (November 14) and the University of New Hampshire (November 15).
The Garnet Chargers will be away from home for the next two weekends, albeit with greatly varying distances from Schenectady. The team heads to Cornell University and Colgate University on November 21-22 before crossing the pond to take part in the annual Friendship Four event in Belfast, Northern Ireland on November 28-29. Union will battle with Sacred Heart University, Miami (Ohio) University and Rochester Institute of Technology for control of the Belpot Trophy, as Union looks to become the first team to win the event twice since its inception in 2015.
Union closes out 2025 with four more games on home ice, getting back into conference play on December 5-6 against Princeton University and Quinnipiac University before a pair of non-conference games against the University of Alaska Fairbanks on December 12-13.
After a bevy of home games in the opening half of the season, the Garnet Chargers will play only seven games in Schenectady over the season’s final two months. The second half kicks off with an exhibition against the Royal Military College of Canada on January 3, followed by a road weekend at Quinnipiac and Princeton on January 9-10.
The team plays its first games of the year with Brown University and Yale University at home on January 16-17, followed by a season-long stretch of five straight games away from home. A tentatively scheduled Monday night matchup at Harvard University on January 19 would finish a busy stretch of three games in four days, followed by the annual Mayors’ Cup game against RPI on January 24, as the Garnet Chargers look for a fifth-straight win in the annual matchup in Albany. A solo game at Dartmouth College comes up next to end the month of January, and February begins with a trip to the North Country to face St. Lawrence and Clarkson on February 6-7.
The team finally returns home for two against Colgate and Cornell on February 13-14. The squad then closes out the home portion of the regular season with games against Harvard (February 20) and Dartmouth (February 21), highlighted by Senior Day on Saturday against the Big Green. The regular season finishes up at Yale and Brown on February 27-28.
Season tickets for the 2025-26 season are available now by visiting UnionAthletics.com/tickets. Benefits of season tickets include the ability to renew the same seats on an annual basis; tickets to the Women’s Ice Breaker Tournament in October and the annual Mayors’ Cup games at MVP Arena; access to special events only for season ticket holders, including a preseason meet-and-greet with the men’s and women’s teams at M&T Bank Center; as well as other perks. Single-game tickets will be made available for purchase later in the summer.
College Sports
Memphis football coach Ryan Silverfield fires back at UTSA’s Jeff Traylor after NIL comparison
The rivalry between Memphis football and UTSA has stretched into 2025. Ahead of the Memphis-UTSA football game in 2024, UTSA coach Jeff Traylor said Memphis had six times more NIL money than UTSA and that the Roadrunners needed to invest more money in their program. The Tigers set their pregame hype video to “Got Money” […]

The rivalry between Memphis football and UTSA has stretched into 2025.
Ahead of the Memphis-UTSA football game in 2024, UTSA coach Jeff Traylor said Memphis had six times more NIL money than UTSA and that the Roadrunners needed to invest more money in their program. The Tigers set their pregame hype video to “Got Money” by Lil Wayne.
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Then the Tigers lost 44-36. It was a damaging loss that knocked Memphis out of contention for the AAC title game.
Memphis football coach Ryan Silverfield appeared on Grind City Media’s “Chris Vernon Show” on June 11 and addressed the situation.
“That head coach signed a $27 million contract,” Silverfield said of Traylor. “He should probably give some of that money back to the school, right? But hey, they beat us so I can’t say much. He’s a good coach, he’s done a good job with that program.”
UTSA went 7-6 in 2024, while Memphis went 11-2.
The two teams don’t play each other in 2025. But both will be expected to compete at the top of the conference.
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UTSA brought back starting quarterback Owen McCown and is positioned to have one of the top offenses in the AAC. Memphis has had significant roster turnover, but the Tigers brought in a strong transfer class and should be competitive on both sides of the ball.
Reach sports writer Jonah Dylan at jonah.dylan@commercialappeal.com or on X @thejonahdylan.
This article originally appeared on Memphis Commercial Appeal: Ryan Silverfield fires back at Jeff Traylor after NIL comparison
College Sports
SDSU launches athlete retention fund
The House settlement, a landmark agreement that allows universities to directly pay athletes, was approved by a California judge Friday night. Within hours, at 9:58 p.m., San Diego State had announced the launch of the Student-Athlete Recruitment and Retention Fund that athletic director John David Wicker said “is a vital step in ensuring we continue […]

The House settlement, a landmark agreement that allows universities to directly pay athletes, was approved by a California judge Friday night.
Within hours, at 9:58 p.m., San Diego State had announced the launch of the Student-Athlete Recruitment and Retention Fund that athletic director John David Wicker said “is a vital step in ensuring we continue to compete for championships while also aligning SDSU Athletics with the future of college sports.”
It was met with a mix of frustration and confusion from many athletic boosters.
Frustration, because of “donor fatigue” or as one fan put it bluntly on a chat board: “How many things do I have to contribute to?”
Confusion, because the SARRF sounds an awful lot like the MESA Foundation, the NIL collective that amassed close to $3 million this season for, well, student-athlete recruitment and retention of the men’s basketball team.
At some universities, outside collectives are already being folded into the athletic department, now that the House settlement shatters the last illusion of amateurism and permits up to $20.5 million per school per year in revenue sharing with players starting July 1. At SDSU, for the time being at least, the MESA Foundation and football’s Aztec Link will remain in place, and donations to them will accumulate Aztec Club “points” that determine ticketing priority.
“It’s a recognition by the university,” MESA founder Jeff Smith said, “that our dollars can do the exact same thing as their dollars through the athlete retention fund that doesn’t really have the ability to be up and running and be impactful just yet.
“If people make the mistake of believing that now that the school has the ability to participate in athlete compensation because of the House settlement, they no longer have to support through MESA, then all the work that’s been done with the program for the last three years will be for naught and all the concerns we’ve had about losing players in the offseason will become reality.”
The athletic department’s response about which to support is: All of the above.
SDSU needed to create an in-house donation mechanism to compensate athletes because most sports don’t have outside NIL collectives, and even football’s Aztec Link started later than MESA and has struggled to generate the kind of war chest needed to be competitive in the brave, new world of college athletics.
A FAQ section accompanying the announcement of SARRF offered this answer to whether MESA and Aztec Link will now go away:
“Not at all. Both collectives will continue their important work and complement the efforts of the new fund. Together, they ensure SDSU has a robust and multifaceted support system for student-athletes.”
The SARRF allows donations to be designated for specific teams (but not specific athletes), so in theory the money from the SARRF and MESA ends up in the same place. There are subtle differences between them, though.
SARRF is administered by the Campanile Foundation, the university’s nonprofit fundraising organization. That typically means a percentage of any donations is siphoned off for overhead costs.
MESA, which also offers tax-deductible contributions, is an outside entity with only one full-time employee – president Caroline Ripley – and a few student interns. Smith and his wife, who in three years tirelessly grew MESA from nothing to raising enough money to help retain the bulk of last season’s roster in an era of unlimited player movement, serve as volunteers.
That allows MESA, Smith says, to distribute about 93% of donations to players. (SARRF’s FAQs do not indicate what percentage of the fund will be diverted to the Campanile Foundation or other administrative costs.)
Another difference: MESA’s meet-and-greet events with men’s basketball players aren’t subject to Title IX equity because it’s an outside organization that, unlike the university, does not receive federal funding.
MESA pays players in monthly installments in exchange for their participation in about a half-dozen community service events per year as well as social media posts. Because SDSU is opting in to the House settlement, any NIL compensation beyond school-distributed revenue sharing comes under the scrutiny of a new NIL clearinghouse that will prohibit individual deals above “market value.”
There’s a simple workaround, however. Because SDSU will not come close to distributing the allotted $20.5 million in revenue sharing (think more like $1 million or $2 million), MESA can simply transfer what it collects to the school, which forwards it to the athletes.
For the 2025-26 season, SDSU is not expected to provide revenue sharing with basketball players. All of their money will still come from MESA. And since the players’ current NIL deals were signed before the House settlement was finalized, they aren’t subject to the clearinghouse’s scrutiny.
So why not put everything under one roof?
“At some point in the future, will there be a scenario where funds go to San Diego State’s athlete retention fund, or will they go to MESA and then to the athlete retention fund specific to basketball?” Smith said. “Those are definitely possibilities. But for right now, what we’ve built is working and what we’ve built can’t change.
“Once it’s very, very clear that’s the environment we’re playing in – and we are in regular conversations with the university – we’ll be more than prepared to do it. Because there’s so much unknown, for the time being MESA can’t change and the fan support of Aztecs basketball can’t change. We need to continue as we are.”
One fear is losing a unique class of MESA donor that identifies more with the program and its players – “the city’s NBA team,” coach Brian Dutcher likes to say – than the university. Despite pleas from the athletic department to include football in the MESA Foundation, Smith resisted.
“There are people who are not just supporters of the university and blindly write a check and hope the money goes to a good cause,” Smith said. “They’re individual sports fans and supporters. That’s something that definitely came out through our efforts. We are always very focused on being singular with basketball. We didn’t want to confuse the audience and have multiple sports.
“If those fans who were less inclined to contribute to San Diego State now believe that San Diego State is involved and they potentially reverse course, it’s a terrible thing for the program.”
The other piece of messaging is to dispel more general misconceptions about the House settlement, which means schools merely have the option of paying their athletes up to $20.5 million per year. It also means, at the overwhelming majority of universities, they have to first find that funding.
“The biggest concern I have,” Smith said, “is that the audience doesn’t understand that this new, in-house version of being able to compensate athletes does not mean there is any new money. It’s quite the opposite. Opting into the House agreement takes a budget that is already challenged and makes it even more financially challenging.”
Originally Published:
College Sports
‘Just getting started’ – Olivia Dunne announces major new career venture after gymnastics
OLIVIA DUNNE is working on getting people smiling as she prepares for life after gymnastics. The former LSU national champion gymnast left the sport behind in April. 6 Olivia Dunne has announced a new career venture after leaving gymnasticsCredit: The Mega Agency 6 The 22-year-old spent five years as an LSU TigerCredit: The Mega Agency […]

OLIVIA DUNNE is working on getting people smiling as she prepares for life after gymnastics.
The former LSU national champion gymnast left the sport behind in April.

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Dunne, 22, spent five years with the Louisiana State Tigers.
The program lost in the NCAA semifinals earlier this year as they attempted to defend their national crown.
Livvy officially hung up her leotard after the loss and has now embarked on a host of new career ventures.
The 22-year-old became one of college sport’s most lucrative athletes during her time at LSU.
READ MORE ON OLIVIA DUNNE
Dunne boasts over 13 million online fans and is a Sports Illustrated model away from the gym.
She is now getting her teeth into a new partnership with brace company Invisalign.
The company fixes crooked smiles through the use of invisible braces.
Livvy has teamed up with the orthodontist giants as a brand ambassador.
“Face card never declines with an @invisalign smile,” Dunne wrote in an Instagram reveal.
“And we’re just getting started.”
Dunne is currently dating MLB star Paul Skenes.
The pair have been in a relationship for almost two years after meeting at LSU.
Skenes, 23, is a star pitcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates and was named NL Rookie of the Year in his debut season.
Dunne left the Tigers in April after five years as a college gymnast.
“Time flies when you’re having fun,” she wrote in a tearful social media farewell.
‘An awesome person’

Travis Kelce has teamed up with Olivia Dunne for a new career venture.
“Something said when you’re enjoying yourself to the point time seems to slip away from you.
“And that’s exactly how the past 20 years in this sport have felt.
“Gymnastics, you have filled my heart. Tou’ve shaped me into the person I am today, creating memories and sisterhoods that will last a life support.
“You are my first love.”

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College Sports
Anonymous ACC coach reveals college football program that is ‘lagging’ in NIL
NC State entered last season as a popular dark horse pick in the ACC, but failed to meet the lofty expectations. After a 9-4 season in 2023, the Wolfpack lost three of their final four games last season, including a loss to East Carolina in the Military Bowl. NC State finished 6-7 overall, finishing tied […]

NC State entered last season as a popular dark horse pick in the ACC, but failed to meet the lofty expectations.
After a 9-4 season in 2023, the Wolfpack lost three of their final four games last season, including a loss to East Carolina in the Military Bowl. NC State finished 6-7 overall, finishing tied for 10th in the ACC with a 3-5 conference record.
One anonymous ACC coach shared his thoughts on why NC State may never be able to become a true national title threat. In an exclusive with Athlon Sports, they shed light on the program’s lagging effort in NIL spending, putting head coach Dave Doeren at a disadvantage.
“Right now, it’s easier to justify them being in that eight-win range,” the anonymous coach said. “Because they’re lagging in NIL. The expectations and reality are pretty far off in that regard.”
Doeren has served as the head coach of the Wolfpack since 2013, compiling an 87-65 overall record in that time span. The Wolfpack has made five consecutive bowl appearances, but has not won a bowl game since 2017. The program has also finished in the AP Top 25 in three different seasons under Doeren.
College Sports
Olivia Trautman Named Assistant Gymnastics Coach at Utah State
LOGAN, Utah – Utah State head gymnastics coach Kristin White announced Wednesday the hiring of Olivia Trautman to her staff as an assistant coach. Trautman will be the primary coach on balance beam and assist on other events as needed. Trautman comes to Utah State after spending the past two years at Oklahoma, where she […]

Trautman comes to Utah State after spending the past two years at Oklahoma, where she served as a sports career pathways graduate assistant and interim director of operations during the 2024-25 season, helping the Sooners to their seventh National Championship, and as a student assistant coach during the 2023-24 campaign.
“We are thrilled to announce the hiring of Olivia Trautman,” said White. “Olivia has competed and worked at one of the top premier programs in the country at Oklahoma, earning five NCAA National Championships and 10 NCAA All American honors.
“Her accolades both personally and professional are astounding, but what really sets Olivia apart is her journey to how she accomplished her goals. Her elite work ethic, competitiveness, and passion for the sport will be an inspiring asset for our student-athletes. Olivia’s leadership qualities and knowledge will make a huge impact as we transition to this new era of college athletics. Welcome to the family Coach O!”
As a student-athlete, Trautman was a member of Oklahoma’s 2019, 2022 and 2023 NCAA National Championship teams and was the 2023 NCAA Vault Champion. The Champlin, Minnesota, native was the 2019 Big 12 Newcomer of the Year, a 10-time NCAA All-American, four-time Big 12 individual champion and a four-time Academic All-Big 12 first-team selection.
Trautman is one of just 10 Sooners to win an individual national championship and ranks fourth all-time in school history with five career perfect 10s. She was a three-time NCAA Regional Champion and a two-time WCGA All-American.
“I am incredibly grateful and excited to accept the assistant coaching position at Utah State University,” said Trautman. “From the moment I met Kristin, I knew this was a special opportunity to grow, be mentored, and give back to the sport that has shaped me into the person I am today. Throughout my journey, I’ve been blessed with incredible role models who believed in me, challenged me, and helped me chase my dreams. Now I’m eager to do the same for the amazing women in this program, helping them develop not only as athletes but confident, strong women. I’m ready to pour my heart into this team and help lead the next generation toward greatness. I’m honored to join the Aggie Family and can’t wait to get to work!”
Trautman graduated from Oklahoma in the spring of 2023 with her bachelor’s degree in health and exercise science with a minor in psychology and earned her master’s of adult in higher education, intercollegiate athletic administration from OU in the spring of 2025.
For more information on the Utah State gymnastics program, follow the Aggies on Twitter at @USUGymnastics, Facebook at UtahStateGymnastics and Instagram at USUGymnastics.
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