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Biggest winners and every star on the move

With all of the big names changing teams, the 2026 NCAA Gymnastics championship is firmly up for grabs with multiple teams in the mix. Morgan Price and the Arkansas Razorbacks Morgan Price is no stranger to bright lights, but now she’ll take her talents to arguably the biggest stage in the sport — the SEC. […]

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With all of the big names changing teams, the 2026 NCAA Gymnastics championship is firmly up for grabs with multiple teams in the mix.

Morgan Price and the Arkansas Razorbacks

Morgan Price is no stranger to bright lights, but now she’ll take her talents to arguably the biggest stage in the sport — the SEC. Originally committed to Arkansas in high school,Price decided to compete for Fisk University and made history several times in her three years there. Fisk became the first HBCU to launch a gymnastics program in 2023 and while there, Morgan became the first HBCU gymnast to earn a perfect 10 and win a national title. She won six national titles in her three years at Fisk, sweeping the event titles at the WGNIC Nationals this year along with defending her 2024 All-Around title.

Now, Morgan joins her older sister, Frankie Price, a fan-favorite Gymback who is taking her fifth year for the 2026 season after being injured during her floor routine at this year’s regional meet. Morgan has the scores on all four events to compete in the All-Around for the Razorbacks, and will especially make an impact on bars and beam.

Price will be joined at Arkansas by San Jose State University transfer Madison Gustitus. Gustitus has three years of eligibility after spending her freshman year at SJSU, where she competed on bars, beam, and floor. Arkansas lost a lot of their depth on beam to graduation this year, so she should fill an immediate need there, while also joining a dynamic floor rotation anchored by Joscelyn Roberson and Frankie Price. She also brings a lot of Level 10 competitive experience, having competed at the Development Program Nationals and Nastia Liukin Cup and won events at the regional level.

Arkansas lost two athletes to the transfer portal this season — Chandler Buntin and Dakota Essenpreis. Essenpreis is returning to her home state of Missouri to compete for SEC rival Mizzou. The vault specialist competed at every meet this season, breaking 9.850 five times, including a career high 9.900. Buntin did not compete in her two years at Arkansas, but could be a strong depth piece on vault and bars at her new program, which she has yet to announce.

Madison Ulrich and Emily Innes to the LSU Tigers

Madison Ulrich competed the last two years for the Big 12’s Denver Pioneers. This year, Ulrich was named a three-time All American by the WCGA and qualified to the NCAA national championships as an all-around individual competitor. She has career highs of at least a 9.900 on all four events and regularly competed in the All-Around for Denver.

Ulrich was one of the hottest commodities in the portal this year, taking official visits at three high-profile schools — Louisiana State, Utah, and Oklahoma — before committing to LSU. LSU tasted glory last year with their first ever national championship, and Ulrich will be instrumental in their quest to reach that peak again. She’ll make a strong case to be a regular three-event competitor on bars, beam, and floor after ending the NCAA season ranked in the top 20 on beam and bars. She owns a career high 9.925 on vault, but LSU has a deep lineup on the event that she might not slot into.

Senior Emily Innes is trading one shade of purple for another as she joins the LSU Tigers after three seasons with the Washington Huskies. She qualified to regional competition this year as an individual competitor on floor and beam, earning a 9.750 on floor and a 9.800 on beam. Last season, she won the regional floor title with a career high 9.950.

Innes will bring stability and experience to a young LSU roster that saw 10 seniors graduate from the program this year. She should consistently make the floor and beam lineups and could contribute on vault as well. She competes a Yurchenko Full that has typically scored in the low-mid 9.800s at UW, but LSU has a strong lineup of Yurchenko 1.5s with higher scoring potential that they’re more likely to include on a regular basis. That said, Innes will at least provide depth on that event while competing regularly on two others.

eMjae Frazier to the Florida Gators

The first big splash in the transfer portal was the surprising news that eMjae Frazier would graduate early from Cal Berkeley and transfer as a graduate student for her final year of eligibility. Over a month after she announced that she would enter the portal, Frazier put the speculation to rest and announced that she would be taking her talents to the Florida Gators.

Frazier would have been a great pick-up for any team in the NCAA, but the Gators in particular will benefit from her poise and consistency. Before college, she was an elite gymnast for Team USA and represented the country internationally. As a sophomore, she broke the NCAA single season scoring record and has scored multiple perfect 10s on different events over her career. In her three years at Cal, Frazier racked up 10 All-American honors across the regular and post-season. She should immediately be competing in the all-around, but watch for her to make a huge impact on beam and floor, both events she holds a career-best 10.0 on.

Florida finished third in the SEC conference meet this year before a shocking meltdown on vault ended their search for a title in the national semi-finals. Frazier will join the Gators quest to maximize their potential next season alongside a strong incoming freshman class and returning stars Selena Harris-Miranda and Kayla DiCello. Frazier led Cal to the team silver medal in the 2024 National Championship, and she’s certainly hungry to return to the podium after Cal failed to qualify to Nationals this year.

Georgia departures

This season, Georgia had a bit of a renaissance under new head coaches Cecile Landi, formerly of World Champions Centre in Texas, and Ryan Roberts. After a strong regular season, Georgia faltered in SEC championships and then placed third in regional finals, failing to advance, but qualifying two individuals to nationals. After the conclusion of the season, three gymnasts announced their intent to transfer, including fan-favorite Naya Howard, who had been missing from the GymDogs’ regional lineups.

All three former GymDogs are moving to the Big Ten, with Sadie Jane Berry transferring to Ohio State, Alexis Czarrunchick heading to Maryland, and Naya Howard announcing her commitment to Michigan State.

Czarrunchick is headlining a large transfer class for Maryland with five athletes recommitting to the Terps so far. She’s joined by a pair of Bowling Green transfers in Megan Bingham and Katrina Mendez Abolnik, Aine Reade from New Hampshire, and Towson’s Chelsey Dennis. Czarrunchick will bolster Maryland’s vault lineup and contend for a spot on bars as well.

Naya Howard has one year of eligibility remaining and she’ll be spending it in East Lansing, Michigan. The Spartans advanced to their first National Championship since 1988 this year, finishing with the fifth-highest score in the semi-final field. Howard has scored at least a 9.900 on all four events and will bring solid experience to the beam lineup in particular and reliable depth on the other events.

Biggest winners in the NCAA Gymnastics transfer portal

Missouri

Missouri has gained three gymnasts from the portal so far and reloads after their historic third place finish at NCAAs this season. They show no signs of slowing down, even after graduating an incredible senior class headlined by Helen Hu and Amari Celestine. They bring in hometown vault specialist from Dakota Essenpreis from Arkansas, Sara Wabi from Illinois State, and Makayla Green from Illinois.

Wabi will spend her fifth year of eligibility as a graduate student at Mizzou. She competed on the uneven bars as an individual competitor at regionals this year after earning All-MIC (Midwest Independent Conference) First Team honors on floor, bars, and vault. She won the conference title on bars and took third on floor and vault. She should shine, especially on bars for the Tigers.

Green will also join the Tigers bars lineup this year after hitting a career high of 9.925 on the event three times this season, including in the high pressure situations of Big 10 Championships and NCAA regionals. She also competed on vault and beam during her career as an Illini, but after being injured in 2024, only competed on uneven bars this season.

Green and Wabi will both help the Tigers continue where they left off last year and fill the void left in the bars lineup left by 2025 SEC co-champion Mara Titarsolej. Essenpreis will bolster the vault lineup with her consistency and the growth she’s shown across her first two seasons.

Ohio State

Ohio State’s bars lineup is getting a huge boost with Sadie Jane Berry (formerly competing for Georgia) and their vault, beam, and floor lineup will be strengthened by the addition of Natalie Martin (formerly competing for Maryland).

Sadie Jane Berry competed nine times on bars as a freshman, earning a career-high 9.875 twice. She was a really strong beam worker in Level 10, placing in the top ten on the event at the 2024 Level 10 Development Program Nationals. It will be interesting to see what lineups she can break into at Ohio State for her sophomore season and beyond.

Natalie Martin, an Ohio native, is coming home with two years of eligibility. She regularly competed three events (vault, beam, and floor) for Maryland and was instrumental in Maryland advancing to the second round of regionals this year with a pair of 9.850s on vault and beam in the first round. She outdid her first round performance with a 9.900 on beam, repeating her 9.850 on vault, and joining the floor lineup for a 9.875 in the second round.

Arkansas, Ohio State, Missouri, Louisiana State, and Maryland come out of this year as the biggest winners, picking up star athletes and filling out their lineups. And, with plenty of athletes still in the portal, the roster shakeups are far from over as we look ahead to the 2026 season.



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Scranton woman cited with damaging slot machine

PLAINS TWP. — Troopers with the Bureau of Gaming Enforcement at Mohegan Pennsylvania cited Michelle Parente, 58, of Scranton, with criminal mischief after she allegedly damaged a slot machine. Parente struck the collect button on a machine with a closed right fist that damaged the screen on May 24, according to a news release […]

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PLAINS TWP. — Troopers with the Bureau of Gaming Enforcement at Mohegan Pennsylvania cited Michelle Parente, 58, of Scranton, with criminal mischief after she allegedly damaged a slot machine.

Parente struck the collect button on a machine with a closed right fist that damaged the screen on May 24, according to a news release from the state police Gaming Enforcement Unit.

Damage to the machine was $1,166.80.



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Professionals share how to be an ally in pride month | University Park Campus News

Throughout June, allies show their support for the LGBTQ+ community through social media campaigns, statements of solidarity and rainbow themed merchandise. However, some advocates are calling for this support to extend beyond Pride month and manifest in different ways. Penn State’s Center for Gender and Sexual Diversity (CGSD) is a group composed of students and […]

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Throughout June, allies show their support for the LGBTQ+ community through social media campaigns, statements of solidarity and rainbow themed merchandise. However, some advocates are calling for this support to extend beyond Pride month and manifest in different ways.

Penn State’s Center for Gender and Sexual Diversity (CGSD) is a group composed of students and staff that are asking: “What does it mean to be an ally when no one is watching?”

“Genuine allyship shows up in how people act,”Kate Rawson, assistant director of CGSD said. “Come to Pride events. Use inclusive language. Talk to your lawmakers.”

While suggesting ways for people to engage in allyship through more public means, she also mentioned how to be an ally on a personal level.

“Ask the people in your life what support actually looks like for them,” Rawson said. “Every person needs something different.”

Rawson is among a group of educators and students calling for a more consistent form of support that doesn’t vanish when the month ends or the parades are over. Alongside her colleagues, she works to equip allies with the language, resources and context to move beyond symbolic gestures.

Small shifts in language can also signal large changes in mindset, according to Rawson. One example she suggested was using phrases like “everyone,” “friends” or “colleagues” as opposed to “ladies and gentlemen.”







State College Pride, board sign

A woman writes a response on a question board during State College Pride on Saturday, June 7, 2025 in State College, Pa.




“To be an ally to the community, I specifically look for active engagement.” Sam Brooks, a fourth year student studying digital art and media design said. “A rainbow sticker is nice, but it’s also understanding, actively trying to understand why these symbols even matter. Allyship isn’t a passive label, it’s an active pursuit of celebration, education and community.”

Brooks said allyship often begins with curiosity and humility.

“Understanding builds empathy, and empathy creates tight knit community bonds,” Brooks said. “Don’t be afraid to learn. Don’t be afraid to engage.”

To help foster learning, the Center offers year-round programming, including its “Queer Voices” peer-education group and “Safer People, Safer Places” workshops. These sessions give participants the opportunity to hear personal stories, discuss inclusive practices and reflect on how to better support LGBTQ+ people in their workplaces, classrooms and communities.

One foundational practice Brooks said is sharing pronouns, something which he models in both professional and social settings.

“I’ll introduce myself and say, ‘Hi, I’m Sam, I use he/him pronouns,’ to model that it’s okay to share,” Brooks said. “It signals that this is a safe space.”

That kind of modeling, Rawson added, helps normalize inclusion.

“Even just coming to Pride events and being visibly present as an ally sends a message,” Rawson said. “We always tell folks on campus, come to our events even if you’re straight. We need our allies in the room to keep this work going.”

Outside of campus, LGBTQ+ organizations across the state are making similar appeals. Michel Lee Garrett, a board member of Centre LGBT+, an organization serving central Pennsylvania, said the stakes are especially high this year.

“We, the queer community, are currently in a moment of profound difficulty, profound challenge and profound fear,” Garrett said. “Anti-LGBT forces are working tirelessly to put policies and legislation into place that would rip away life-saving gender-affirming medical treatment and undo much — if not all — of the progress that the queer community has made over the last number of decades.”

She called for a more courageous and public form of allyship, saying people who are willing to show up, be visible and push back anti-LGBT speech and actions are needed.

“Passive allyship, allyship that will listen to others spout anti-LGBT rhetoric and not push back against it, is not allyship. It is complicity,” Garrett said.

Garrett urged supporters to speak up, whether in private conversations or public spaces.

“We need people who speak up in their families, in their workplaces, in their places of faith,” Garrett said. “We need people who are calling their elected officials. We need people who are showing up to public meetings. We have gotten to where we are as a community by being loud and proud and visible, and in this moment, perhaps more than ever before, we need our allies to be loud and proud and visible.”







State College Pride, flag

A man holds a pride flag during the State College Pride parade on Saturday, June 7, 2025 in State College, Pa.




She also emphasized the importance of respectful language and the willingness to learn, while also saying it’s okay for people to have questions and make mistakes. Garrett said the goal of inclusive language isn’t to make people fear saying the wrong thing, but to support and uplift marginalized people.

When it comes to terminology, Garrett acknowledged the complicated legacy of the word “queer.”

“Some people have a visceral reaction to it because of its history, but many queer people have reclaimed the term and use it very, very proudly,” Garrett said. “Queer encompasses everybody. We are all part of the queer family, and that sort of openness — that sort of ‘open-armed-ness’ of the term — is something that I think a lot of us respond to.”

Still, Garrett cautioned allies to be mindful.

“Some people don’t necessarily love it when allies use the term ‘queer’ because of its history,” Garrett said. “But it has become a term of pride and endearment (for some).”

Garrett also spoke about newer, inclusive terms like “gender-expansive”, which she described as a broad umbrella term for identities that move beyond the traditional gender binary.

“Gender-expansive people have existed throughout history, across cultures, across time,” Garrett said, noting that they always have and always will.

For allies looking to educate themselves without placing additional emotional labor on LGBTQ+ friends or colleagues, Garrett recommends engaging with queer media.

“We’re exhausted,” she said. “We appreciate being asked, but self-education is key. Read books by queer authors. Watch films by queer creators. Learn from the voices already doing the work.”

She named Centre LGBT+ as a local resource for education and advocacy and pointed to other organizations doing similar work, including the Pennsylvania Youth Congress, the Eastern PA Trans Equity Project, the ACLU, and the Human Rights Campaign.

Garrett noted there are so many resources already in the community.

As Pride Month draws to a close, the message from advocates across Penn State and Central Pennsylvania is clear: allyship is a commitment.

“Pride is about joy and celebration,” Brooks said. “But it’s also about history, resilience and community. Community means everyone is welcome, but you have to show up.”

Garrett put it even more directly: “Don’t just celebrate Pride. Live it through action, compassion and courage every day.”

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Charlie Cerrato’s preparations for NHL draft | Penn State Men’s Hockey News

At just 18, Youngstown Phantoms forward Charlie Cerrato was on the cusp of his lifelong dream. His name was officially entered into the NHL entry draft, an ambition set when he was just a mere 6-7 years old.  However, Cerrato’s 13 years of tireless work didn’t lead to fulfillment on draft day. He went undrafted […]

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At just 18, Youngstown Phantoms forward Charlie Cerrato was on the cusp of his lifelong dream. His name was officially entered into the NHL entry draft, an ambition set when he was just a mere 6-7 years old. 

However, Cerrato’s 13 years of tireless work didn’t lead to fulfillment on draft day. He went undrafted in his first two years of eligibility before heading to Penn State for his freshman year. Yet, Cerrato didn’t back down — he continued to put in the work and inched closer to his ultimate goal. 

“It’s a chip on your shoulder when you don’t get drafted,” Cerrato told The Daily Collegian. “Two years of not getting drafted, looking back on it, it’s just whatever, it is what it is. Whether you get drafted or not you still have to go out there and earn your contract. At the end of the day, we’re all in the same position no matter what.”

Fast forward to 2025 and Cerrato is heading into this year’s draft with heightened expectations. After being ranked 222nd and 175th among North American skaters in the previous two College Hockey Inc. draft guides, he now enters the 2025 draft at 110th per NHL.com. 

That substantial leap to a 3rd-4th round draft grade hasn’t come without reason. In Cerrato’s eyes, many professional scouts and team management look for “guys that show up in big moments,” and there wasn’t a higher stage than the one Penn State was on this past season. 

While the Nittany Lions fell just short of a national title, Cerrato entered the spotlight with his tremendous play and clutch performances — most notably his behind-the-back assist to Matt DiMarsico that sent his program to its first Frozen Four. 

“Playing in big games like that, learning to prepare and focus in huge games is huge in the minds of scouts and management,” Cerrato said. “So just being able to experience that and learn from our journey and our stretch that we went on at the end of the year is going to be huge in the future when you play professional hockey.”







Hockey celebration, trophy and sign

Forward Charlie Cerrato (15) holds the NCAA trophy during a celebration for the Penn State men’s hockey team at Pegula Ice Arena on Monday, March 31, 2025 in University Park, Pa.




Throughout the blue and white’s substantial postseason run Cerrato flashed his vision, hockey IQ and 200-foot game. The freshman set his teammates up at will, and he did so when it mattered most.

“He has a lot of great physical attributes, but his IQ sets him apart,” DiMarsico told The Daily Collegian. “You could even see on the goal that sent us to the Frozen Four, the play to slip at the blue line and then the behind the back pass, like not many players in college hockey can make that play. It showed his full tool set.”

But what really makes the center such a hot commodity is his defensive prowess. Cerrato can shut down teams from his own zone and turn it into offense in a split second. 

That two-way game projects Cerrato as a middle-six center in the NHL, and he shares that same vision. The lefty forward said he models his game after Florida Panthers’ center Sam Bennett — someone who sizes up similarly and will cash in this offseason with a long-term contract. 

“(Bennett’s a) similar size, 6-foot-1, 190-195. He’s a playmaker, he’s physical, he works his butt off,” Cerrato said. “He scores goals, makes plays in the big moments and I feel like that’s a guy I try to model my game after and play like. If I turn out like him, I’d be super fired up with how my career went.”

Standing 6-foot-1, 195 lbs, Cerrato definitely matches up in stature with Bennett, but they share other similarities as well. Both play with an edge to their games that leads to getting under opposing players’ skins, this was seen when the freshman taunted Michigan’s bench after converting a penalty shot to essentially clinch the best-of-three Big Ten quarterfinal series.

But the resemblance that stands out the most is the physicality both players showcase. Cerrato credits that toughness to his football background, mentioning he plays with a “fearlessness” because of his time with a pigskin.

Growing up as the kid of a former NFL executive, Cerrato picked up the sport at the early age of five — the same time he started to play hockey. His work on the football field translated to the rink, with his former Phantoms coach Ryan Ward even saying Cerrato is a “football player wearing hockey equipment.”

“When you start playing football at a young age, you’re not scared of contact,” Cerrato said. “Throwing my weight around from Day 1 when hitting was legal in hockey was never a problem. I’ve never been scared of going to the hard areas, I’ve never been scared of contact or afraid of hitting guys that are bigger than me.”







Men's Ice Hockey vs. Wisconsin, Cerrato Held Back

Penn State Forward Charlie Cerrato (15) is held back by an official after a brief skirmish with a Wisconsin player during the men’s ice hockey game at Pegula Ice Arena on Saturday, Nov. 16, 2024 in University Park, Pa. The Badgers beat the Nittany Lions 6-3.




Not only will Cerrato’s physicality need to transfer over to the NHL, but his blindness to outside noise from the media will be a valuable trait. Despite having high expectations his entire career — entering college ranked as a 4.5-star and being a potential draft pick — he doesn’t care about what others think.

“I don’t really look at the whole star stuff,” Cerrato said. “You know what Twitter says or Instagram, whatever the h— they talk about. At the end of the day, I feel like I’ve always had the confidence in myself to take that next step and be a pro player. If I keep getting bigger, faster (and) stronger, working on stuff in the offseason and progressing through the season, I’ve always had the confidence in myself that I can make an NHL team and make a big impact.”

His maturity with off-ice activities has only grown with age, although it’s one of the only knocks on his draft stock as an overager. Cerrato, 20, enters his third and final draft of eligibility starting on June 27, but he doesn’t want teams to shy away because of that. 

When asked to give his pitch to teams as to why he should be drafted, Cerrato said  “I’d tell them ‘Look, I’m 20 years old, you’re looking at 18 years olds but I’ve been through it, I’ve faced adversity my whole life and I’ve overcome it. So if you want a guy that’s going to go out there and work his butt off every day, whether it’s practice, on the ice, off the ice or in games, you know where to find me.’”  

He’s dealt with adversity his entire life, but that hasn’t halted him from putting in the work. Being a hockey player from a non-traditional hockey market in Maryland, there were plenty of challenges to overcome. The main hurdle was that he practiced and played in Philadelphia two to three times a week, which is over an hour drive from his hometown. 

Regardless, he continued to push himself, in large part due to his parents, but it’s also just the player and person he is — he often emphasizes his continuous effort, which is a sentiment shared by his collegiate coach Guy Gadowsky.

“The role he’s evolved into is something that he’s earned,” Gadowsky said in February. “He wasn’t given anything.”







Frozen four, Cerrato faces off

Penn State forward Charlie Cerrato (15) faces off during the NCAA Frozen Four ice hockey championship semifinal game against Boston University at the Enterprise Center on Thursday, April 10, 2025 in St. Louis, Mo. The Terriers beat the Nittany Lions 3-1.

 




As Cerrato gears up for a second season with the Nittany Lions, he plans to spend time training in State College with his linemate DiMarsico. From there, Cerrato will likely get drafted and work out at that team’s development camp. 

But for now, Cerrato is in Michigan, which is a place he called home for five years. The upcoming sophomore is skating, working out and training at the USA Hockey Arena before he eventually makes a lengthy car ride to his home state to await a potential life-changing phone call with his family. 

Whether his name gets called or not, he’ll be with the support group that’s backed him since he was a child and perhaps experiencing one of the most thrilling moments of his life together. 

As Cerrato’s name has flown around in mock drafts and social media the past few seasons, he’s trying to “stay in the present, focus on (himself) and not listen to the outside noise,” ahead of the 2025 NHL draft. 

“If it happens, it happens. If it doesn’t, it doesn’t,” Cerrato said.

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Penn State men's hockey earns commitment from two-way defenseman Jackson Smith

After all the rumors, it’s official.

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News: CFP, Okmin, Nielsen – Sports Media Watch

No consensus reached after CFP meetings; a longtime Fox reporter will depart the network; Nielsen reports streaming tops linear TV for the first time last month. No agreement on CFP format College Football Playoff leadership has no clear consensus on the future of the tournament after meetings this week, according to ESPN’s Heather Dinich. The […]

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No consensus reached after CFP meetings; a longtime Fox reporter will depart the network; Nielsen reports streaming tops linear TV for the first time last month.

No agreement on CFP format

College Football Playoff leadership has no clear consensus on the future of the tournament after meetings this week, according to ESPN’s Heather Dinich. The Big Ten and SEC, who control the discussion about the playoff, are in disagreement about key points of a new deal.

Previous models explored include a format in which the Big Ten and SEC would be guaranteed four spots each, with two more reserved for each the Big 12 and ACC. The “5+11” model appeared to gain traction last month, which would simply expand the current format to four additional at-large teams.

Among the points of contention is the Big Ten’s objection to the SEC and ACC continuing to play eight conference games annually, instead of nine. The SEC is seeking compensation from ESPN as well as assurances of playoff access before adding additional losses to its teams’ resumes.

A deadline of December 1 is in place to reach agreement on the playoff format for 2026-27 and beyond. This year’s playoff will repeat the twelve-team format from last year, with the slight modification that conference champions will not automatically be given a bye if not ranked in the top four spots.


Laura Okmin departing Fox Sports

Longtime Fox Sports NFL sideline reporter Laura Okmin will not renew her contract, ending her 23-year run with the network, according to Front Office Sports. The network was reportedly “surprised” by Okmin’s departure. Okmin primarily worked on Fox’s lower-tier NFL crews, including this past season alongside Kevin Kugler and Daryl Johnston.

Okmin said in an interview with FOS that she will continue to work the NFL Playoffs and Super Bowl for Westwood One’s radio coverage, but her primary focus will be on her own women’s sports development company.

Okmin finishes her TV career at #3 on the list of all-time NFL sideline broadcasts worked, behind Fox’s Pam Oliver and former NBC reporter Michele Tafoya. Prior to Fox, Okmin worked for TNT Sports and CNN.




Streaming surpasses linear in May, per Nielsen

Viewing of streaming video in the US has surpassed broadcast and cable viewership combined for the first time, according to Nielsen’s analysis of May 2025 data. Combined streaming viewership was 44.8% of all content, exceeding the combined share of broadcast TV (20.1%) and cable (24.1%).

YouTube led all platforms with 12.5% share of media consumption. To put it another way, one out of every eight minutes of video watched last month in the US was accessed through YouTube. Netflix remains in second place with a 7.5% share. Even smaller free platforms have a surprising audience: the combined viewership of Tubi, Roku Channel, and PlutoTV was larger than any individual broadcast television network last month.

Nielsen’s “broadcast” and “cable” categories include linear networks like ABC and ESPN, even when accessed through a streaming platform like YouTube TV. Viewership of ESPN+ is included in the “streaming” category, along with other platforms like Prime Video, Peacock, and Paramount+.



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Class of 2027 NCAA Gymnastics Stars to Watch This Season

The class of 2027 NCAA gymnastics recruits are garnering attention as they can now commit to college programs despite competing elite through summer and fall. Prominent gymnasts like Claire Pease, Lia Monica Fontaine, and Alyssa Guerrier Calixte highlight the talent pool. Pease has already made headlines with standout performances in the junior ranks, while Fontaine […]

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The class of 2027 NCAA gymnastics recruits are garnering attention as they can now commit to college programs despite competing elite through summer and fall. Prominent gymnasts like Claire Pease, Lia Monica Fontaine, and Alyssa Guerrier Calixte highlight the talent pool. Pease has already made headlines with standout performances in the junior ranks, while Fontaine dominates in Canadian competitions. This recruiting period marks a pivotal moment for these young athletes as they aim to secure their spots in top gymnastics programs.

By the Numbers

  • Claire Pease won the U.S. junior all-around title and multiple elite competitions.
  • Lia Monica Fontaine achieved a personal best all-around score of 54.316 at the Canadian Championships.

State of Play

  • Recruiting for the class of 2027 has officially begun, with gymnasts actively competing in elite events.
  • Pease and Fontaine are among the leading figures, attracting attention from major NCAA programs.

What’s Next

As these recruits continue to perform in competitions, their collegiate commitments will likely be announced over the coming months. Expect further developments in outstanding performances at national and international events that could elevate their recruitment status. The upcoming U.S Championships will be crucial for Pease and others seeking to enhance their visibility.

Bottom Line

The class of 2027 is poised to make a significant impact on NCAA gymnastics, with talented individuals like Pease and Fontaine leading the charge. As they solidify their skills and competitive standings, all eyes will be on them as potential future stars in the sport.





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First HBCU gymnastics program at Fisk University to end in 2026

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WTVF) — Fisk University made history in 2023 as the first Historically Black College or University to launch a gymnastics program. Now, just three years later, the university has announced the program will end after Spring 2026. The team quickly gained national attention, breaking records, competing nationwide, and inspiring fans across the country. […]

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WTVF) — Fisk University made history in 2023 as the first Historically Black College or University to launch a gymnastics program. Now, just three years later, the university has announced the program will end after Spring 2026.

The team quickly gained national attention, breaking records, competing nationwide, and inspiring fans across the country.

“I didn’t really realize we were making history or I was making history until maybe halfway through, because at the end of every meet we have to stay, Oh my God, sometimes an hour after the competition, signing autographs, taking pictures, meeting alumni from Fisk, and also letting the other little girls that were looking up to us and inspired by us,” said Naimah Muhammad, a former Fisk University gymnast.

Muhammad, who graduated in May, had hoped to mentor the team but was shocked to learn about the program’s discontinuation.

“Never expected it to happen, especially knowing how much support we got from not just people on the outside of school, but inside the school. The students, the faculty, the staff, the alumni especially really loved the gymnastics team,” Muhammad said.

The university cited the lack of HBCU Athletic Conference sanctioning as a major hurdle, making it difficult to schedule meets and recruit athletes. Fisk competes in the HBCU Athletic Conference, where gymnastics isn’t sanctioned.

“While we are tremendously proud of the history our gymnastics team has made in just three years, we look forward to focusing on our conference-affiliated teams to strengthen our impact in the HBCU Athletic Conference,” said Valencia Jordan, Director of Fisk Athletics. “Fisk is grateful for the hard work, dedication, and tenacity of its gymnasts, staff members, and coaches who made this program possible.”

“It was very much a shock when they announced the dismantling,” Muhammad said. “It made me very upset.”

Now, Muhammad and fellow alumni are rallying to save the program, launching a petition to raise awareness.

“At the end of the day, you can’t take away the history we made for the past three years that literally shook and impacted the whole world,” Muhammad said.

Since Fisk’s groundbreaking move, two other HBCUs created gymnastics programs. Talladega College in Alabama started shortly after Fisk in 2023 but ended its program in 2024 due to financial reasons. After Spring 2026, only Wilberforce University in Ohio will remain as an HBCU with a gymnastics program.

Muhammad says if she can’t save Fisk’s program, she will focus her efforts on supporting Wilberforce.

This story was reported on-air and written by Kelsey Gibbs and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

Longtime breakfast tradition continues for friends who met through Big Brothers Big Sisters mentorship

This is a beautiful story of chosen family, proving a father figure doesn’t have to have biology in common to make a difference in a child’s life. The story of De’Andre and Alex will remind you that our relationships help determine the course of our lives. And that being supportive of someone – through a meal, a shared experience or even swim lessons can make all the difference.

– Rebecca Schleicher





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