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Brag House Holdings, Inc. Files Form 10-K and Reaffirms Strategic Vision for Gen Z Engagement Through Gaming — TradingView News

NEW YORK, May 08, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Brag House Holdings, Inc. TBH (“Brag House” or the “Company”), a media-tech company at the intersection of gaming, college sports, and digital brand engagement, today announced the filing of its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024. The Company reaffirmed its confidence in […]

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NEW YORK, May 08, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Brag House Holdings, Inc. TBH (“Brag House” or the “Company”), a media-tech company at the intersection of gaming, college sports, and digital brand engagement, today announced the filing of its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024.

The Company reaffirmed its confidence in the execution of its strategic plan to redefine digital engagement for casual college gamers and brands seeking to connect with the Gen Z demographic. As outlined in the Management’s Discussion and Analysis of its Annual Report on Form 10-K, Brag House continues to develop a first-of-its-kind digital platform where casual college gamers can compete, support their schools, engage in spirited banter, and win prizes in a safe, inclusive environment.

“We are creating more than a platform—we are building a new sports medium,” said Lavell Juan Malloy II, CEO and Co-Founder of Brag House. “By merging gameplay with school spirit, our student-led tournaments, proprietary Bragging Functionality, and interactive experiences offer Gen Z an entirely new way to engage with college rivalries.”

The Company highlighted its landmark strategic partnership with Learfield, which launched in April 2025 in collaboration with Florida Gators Athletics. The partnership represents a significant revenue-generating opportunity and marks the first step in a nationwide rollout designed to scale across Learfield’s network of over 200 collegiate institutions.

The Company reaffirmed its strategic focus by highlighting the launch of a landmark initiative with Florida Gators Athletics and Learfield’s Florida Gators Sports Properties, as announced in its April 28, 2025 press release titled “Brag House, Florida Gators Athletics, and Learfield Announce Strategic Partnership to Create New Digital Sports Medium for Gen Z.” This innovative collaboration introduces a new digital sports medium for Gen Z—merging school spirit, gaming, and live sports into immersive experiences, as detailed below.

The debut activation, known as the Brag Gator Gauntlet, kicks off in May 2025 at the University of Florida. This flagship series introduces:

  • Live and digital gaming activations aligned with real-world sporting events;
  • NIL-integrated content featuring student-athletes to amplify authenticity and school pride;
  • Branded loyalty tokens and cross-channel sponsorship opportunities across digital and on-campus platforms.

By uniting Brag House’s gamified platform with Learfield’s nationwide network of collegiate institutions, this initiative redefines how fans and students engage with college sports. It also opens up high-impact, measurable opportunities for brands to reach Gen Z through student-led tournaments, influencer-driven campaigns, and serialized content. The Company believes this model will generate high-ROI advertising opportunities and serve as a foundation for future data-driven insights, enabling brands to engage Gen Z with greater precision, authenticity, and scale.

“Our development and marketing strategy is laser-focused on high-impact, revenue-producing milestones,” added Malloy. “We are investing strategically in infrastructure while maintaining disciplined cost controls expected of a public company.”

The Company’s near-term strategic goals include:

  • Scaling Learfield-based activations across multiple universities;
  • Deploying digital rewards through Loyalty Tokens and Bragging Functionality;
  • Advancing key platform technology modules to operational beta;
  • Leveraging proprietary data for brand-focused SaaS revenue generation.

Brag House remains confident in its long-term growth trajectory and will continue providing shareholders with updates as key milestones are reached.

About Brag House

Brag House is a leading media technology gaming platform dedicated to transforming casual college gaming into a vibrant, community-driven experience. By seamlessly merging gaming, social interaction, and cutting-edge technology, the Company provides an inclusive and engaging environment for casual gamers while enabling brands to authentically connect with the influential Gen Z demographic. The platform offers live-streaming capabilities, gamification features, and custom tournament services, fostering meaningful engagement between users and brands. For more information, please visit www.braghouse.com.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements as defined within Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Forward-looking statements in this press release, include, but are not limited to statements relating to the ability to generate revenue from strategic partnership with Learfield; the ability to generate any revenue, return on investment, or any specific outcomes related to scheduled or unscheduled activations or immersive experiences; the ability to deliver anticipated platform growth, including through anticipated development roadmap or scalable model; the timeliness of any anticipated beta versions; the ability to generate revenue from anonymized behavioral insights or other proprietary data; the effectiveness of marketing strategies and strategic investments on revenue; the availability or value of any digital rewards and functionality; the feasibility of near-term strategic goals; or the impact on growth of near or long-term trajectories. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements because they contain words such as “may,” “will,” “would,” “should,” “expects,” “plans,” “could,” “intends,” “target,” “projects,” “forecasts,” “believes,” “estimates,” “anticipates,” “potential,” “continue,” “assumption” or “judgment” or the negative of these words or other similar terms or expressions that concern our expectations, strategy, plans or intentions. These statements relate to future events or our future financial performance and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors that may cause our actual results, levels of activity, performance, or achievements to be materially different from any future results, levels of activity, performance, or achievements expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements.

Although the Company believes the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements are reasonable when made, the Company cannot guarantee future results, levels of activity, performance, or achievements. There are a number of important factors that could cause the Company’s actual results to differ materially from the results anticipated by the Company’s forward-looking statements, which include, but are not limited to: the Company’s history of recurring losses and anticipated expenditures raises substantial doubts about its ability to continue as a going concern; the Company’s loss of or a substantial reduction in activity by one or more of its largest clients, vendors and/or sponsors could materially and adversely affect its business, financial condition and results of operations; the Company’s revenue model may not remain effective, and the Company cannot guarantee that its future monetization strategies will be successfully implemented or generate sustainable revenues and profit; technology changes rapidly in the Company’s business and if it fails to anticipate or successfully implement new technologies or adopt new business strategies, technologies or methods, the quality, timeliness and competitiveness of the Company’s amateur tournaments or competitions may suffer; the Company relies on information technology and other systems and platforms, and any failures, errors, defects or disruptions in the Company’s systems or platforms could diminish its brand and reputation, subject it to liability, disrupt its business, affect its ability to scale its technical infrastructure and adversely affect its operating results and growth prospects..

Additional factors include those described in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, including under the captions “Risk Factors,” “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations,” and “Business,” in the Company’s subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, including under the captions “Risk Factors” and “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations,” and in our subsequent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

A forward-looking statement is neither a prediction nor a guarantee of future events or circumstances. You should not place undue reliance on the forward-looking statements. Unless required by federal securities laws, the Company assumes no obligation to update any of these forward-looking statements, or to update the reasons actual results could differ materially from those anticipated, to reflect circumstances or events that occur after the statements are made.

Investor Relations Contact:

Adele Carey

VP, Investor Relations

ir@thebraghouse.com

Media Contact:

Fatema Bhabrawala

Director of Media Relations

fbhabrawala@allianceadvisors.com



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Swann & Filias Earn USTFCCCA All-American Nods

Xander Swann & Dave Filias tallied All-American honors. Story Links Xander Swann (400-meter hurdles) and Dave Filias (hammer throw) of the Middlebury men’s track and field team tallied United States Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) All-American honors. The awards are based on the athlete’s performance at the NCAA […]

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Xander Swann & Dave Filias tallied All-American honors.

Xander Swann (400-meter hurdles) and Dave Filias (hammer throw) of the Middlebury men’s track and field team tallied United States Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) All-American honors. The awards are based on the athlete’s performance at the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships.

HONOREE HIGHLIGHTS

  • Swann (First Team)

    • Swann earns his first All-American honor.
    • In the qualifying rounds, the Panther clocked the second-fastest time in the 22-competitor field, stopping the clock at 52.22 seconds.
    • Swann excelled in the championship heat. Staying near the front of a cluster of competitors, he claimed bronze with a time of 52.63 seconds.
    • The Panther closes his Middlebury campaign with five all-region honors across the indoor and outdoor seasons, two NESCAC Men’s Track Athlete of the Week laurels and the 2025 Men’s Sabasteanski Award at the conference championships. 

  • Filias (Second Team)

    • Filias claimed All-American accolades for the second-consecutive campaign.
    • During the hammer, the senior recorded a toss of 56.09 meters, earning 15th overall.
    • The Panther is a three-time conference champion in the event, defending his title this spring with an event-best 57.47m.
    • Filias caps his Middlebury career with five all-conference nods and the program record in the event (61.22m).

Middlebury now has 37 Outdoor All-American honorees. Those who finish in the top-eight individually or in a relay earn first-team distinction, while individuals claiming ninth through 16th and relays earning ninth through 12th tally second-team laurels. The full list of honorees can be found here.



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Florida Atlantic University Athletics

BOCA RATON, Fla. – Florida Atlantic women’s basketball Head Coach LeAnn Freeland has announced the addition of graduate transfer Jessica Moors from Nova Southeastern.   Moors, a native of Auckland, New Zealand, joins the Owls as a graduate student after opening her collegiate career at Colorado State and playing the last two seasons at Nova […]

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BOCA RATON, Fla. – Florida Atlantic women’s basketball Head Coach LeAnn Freeland has announced the addition of graduate transfer Jessica Moors from Nova Southeastern.
 
Moors, a native of Auckland, New Zealand, joins the Owls as a graduate student after opening her collegiate career at Colorado State and playing the last two seasons at Nova Southeastern under Coach Freeland.
 
“Jess is a great addition to our program,” said Coach Freeland. “She was a huge part of our success at NSU for two seasons and helped lead us to two Sweet 16 appearances. She’s a versatile guard with good size, a high motor, and can defend any position. Jess is a great leader who works hard every day, challenges teammates, and is extremely coachable. Our staff is excited to announce Jess is an Owl!”
 
At Nova Southeastern, Moors made 61 appearances and 38 starts and helped lead the team to two NCAA DII Sweet 16 appearances during her two seasons with the Sharks. During her redshirt junior season, Moors led the Sharks in blocks with 24 and ranked second on the team in steals, collecting 58 and averaging 1.7 steals per game, as well as scoring 6.5 points per game and tallying 3.8 rebounds per contest. She tied a career-high 16 points against Palm Beach Atlantic twice on January 8 and March 4. Defensively, Moors posted 17 games with two or more steals, including a season-best six steals against Georgian Court on November 30. In her first season with NSU, Moors led the team in steals with 55, averaging 1.8 steals per contest, and ranked third on the team in rebounding, averaging 4.1 rebounds per game, in addition to scoring 5.8 points per game, shooting 40 percent from the field. She scored a career-high 16 points against Embry-Riddle on December 30, and posted 13 games with two or more steals, including a career-best seven steals against Mount Olive on December 13.
 
Prior to arriving at Nova Southeastern, Moors started her collegiate career and played two seasons at Colorado State. Moors redshirted her sophomore season in 2022-23. As a freshman, she appeared in 13 contests, averaging 6.1 minutes per game.
 
SEASON TICKETS
Season ticket renewals are now available, click here to renew your season tickets for the 2025-26 season. If interested in purchasing new season tickets, fill out the season ticket interest form here.
 
FOLLOW THE OWLS
For updates, follow @FAUWBB_Hoops on X and @FAUWBB on Instagram, or like Florida Atlantic Women’s Basketball on Facebook.
 





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Tetairoa McMillan talks Olympic flag football, volleyball career – NBC4 Washington

Carolina Panthers rookie wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan had Olympic aspirations in another sport long before it was announced that flag football would make its Olympic debut at the 2028 Los Angeles Games. “I didn’t play like a normal volleyball player,” he said. “I guess you could say I was kind of dangerous out there.” McMillan […]

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Carolina Panthers rookie wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan had Olympic aspirations in another sport long before it was announced that flag football would make its Olympic debut at the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

“I didn’t play like a normal volleyball player,” he said. “I guess you could say I was kind of dangerous out there.”

McMillan was a star volleyball player at Servite High School in Anaheim, Calif., where he tied the school record for most kills in a match. He was recruited by UCLA, USC and Stanford to play both football and volleyball collegiately before ultimately deciding to leave the state and focus on just playing football at the University of Arizona.

His high school volleyball coach, Matt Marrujo, even told Panthers.com that McMillan “had a shot” at competing for a spot on the U.S. Olympic volleyball team “if he had really focused on volleyball.”

“He’s just being generous,” McMillan said. “But who knows what could have been.”

The 6-foot-4 McMillan brought physicality from the football field to the volleyball court.

“I always swung as hard as I can,” McMillan said. “I feel like some people were spooked and scared to play me and block me at times.

“There’s a few people that I definitely hit in the face and I believe I broke [an opponent’s] hand before, I’m pretty sure.”

Conversely, McMillan credits his volleyball experience for making him a better football player.

“It’s all about timing,” he said. “Being able to time the ball at the highest point, being able to be a pogo stick bouncing off the ground as quick as possible.

“It’s not easy. People think volleyball is easy and it’s for girls, but it is not easy. It’ll humble you real quick.”

For now, with his volleyball playing career on pause, McMillan’s best shot at competing at an Olympics is in flag football. The competition will be held at BMO Stadium, just 30 miles from where he went to high school.

“That would be a real dope moment,” he said. “It’s something I can see myself doing in the future. But first I’ve got to make some plays on the football field and try to make a name for myself and maybe they’ll come recruit me for the flag football.”

When asked who he would want to quarterback Team USA, McMillan picked his starting quarterback with the Panthers, Bryce Young, although NFL conditions state that no more than one player per NFL team can represent each country. He also identified a pair of defensive players as intriguing prospects.

“They might grab Myles Garrett or somebody like that or Micah Parsons to go out there and just be freakishly athletic,” McMillan said in an interview on behalf of Sharpie, the pen he used to sign his NFL rookie contract. “But I’m fortunate enough to be a skill player, so I’ve got a higher percentage of being picked.”

If McMillan ever does decide to return to volleyball, there is precedent for a professional athlete switching sports to play at the Olympic level. Chase Budinger played beach volleyball at the 2024 Paris Games after seven seasons in the NBA.

But don’t expect to see McMillan competing on the sand.

“I chose to play an outdoor sport, which is football,” McMillan said, “so everything else I do is always going to be inside in the AC.”





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NCAA track and field Jacksonville 2025: Day one report

College World Series; Women’s College World Series; NFL OTAs | 2MD College baseball’s 64-team tournament is set to begin; the Women’s College World Series is down to 8 teams; Dolphins, Jaguars, Bucs OTAs. (This story has been updated to add new information.) The schedule said Jacques Guillaume was supposed to make his Jacksonville return for […]

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(This story has been updated to add new information.)

The schedule said Jacques Guillaume was supposed to make his Jacksonville return for the NCAA Track and Field East First Round preliminaries around 8 p.m. May 28.

The storm clouds replied: Not so fast.

By the time the last times and marks of the day’s track and field action lit up the scoresheet, with former Mandarin High School standout Guillaume now officially a second-round qualifier, Northeast Florida’s longest track day of 2025 had spilled over into May 29.

Hours of lightning left the nation’s top college track and field athletes burning the midnight oil, and beyond, for the first day of the NCAA championships at the University of North Florida’s Hodges Stadium.

Strong thunderstorms halted competition at 5:18 p.m., after the third flight in the men’s javelin and the second flight in the long jump, delaying the action for 4 hours and 42 minutes and bumping several events into the early hours of the morning.

But when the starting gun finally fired past midnight, Mandarin graduate Guillaume was ready. The Navy senior placed fourth in his heat of the 400-meter hurdles in 50.94 to earn one of the at-large berths for the May 30 second round.

Guillaume previously set school records at Mandarin in 2019, competing in both track and cross country with the Mustangs.

Another athlete not fazed by the delay was Georgia’s Moustafa Alsherif, who had begun his warm-up throws around 5 p.m. and then had to place his plans on hold through the evening. The senior finally returned from the long stoppage for a late-night throw of 246 feet, 1 inch to lead the 12 javelin qualifiers for the June 11-14 national championships in Eugene, Ore.

However, host UNF’s two runners both missed out. Aidan O’Gorman finished 24th in 29:43.79 in the 10,000 after entering with the fourth seed, and Robert Pedroza came in 42nd (1:50.53) in the 800.

Former Mandarin runner Gavin Nelson, a Florida sophomore, also exited after a 36th-place 1:49.57 in the 800, while Providence graduate Jocelyn Pringle, now at East Carolina, came in 23rd at 193 feet, 1 inch in the women’s hammer throw on May 29.

Most event favorites progressed comfortably, although not without some surprises.

In the long jump, Albany’s Louis Gordon topped the standings from the third flight with a career-best 25 feet, 8 1/4 inches, while fifth seed Xavier Branker of N.C. State was an early elimination from the 400 hurdles.



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Tarleton State Athletics breaks GPA record again in Spring 2025

Story Links STEPHENVILLE, Texas – For the second straight semester and for the third semester over the past two years, Tarleton State Athletics’ student-athletes have set a new department-wide GPA record in its NCAA Division I era.   Tarleton State’s roughly 400 student-athletes averaged a Spring 2025 semester GPA of 3.30. That breaks […]

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STEPHENVILLE, Texas – For the second straight semester and for the third semester over the past two years, Tarleton State Athletics’ student-athletes have set a new department-wide GPA record in its NCAA Division I era.
 
Tarleton State’s roughly 400 student-athletes averaged a Spring 2025 semester GPA of 3.30. That breaks Tarleton State’s D1 GPA record, which was set this past fall at 3.27.
 
Five programs set new GPA records, as well. A fifth of Tarleton State’s student-athletes posted a perfect 4.0 this semester.
 
Texan Women’s Golf had the best GPA with a program-record 3.89. Joining them above a 3.5 were Texan Tennis (3.70), Soccer (3.68), Volleyball (3.63) and Beach Volleyball (3.6).
 
Credit the hard work by Tarleton State’s student-athletes, Tarleton State University faculty, and Tarleton Athletics’ academic department; Dr. Megon O’Quin, Brandon North, Chelsea Stone, Annabel Anderson, Amber Renz, Samuel Arthur and Amelia Anderson.
 





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Iona Anderson Out of Australian World Championship Trials While Managing a Back Injury

Australian Olympian Iona Anderson will miss next month’s World Championship Trials while managing a back injury. That rules the 19-year-old out of the World Championships, as the Trials are Australia’s only selection event for Singapore. The Trials will be held June 9-14 in Adelaide. Australia released the entry lists for Trials this week, and Anderson’s was […]

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Australian Olympian Iona Anderson will miss next month’s World Championship Trials while managing a back injury. That rules the 19-year-old out of the World Championships, as the Trials are Australia’s only selection event for Singapore.

The Trials will be held June 9-14 in Adelaide.

Australia released the entry lists for Trials this week, and Anderson’s was the notable absence.

She won silver on the women’s 400 medley relay (prelims) and bronze in the mixed 400 medley relay (prelims) at the Paris Olympic Games. She also finished 5th individually in the 100 back, where she was the youngest finalist by three-and-a-half years (Regan Smith was next-youngest).

The 19-year-old is Australia’s backstroke understudy to Olympic Champion Kaylee McKeown.

Anderson last raced at the Victorian Open Championships in February, where she swam 28.10 in the 50 back, 1:00.50 in the 100 back, and 2:13.22 in the 200 back.

There is no timeline for Anderson’s return.

She is one of at least two Australian Olympians who will miss this summer’s festivities with injuries: breaststroker Sam Williamson will miss the meet after suffering a gruesome knee injury while doing warmup box jumps.





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