NIL
Pathway Sports sets sights on maximizing returns for players in college football video game space
Casey Schwab’s background doesn’t exactly scream “gamer.” A Wisconsin graduate with a law degree from Southern Cal, Schwab’s career has included stops at NFL Network, Fox and, eventually, the NFLPA, running business and legal affairs for NFL Players Inc. He followed all that by founding Altius Sports Partners in 2020 amid the advent of NIL. […]

Casey Schwab’s background doesn’t exactly scream “gamer.”
A Wisconsin graduate with a law degree from Southern Cal, Schwab’s career has included stops at NFL Network, Fox and, eventually, the NFLPA, running business and legal affairs for NFL Players Inc. He followed all that by founding Altius Sports Partners in 2020 amid the advent of NIL.
So, how and why, with a CV like that, is Schwab’s latest venture centered on, of all things, video games?
“There’s a lot of uncertainty [in the college space] around revenue sharing, the [House] settlement, employment status — or not employment status — collective bargaining,” he said. “But there’s not a lot of uncertainty around the commercial opportunities for college football players when it comes to video games.”
That clarity is why Schwab has moved on to a new venture — Pathway Sports and Entertainment.
Pathway’s business model is simple: The company aims to develop a video game group license for college football players by offering individual upfront payments of $1,500.
The real potential comes as those players signed on with Pathway could earn further compensation, should the group license subsequently be sold to a developer such as Electronic Arts, at which time players would receive no less than 70% of the net royalties.
So far, that pitch has been heard loud and clear.
Pathway has signed more than 2,700 players across the Power Four, just under half the total scholarship athletes at that level. That includes inking deals with at least 75% of the rosters at Alabama, Baylor, Texas, Georgia, Tennessee, Oregon, Nebraska, Wisconsin, SMU, Washington, Texas Tech and South Carolina, among others.
“It’s incumbent on us to perform,” said Eric Winston, president of Winners Alliance, the firm backing Pathway financially. “We’re not telling college players, ‘Hey, trust us,’ or ‘There’s a hope and a prayer and we’ll see what we can do.’ We’re out laying capital to these players so that they’re no worse off than the baseline — and we still believe that we can do multiples of that baseline better over time.”
The college football video game ecosystem exists in a relatively monopolistic state — opening the door for a disrupter such as Pathway.
EA, which declined to comment for this story when reached by Sports Business Journal, signed more than 11,000 athletes in relaunching its college football franchise last year via EA Sports College Football 25.
Those deals are technically individual and nonexclusive, though the majority of those athletes are also part of a group licensing agreement with OneTeam, which handles player payments and other responsibilities related to the game.
Pathway’s approach, albeit more aggressive, is essentially betting if it can sign enough players, developers would have to buy its group license in order to maintain a certain level of user experience.
After all, would the lone major college football video game sell to its maximum potential without half the players in the Power Four?
“There have been some headwinds,” Schwab conceded. “There’ve been some people who are confused by what we’re doing. There are some people who are challenged by what we’re doing. All of those are to be expected and, frankly, welcomed when you’re trying to disrupt and innovate and do something new.”
The announcement dropped like a hopeful hammer.
“For those who never stopped believing…” the post from EA Sports College’s X account read on Feb. 2, 2021, confirming the return of a college football video game.
While it was three more years before users had a downloadable game in front of them, EA Sports College Football 25 has since become the bestselling sports video game of all time, according to Circana (EA has not disclosed its exact sales figures).
“I was expecting it to debut as the biggest college football game in a launch month,” Mat Piscatella, Circana executive director, video games, told SBJ last year. “But I did not expect it to more than triple the lifetime dollar sales of the previous bestselling game [NCAA Football 07].”
For what massive success the revamped franchise has enjoyed after a decade-long hiatus, there has been ample consternation over athletes’ compensation related to their inclusion in the game.
The initial wave of onboarding real players into EA Sports College Football 25 — a significant shift from past iterations, given restrictions around NIL at the time — was done via a joint effort by EA, Learfield and OneTeam Partners.
Players were offered a flat payment of $600, regardless of position or school, along with a copy of the game for either PlayStation or Xbox. Cover athlete and “Ambassador” deals also were struck with a select number of athletes (terms of those deals have not been made public).
The issue Pathway intends to rectify: The upfront cash paid to players reflected neither their value to the game nor offered them a stake in how well it sold.
“Whether it‘s EA, whether it‘s whomever, we really think that we can bring value into a place that, quite frankly, players have not received it yet,” Winston said. “That just comes back to that core premise of why we’re doing this.”
Pathway’s efforts aren’t entirely novel, considering the machinations entailed in launching EA Sports College Football 25. But the backing behind Pathway, its key players and the group’s early returns are significant enough to merit notice.
The company’s three-person leadership team includes Schwab, former Georgia NIL collective frontman Matt Hibbs and Bob Philp, a longtime sports marketing executive most recently at CAA and Roc Nation. It also added Sami Robbins, who’d been managing college NIL partnerships at OneTeam, as its new director of college.
“Between myself, our investors and our operational team, we have quite literally decades of experience of structuring those deals, monetizing those deals, maximizing those deals for the athletes,” Schwab said.
In all, signing every scholarship player at the FBS level (134 schools) using Pathway’s $1,500 baseline could cost more than $17 million, or around $127,000 per school.
The company also is creating an activation program slated to feature up to 200 athletes for varying opportunities beyond the base payment.
Winners Alliance — an agency that has handled group licensing efforts in professional tennis and cricket and is headed up by OneTeam founding CEO Ahmad Nassar — is fronting the money to get Pathway off the ground. Winston declined to disclose how much is being invested, but it‘s understood enough capital has been poured in to pay players for multiple years.
Eventually, though, there will need to be a return on that investment.
Schwab told SBJ that Pathway’s profit plan centers on taking a cut of any deal that might be struck with potential game developers.
For example, Pathway and EA could hypothetically agree to a deal granting Pathway 10% of game sales in exchange for EA incorporating those players captured under the group license. If that game recorded $340 million in sales, Pathway would net $34 million, or double the rough investment it would take to sign all 11,000-plus FBS players.
Schwab noted at least 70% of the profit Pathway generates from a group license sale will go toward players. In this case, around $24 million of the theoretical $34 million agreement would be earmarked for athletes (about $2,100 per person) — $17 million toward the initial investments the company made in player signings, and roughly $7 million in new money. Pathway would then pocket the remaining $10 million.
“They have a value proposition for college players that is unique to anything else I‘ve seen in this space,” Arizona Cardinals tackle and Pathway adviser Kelvin Beachum said in a statement provided to SBJ. “They have a dedicated team and long-term vision that puts the players first, which is something I wish I had as a college player.”
Pathway has roared out of the gates since its first set of meetings with teams in February, but forecasting its long-term feasibility and potential isn’t as simple as back-of-the-napkin math.
For one, Pathway and EA have no current business relationship in place, and the latter is certainly under no obligation to create one.
There’s also competition on the market.
OneTeam — which handled NIL agreements for EA ahead of last year’s launch of College Football 25, and has played a major role with the NFLPA and EA’s Madden arrangement since 2020 — upped its one-time payments to athletes from $600 to $1,500 in March.
Still, the swath of agreements Pathway has struck should have a consequential impact in the not-too-distant future.
The deals the company inked in recent months are nonexclusive in 2025, but become exclusive in 2026 and extend through a player’s eligibility (exclusivity would end at that point).
More significant, Pathway also has included a right of first refusal in its deals for players who make a pro roster, giving the company a 90-day window to negotiate video game rights for those athletes.
That could theoretically create an impasse (or, on the flip side, incentivize partnership) between Pathway, the NFLPA, OneTeam and EA related to group licensing and the Madden franchise.
The NFLPA and OneTeam declined to comment for this story when reached by SBJ.
Schwab, however, insisted the ROFR included in Pathway’s deals is unlikely to be exercised.
“The only way it would make sense for us, or anybody, to exercise that right is if we had a deal with a video game developer to go pay more for those rights,” he said. “The analogy is if somebody has a right of first refusal on my house, and I’m trying to sell my house, I‘m going to be able to drive the rest of the market up for the value of my house.”
Pathway may also serve purposes beyond college football video games — though Schwab is adamant it‘s not a precursor to a union.
The company’s advisory board includes co-head of WME Sports Karen Brodkin and National Association of Basketball Coaches Executive Director Craig Robinson, suggesting a potential foray into college basketball.
More immediately, college sports leaders are determined to avoid classifying athletes as employees, despite seeking a way to collectively bargain (federal law requires one be deemed an employee in order to do so). Group licensing, thus, might provide a way to pseudo-organize without needing employee status or an antitrust exemption from Congress.
The approach is also one schools may look toward in a post-House settlement world, where NIL deals are likely to face more scrutiny from a Deloitte-run clearinghouse designed to judge fair market value on agreements worth $600 or more.
“I‘m a firm believer that the path forward [for college sports] is a situation where the student athletes can act collectively and we can reach an agreement with them in some form,” said former Notre Dame AD Jack Swarbrick, who‘s serving as an adviser for Pathway. “There are a lot of different ways to skin that cat, and so I‘m super supportive of anybody who‘s laying the groundwork for that. Casey certainly is.”

NIL
Franklin addresses CFP in media session | News, Sports, Jobs
UNIVERSITY PARK — The College Football Playoffs are evolving even faster than NIL and the transfer portal. It seems inevitable that the field will expand to 16 teams, possibly as soon as the 2026 season. The management committee for the CFP recently modified the seeding where the top four conference champions will not necessarily receive […]

UNIVERSITY PARK — The College Football Playoffs are evolving even faster than NIL and the transfer portal. It seems inevitable that the field will expand to 16 teams, possibly as soon as the 2026 season.
The management committee for the CFP recently modified the seeding where the top four conference champions will not necessarily receive a bye, but will go to the top four teams.
Now, the discussion has changed to how are the teams picked and should the committee start using a formula such as what was used in the BCS era from 1998-2013.
Count Penn State coach James Franklin as part of the crowd that is undecided.
“There were all these complaints about the BCS,” Franklin said. “Then we go to (the CFP), and the problem is everyone voting is biased, whether you want to be or not. In a lot of ways, you could make the argument that a formula could be better, but we didn’t love the formula, so we went to this.”
Ohio State coach Ryan Day made the argument earlier this week that the Big Ten should have four automatic qualifiers to the playoffs. Part of the reasoning is because the conference expanded to 18 teams last season, with the four West Coast teams being some of the predominant teams that the PAC-12 featured for many years.
“It’s an interesting discussion,” Franklin said of the four automatic qualifiers. “Somebody said, ‘Let’s just choose the best 16.’ Well, how do you choose the best 16?
“It’s why I think we need a commissioner. The majority of people that have strong opinions have an agenda and are biased based on what’s good for them.
“We do have more teams now and a greater level of competition. Why should (the field makeup) be balanced? I think that’s the conversation everyone is having.”
It’s an ongoing conversation that likely won’t have an end game until at least next year, if not longer. Franklin pointed out that the Big Ten only plays nine conference games, while the SEC only plays eight in league play. That only scratches the surface of the whole dilemma.
“At the end of the day there’s not going to be a perfect system,” Franklin said. But let’s make it as perfect as we can so we can compare an apple to an apple.”
A brand new room
The leading wide receiver from last year’s Nittany Lions returning is Liam Clifford, who managed to get just 286 yards on 18 catches. First Team All-American tight end Tyler Warren was a first-round NFL Draft pick, while Harrison Wallace III and Omari Evans transferred to Ole Miss and Washington, respectively.
But the wideouts were revamped over the winter with USC’s Kyron Hudson and Troy’s Devonte Ross committing to Penn State via the transfer portal. On the day of the Blue-White Game, it was also reported that Syracuse’s Trebor Pena was also coming to State College.
Pena had 84 receptions for 941 yards and nine touchdowns last season for the Orange.
“It worked out pretty well,” Franklin said. “Since he’s been here, I know our veteran players like him. Hudson has come here and been a good fit and the guys really like him. Hudson and Pena were both captains at their schools. That’s very telling.”
What has the rest of the coaching staff noticed about Pena since he’s been on campus?
“He’s got tremendous ball skills,” offensive coordinator Andy Kotelnicki said. “He’s really quick. He can make things happen with the ball in his hands.”
Wide receivers coach Marques Hagans pointed out his production, his competitiveness, and his toughness stands out on film.
“No matter what system you’re in, football is football,” Hagans said. “Can he run? Can he catch? What can he do with the ball in his hands? It’s a different system, but the result we need is the same. Guys that can get open and catch the ball and make something happen with it. He proved he can do that on film.”
Edge rusher out
Franklin confirmed on Thursday that redshirt freshman defensive end Max Granville is out with a long-term injury that he suffered at home while working out.
Granville saw limited action in seven games last year with one tackle and one pass break-up, but was likely going to receive a bigger role this season.
“Obviously not an ideal situation,” Franklin said. “My heart breaks for the kid and the family. Obviously not what we wanted or needed either. He played last year and we were depending on him taking that next step this year.”
NIL
Michigan Running Back’s Groundbreaking NIL Deal Redefines College Football
Michigan Running Back’s Groundbreaking NIL Deal Redefines College Football originally appeared on Athlon Sports. When Justice Haynes traded crimson for maize and blue, Michigan fans expected game-changing runs. What they didn’t expect? A business move just as explosive. Advertisement Haynes, the former Alabama running back and one of the top transfers of 2025, has inked […]

Michigan Running Back’s Groundbreaking NIL Deal Redefines College Football originally appeared on Athlon Sports.
When Justice Haynes traded crimson for maize and blue, Michigan fans expected game-changing runs. What they didn’t expect? A business move just as explosive.
Advertisement
Haynes, the former Alabama running back and one of the top transfers of 2025, has inked a unique NIL deal with Loom Juices, not just as a brand ambassador, but as an equity stakeholder. That’s right: the Wolverines’ rising star now owns part of the brand.
“This partnership exemplifies how athletes can leverage their platforms for meaningful, long-term brand engagements,” said Haynes’ agent, Dan Everett.
In a landscape flooded with apparel deals and one-off endorsements, Haynes’ agreement stands out. According to On3’s Pete Nakos, the deal positions the 5-foot-11, 205-pound back not only as a face of Loom’s health-focused mission, but as a strategic partner. For Loom, which targets a younger, wellness-conscious demographic, Haynes is the ideal match.
Michigan Wolverines running back Justice Haynes.Maize & Blue Review
The move reflects a growing NIL trend: equity over appearance. Instead of cashing short-term checks, Haynes is playing the long game, something fans and athletes alike should take note of.
Advertisement
It’s a bold step for the sophomore, who tallied 715 total yards and nine touchdowns over two seasons at Alabama. After entering the portal this winter, Haynes chose Michigan over South Carolina and Ole Miss, eager for a bigger stage and a larger role. He now enters a wide-open RB competition for a team hungry to rebound from a disappointing 10-3 finish in 2024.
With Haynes bringing both his downhill running style and entrepreneurial mindset to Ann Arbor, it’s clear: this isn’t just about football anymore.
This NIL deal isn’t just a contract. It’s a statement about athlete empowerment, brand strategy, and the evolving landscape of college sports.
If Haynes breaks out in the Big Ten like many expect, Loom Juices won’t just have a new face. They’ll have a stake in a star.
Advertisement
Related: Former Kentucky Great Has Words About NIL: “I’m Glad I Didn’t Play in That Era”
Related: Bill Belichick Breaks Silence on NIL Chaos
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 5, 2025, where it first appeared.
NIL
What Georgia pays softball coach Tony Baldwin after 2024 extension
Georgia softball reached the NCAA Super Regional round this past season for the third straight year under coach Tony Baldwin. It came after a tough SEC season when a Bulldogs team with an overhauled roster did not win an SEC series in a conference that saw three teams reach the final four of the Women’s […]

Georgia softball reached the NCAA Super Regional round this past season for the third straight year under coach Tony Baldwin.
It came after a tough SEC season when a Bulldogs team with an overhauled roster did not win an SEC series in a conference that saw three teams reach the final four of the Women’s College World Series.
Georgia awarded Baldwin with a boost in pay and a three-year contract extension in a deal signed last September, according to a contract obtained by the Athens Banner-Herald in an open records request.
It keeps Baldwin under contract through the end of the 2029 season and raised his total pay to $325,000 annually. That’s an increase of approximately $87,000 for Baldwin, who just completed his fourth season as Georgia’s head coach.
Baldwin’s pay is still below at least nine other SEC coaches according to a salary survey from The Oklahoman.
As part of the deal, Baldwin’s total pay increases $25,000 each year of the deal to $350,000 starting July 1, 2025, $375,000 on July 1, 2026, $400,000 on July 1, 2027 and $425,000 on July 1, 2028.
Baldwin also received a $30,000 longevity bonus on Sept. 30, 2024 and receives a $25,000 longevity bonus one month after each season.
He was due to receive a $50,000 longevity bonus on July 31, 2026 under his original contract after he was promoted from associate coach under Lu Harris-Champer following the 2021 season when the Bulldogs last made the Women’s College World Series.
Georgia finished the 2025 season with a 35-23 record. It went 7-16 in the SEC but won an NCAA regional as a lower-seeded team at Duke.
“This was a very young team, we graduated a ton of seniors last year,” athletic director Josh Brooks said. “Really excited with the progress they made. With all due respect to Duke and every other conference, we went through a gauntlet in the SEC. I knew once we got to regionals…I felt good about our opportunity.”
Georgia lost a deciding game three against Florida in a Super Regional series in Gainesville, 5-2.
“We’ve taken our share of punches and shots and all of the setbacks and we’ve shown up every week to start the new week with a fresh mindset that this week’s going to be our week and you don’t get that without great senior people in your room,” Baldwin, who is 163-75 as head coach, said after the final game. “We had some shortcomings this year, but the reason that we played for a chance to go to the World Series today was because of the people we have in a room, and I’ll go to bat with that any time.”
Brooks said he feels good about where the program is with a young team and the additions it’s making in the transfer portal and through the high school ranks.
“We’re giving them support now, a brand new facility,” Brooks said of softball upgrades. “We got to showcase it at the SEC softball tournament. I think facilities still do matter. I know NIL has become a big thing, but for a sport like softball, not just for recruiting but for how a kid will be able to train and develop and where they’ll call home, I think matters. I think it will keep elevating that program.”
NIL
NCAA super regional game today
Louisville baseball coach Dan McDonnell on Super Regional game vs. Miami Louisville’s Dan McDonnell talks the day before the NCAA Tournament Super Regional game against Miami at Jim Patterson Stadium. Miami baseball has a 12-11 series lead over Louisville. The Louisville Cardinals are 37-10 all-time in postseason home game, advancing to five straight super regional […]


Louisville baseball coach Dan McDonnell on Super Regional game vs. Miami
Louisville’s Dan McDonnell talks the day before the NCAA Tournament Super Regional game against Miami at Jim Patterson Stadium.
- Miami baseball has a 12-11 series lead over Louisville.
- The Louisville Cardinals are 37-10 all-time in postseason home game, advancing to five straight super regional series between 2013 and 2017 and again in 2019. They won in 2013, 2014, 2017 and 2019.
- The Miami Hurricanes have made the College World Series 25 times with four national championships. Most recently, they made back-to-back trips in 2015 and 2016.
Louisville baseball and Miami are set for Game 1 of their NCAA Tournament super regional series today at Jim Patterson Stadium.
The ACC foes didn’t play this year but are two of the conference’s five teams to make the super regionals. Louisville will look for a series victory over the Hurricanes to make it back to the College World Series in Omaha for the first time since 2019. That was also the last time the Cardinals hosted a super regional. The Cardinals swept East Carolina that season to advance to the CWS.
Here is what to know heading into Game 1 of the best-of-three series.
Buy Louisville baseball tickets
Miami has a 12-11 series lead over Louisville. The two programs are 2-2 over their last four meetings with the Hurricanes winning the last two games of last year’s ACC series.
Louisville is in postseason form and playing with a ton of momentum right now. Going 3-0 in the regional with almost a week off to prepare will give the squad the time it needs to take Game 1 of the series. Louisville 8, Miami 4.
The Cardinals are 37-10 all-time in postseason home game, advancing to five straight super regional series between 2013 and 2017 and again in 2019. They won in 2013, 2014, 2017 and 2019.
The Hurricanes have made the College World Series 25 times with four national championships. Most recently, they made back-to-back trips in 2015 and 2016.
Looking to buy Louisville baseball tickets? We’ve got you covered.
Buy Louisville baseball tickets
- Game 1: June 6, 3 p.m.
- Game 2: June 7, 11 a.m.
- Game 3: June 8, TBD (if necessary)
Reach Louisville football, women’s basketball and baseball beat writer Alexis Cubit at acubit@gannett.com and follow her on X at @Alexis_Cubit.
NIL
Texas governor implements integral new bill heading into new athletic year
As we head into a new athletics year under the NIL era, a new bill has been signed into law in the state of Texas that could benefit Texas A&M and other universities in the state moving forward. As announced on Thursday afternoon, Governor Greg Abbott signed a new NIL law that will allow athletes […]

As we head into a new athletics year under the NIL era, a new bill has been signed into law in the state of Texas that could benefit Texas A&M and other universities in the state moving forward.
As announced on Thursday afternoon, Governor Greg Abbott signed a new NIL law that will allow athletes over 17 in the state to receive NIL contracts directly from a university. This bill also aligns with the House settlement that is yet to be approved. For Texas A&M and other in-state universities, it will allow them to avoid any potential lawsuits or compliance issues and compete for recruits in some ways others may not be able to just yet.
The implementation of the bill was first reported by KBTX senior sports writer Travis L. Brown via X:
Let’s cut straight to the facts: there is no denying the influence of NIL on all collegiate athletics and it continues to grow by the minute. The transfer portal has reached historic numbers since the decision was made to introduce financial gain for players for their name, image and likeness (NIL).
That was just the beginning of something way bigger than anyone ever thought could happen in the sport. Some college athletes, like UCLA quarterback Nico Lamaleava, are making millions of dollars before they even reach the National Football League, which has always been the goal of most athletes, historically speaking.
Now, what is stopping players from just managing their finances in college and then retiring? Is that going to cause a shortage of athletes in the NFL? Or, will the professional football league continue to blossom? That is still to be determined.
For now, the House vs. NCAA antitrust lawsuit remains in full swing, with seemingly no end in sight just yet. The proposed, and now imposed, bill in the state of Texas protects universities in the state in more ways than one, while also providing a slight edge in recruiting as well.
The world of NIL and the transfer portal is something that will change rapidly and often. As new bills are signed or rejected, there seems to be some major miscommunications between the House and the NCAA that could be detrimental for all parties if not solved.
Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Dylan on X: @dylanmflippo.
This article originally appeared on Aggies Wire: Texas governor signs NIL bill integral to universities in the state
NIL
Florida gymnastics adds eMjae Frazier, 10
AI-assisted summaryFlorida Gymnastics had an early exit in the 2025 NCAA Championship, their worst finish since 2019.The Gators added All-American eMjae Frazier from Cal-Berkeley to bolster their roster for the 2026 season.Frazier is a 10-time All-American and holds multiple Cal program records.Florida also welcomes four incoming freshmen, including two 5-star recruits.Florida gymnastics’ season ended at […]

AI-assisted summaryFlorida Gymnastics had an early exit in the 2025 NCAA Championship, their worst finish since 2019.The Gators added All-American eMjae Frazier from Cal-Berkeley to bolster their roster for the 2026 season.Frazier is a 10-time All-American and holds multiple Cal program records.Florida also welcomes four incoming freshmen, including two 5-star recruits.Florida gymnastics’ season ended at its earliest since 2019 with a stunning defeat in the semifinals.
It was an unexpected end for the third-ranked Gators, which fell to eventual national champion Oklahoma and upstart Missouri in its bid for the program’s fourth national championship and first since 2015.
The loss capped off a frustrating season where Florida dealt with injuries and inconsistent performances. With six seniors departing, including former national champion and Olympic alternate Leanne Wong, changes had to come to return the program to its perch atop the sport.
A month and a half after the defeat, coach Jenny Rowland and Co. reloaded and attacked the transfer portal. Last season, the team added All-American Selena Harris-Miranda, who instantly became one of the team’s best gymnasts.
This offseason, it seems like Rowland has struck gold once again as she’s corralled rising senior eMjae Frazier from Cal-Berkeley to join the Gators’ 2026 squad.
Here’s what you need to know about Frazier and her impact:
Who is eMjae Frazier?
Frazier (first name pronounced MJ) spent her first three years of college at Cal-Berkeley. She’s from the east coast, though, originally hailing from Erial, New Jersey.
At Berkeley, Frazier made a splash as a freshman. She was one of three freshmen to be named an All-American at the 2023 NCAA Championships. The other two first years are now her teammates – Kayla DiCello and Harris-Miranda (who did it at UCLA).Frazier and Harris-Miranda both know each other due to their west coast backgrounds, and it’s likely Harris-Miranda played a role in Frazier’s decision to come to Gainesville.Harris-Miranda arrived in North-Central Florida with an already impressive resume – including 2024 Pac-12 Gymnast of the Year. However, she took it up a notch – being named SEC Newcomer of the Year and earning five All-American nods.The Gators will certainly hope for similar improvement from Frazier, although her resume is already pretty stellar. Frazier is a 10-time All-American and, like Harris-Miranda, she picked up an impressive accolade in the 2024 season – World Collegiate Gymnastics Association (WCGA) West Region Gymnast of the Year.She’s scored three perfect 10s – two on floor and one on balance beam – and holds Cal program records for all-around, floor and beam.How does Frazier fit into the Gators?Frazier gives Florida’s some much needed depth. The loss of Wong is the big one, obviously, but the team also lost Sloane Blakely and Victoria Nguyen, both of whom received ample time competing last season.Frazier fits into the Gators’ all-around lineup along with Harris-Miranda. Anya Pilgrim is also back for her junior season, and rising sophomores like Ly Bui and Taylor Clark are key pieces.The unknowns on this roster come from Skye Blakely and Kayla DiCello. Both are supremely talented and seemed ready to claim Olympic spots in 2024, but they each suffered injuries during Trials. Blakely recovered in time to compete this season, but she was limited. Expect her role to increase big time.DiCello dealt with enough nagging injuries where she couldn’t compete in 2025. She is healthy, and let’s not forget, she was SEC Freshman of the Year in 2023.
Who else is joining the Gators?Frazier is one of five newcomers so far on the Gators’ 2026 roster. The other four are incoming freshman. They include Amelia Disidore, Maddy Dorbin, Jocelyn Sasson and Jayla Booker.Sasson and Dorbin are each rated as 5-star recruits from College Gym News, while Disidore and Booker are 4-stars. Disidore is also the younger sister of Gabby Disidore – who is a rising junior on UF’s squad.The final member of the class was Bui, but she decided to enroll early and competed much of the season at age 16.
Noah Ram covers Florida Gators athletics and Gainesville-area high school sports for The Gainesville Sun, GatorSports.com and the USA TODAY Network. Contact him at nram@gannett.com. Follow him on X @Noah_ram1. Read his coverage of the Gators’ national championship basketball season in “CHOMP-IONS!” — a hardcover coffee-table collector’s book from The Sun. Details at Florida.ChampsBook.com.
-
College Sports2 weeks ago
Portal Update – Basketball and Gymnastics Take Hits
-
College Sports2 weeks ago
Portal Update – Basketball and Gymnastics Take Hits
-
Professional Sports2 weeks ago
Jon Jones answers UFC retirement speculation as fans accuse champion of 'holding the belt …
-
Health3 weeks ago
BYU women's basketball guard injures ACL twice
-
NIL2 weeks ago
2025 NCAA Softball Tournament Bracket: Women’s College World Series bracket, schedule set
-
Youtube2 weeks ago
Xavier Legette taught Marty Smith his signature celly
-
High School Sports2 weeks ago
Today in the MHSAA
-
College Sports3 weeks ago
IU basketball recruiting
-
College Sports2 weeks ago
NCDC Commitment Profiles: Cyclones’ Martins Moving On to Saint Anselm College • USPHL
-
Health3 weeks ago
New training facility opens in Reading for athletes' mental and physical advancement