Nina Ballou will compete for …

… I’m loving these College reveal videos.

Click PLAY or watch it on Instagram.

Her top criteria for picking the schools to visit were “diversity, NIL opportunity, [a] huge fanbase, and that family feel.” …

For 5-Star Nina Ballou, ____ is Home

Samantha Peszek – fear on Beam

Sam Peszek was the 2011 and 2015 NCAA balance beam champion. A legend on the apparatus.

After retirement in 2017, she launched Beam Queen Bootcamp.

Despite her successful gymnastics career, she struggled with fears on beam majority of her career.

We had the opportunity to get insight into how she dealt with fear and ultimately overcame it.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Frida Esparza – Bhardwaj

Beautiful form and technique.

Frida Esparza is a Mexican-American artistic gymnast currently competing for UCLA.

Click PLAY or watch it on Instagram.

Ana Padurariu will try for Paris

Canada qualified a full team to the 2024 Olympics. I’m expecting it will be quite competitive to make that line-up.

Welcome back Ana.

Janelle McDonald interview

All agree that Janelle and her assistants turned UCLA around last year.

With increased difficulty on Vault, they plan to be even better in 2024.

Janelle is super enthusiastic. Her main goal still is building the culture.

Heath interviews Morgan

Past world Champion Morgan Hurd is (relatively) healthy. Looking forward to competing for Florida this season. Excited about her new floor routine.

Needless to say, Heath is an excellent interviewer and we can predict his will soon be one of the best and most popular Gymnastics podcasts.

Tom Farden on paid admin leave

Carly Dockendorf has agreed to be interim head coach of the Red Rocks.

From the statement:

“This action comes after recent conduct and actions by Coach Farden not related to student-athlete welfare, which simply do not align with our values and expectations.”

KJ Kindler interview

Every year KJ Kindler starts with an expectation that Oklahoma will win. Again.

All Things Gymnastics Podcast just posted a pre-season interview.

Once again in 2024, do NOT bet against OU. 😀

NCAA NIL is a MESS

The 3rd year of NCAA NAME, IMAGE, LIKENESS (NIL) is underway.

Unsurprisingly, the rollout has been inconsistent and unfair.

According to a study by Opendorse, the leading athlete marketplace and NIL technology company, the NIL market should grow by 11.2% to a whopping $1.17 billion. And while that’s great for all student-athletes, the lion’s share of that money is flowing into the 65 Power 5 football programs. …

More than half of $1.17 billion spent on NIL will go to 65 teams in one sport, report shows

Some additional facts from NIL year 2 via The Upside:

  • Deep-pocketed alumni superfans, also known as boosters, have created complex organizations and nonprofits to effectively use as slush funds to attract the top athletes to play for their alma maters
  • A group of University of Iowa superfans, pays recent transfer quarterback Cade McNamara $600 an hour for various community-oriented tasks, like delivering meals to seniors and making visits to children’s hospitals
  • Michigan State football players, are simply tasked with promoting their collective’s charity via social media, … some athletes to make as much as $25,000 per post.
  • University of Utah’s Crimson Collective is granting every scholarship football player a new $61,000 Dodge truck — leased to each player
  • average starter at a major football program now makes about $103,000 a year, according to Opendorse, while the average men’s basketball player with a collective deal earns $37,000
  •  “[The collective system is] a pay-for-play scheme disguised as NIL,” Big Ten Conference commissioner Tony Petitti said at a Senate hearing in October

HOPEFULLY, the beginning of the NIL era may be remembered as a short-lived period of unregulated mayhem. The IRS is increasingly cracking down on booster organizing.

More regulation is needed. And it must be enforced.

All that said, I support College athletes getting MORE of the billion$ made by the NCAA.

But it should be done more fairly.

Livvy Dunne was the highest-valued women’s college athlete as of 2022.

One downside of fame and money is the need for security.

Gracie Kramer – professional gymnast

Gracie has a few different revenue streams, including coaching.

Former UCLA Gymnast Gracie Kramer @graciekramer14 ended her career early because of covid shut downs.

Now at 25, Gracie is considered “old” for a pro gymnast. But, Gracie is determined to go against the age stereotypes, continue flipping, and make a living doing it.

Watch to see how Gracie makes a living as a former college gymnast.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.