FAMU football has third spring scrimmage: Hear Quinn Gray's recap https://t.co/uRnXbVnDhR
— Tallahassee Democrat (@TDOnline) March 28, 2026
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Saturday, March 28, 2026
FAMU football has third spring scrimmage: Hear Quinn Gray's recap
Southern University: Inside The First Padded Practice l Spring Football 2026 | Faulk Media
Spring Practice Inside Look @GeauxJags https://t.co/gmK99cAj1G pic.twitter.com/HZTUcYiNLa
— SU Recruiting Spotlight (@Recruit4SU) March 28, 2026
FCS vs. FBS: Can a North Carolina Team Pull an Upset in 2026?
NC A&T was the last North Carolina FCS team to beat an FBS opponent (at ECU, 2018)
— NC Football News (@NCFootballNews) March 28, 2026
Our state's FCS squads will get seven chances in 2026.
We profile the match-ups and ponder if there's an upset or two in there somewhere:
STORY: https://t.co/zsDLKcMdNZ pic.twitter.com/TMdzVyrRqM
Thank You to the NFL Scouts Who Came Out To Pro Day!
Thank You to the NFL Scouts Who Came Out To Pro Day!#GuardTheeYard #JSUProDay2026 pic.twitter.com/4i8WlF1Jzm
— Jackson State Football (@gojsutigersfb) March 28, 2026
Savannah State takes down @GoldenBearsofMC in an emphatic way in Game Two!
Savannah State takes down @GoldenBearsofMC in an emphatic way in Game Two! Tigers look for a sweep tomorrow at 12pm at Tiger Field! #HailSSU! #ClawDown!🐅🔵🟠⚾️ pic.twitter.com/6Zt4aob1KQ
— Savannah State University Athletics (@SavStateTigers) March 28, 2026
Canopies Up. Mission Accomplished | Rick Kinsey
Canopies Up. Mission Accomplished.
— Rick Kinsey (@rickinsey1) March 28, 2026
Because of the generosity of 164 donors, our Championship Track Team now has the cover they deserve!
On behalf of Rattlers in Arms, Inc., THANK YOU for stepping up and making this vision a reality. Your impact will be felt for years to come. pic.twitter.com/mohsBaAUZa
Join Rattlers in Arms, Inc. and help us provide scholarships, support student success, and strengthen the legacy of Florida A&M University.
— Rick Kinsey (@rickinsey1) March 26, 2026
Your membership = Real impact.
Stand with us. Give back. Empower the next generation.
Join today.https://t.co/dgSmDTWzBI pic.twitter.com/Ejt9QKnDrm
Another Great Day.
— Rick Kinsey (@rickinsey1) March 22, 2026
Rattlers in Arms, Inc surprised a student from the Rattler Track Team with a $1K scholarship for his performance in the classroom and on the Track field. Bryce Webb is a junior, majoring in psychology and has a 3.65 GPA.https://t.co/JQ8je7dz5h pic.twitter.com/zDBjqCOXbu
Join Rattlers in Arms, Inc. and help us provide scholarships, support student success, and strengthen the legacy of Florida A&M University.
— Rattlers In Arms (@RattlersinArms) March 27, 2026
Your membership = Real impact.
Stand with us. Give back. Empower the next generation.
Join today.https://t.co/62bcbX7MTp pic.twitter.com/qiyD2VzMbH
#Southern Assistant Head Coach Curtis Johnson on Marshall Faulk coming to the Bluff | Brendon Fairbairn
“It's a perfect fit.”#Southern Assistant Head Coach Curtis Johnson on Marshall Faulk coming to the Bluff.
— Brendon Fairbairn (@FairbairnTV) March 28, 2026
The two share a long history—Johnson was the only coach to offer Faulk a chance to play running back out of high school. Now, it’s come full circle, with Johnson helping… pic.twitter.com/pvo5RRTtWs
Here's every 2026 HBCU football homecoming and classic in the FCS | Stan Becton
— Dbandman (@Dbandman2) March 28, 2026
Hornets' Baseball Falls To FAMU
Hornets' Baseball Falls To FAMU https://t.co/sEBRKCsPZU
— Dbandman (@Dbandman2) March 28, 2026
Rattlers win again, and will play tomorrow for the final game of the series!
#Repost @FAMU_Baseball
— The O&G StrikeZone (@OandGStrikezone) March 28, 2026
...
Have a great night 😉 Rattlers win again, and will play tomorrow for the final game of the series! #fangsup pic.twitter.com/9Zlc6qfoie
FAMU football has third spring scrimmage: RB Jamal Hailey recaps | Gerald Thomas III
FAMU football has third spring scrimmage: RB Jamal Hailey recaps https://t.co/DYVi1cigMG
— Tallahassee Democrat (@TDOnline) March 28, 2026
𝗪𝗜𝗡 𝗧𝗛𝗘 𝗗𝗔𝗬#RestoreTheStrike X #ALLIN pic.twitter.com/57syr1iGAp
— Florida A&M Football 🏈 (@FAMU_FB) March 28, 2026
Why FAMU football is emphasizing 'accountability' as spring game looms | Gerald Thomas III
FAMU football's final spring scrimmage evaluated mentality and discipline before the first public showcase, the Orange and Green game. 🏈
— G. Thomas III (@3peatgee) March 28, 2026
“Build confidence and make sure we’re mentally where we need to be,” says head coach Quinn Gray Sr. (@CoachQGray). https://t.co/mdvmlDLBdm
BOUNCED BACK.
BOUNCED BACK. #𝙃𝙖𝙞𝙡𝙒𝙞𝙡𝙙𝙘𝙖𝙩𝙨 | #𝙋𝙧𝙚𝙮𝙏𝙤𝙜𝙚𝙩𝙝𝙚𝙧 pic.twitter.com/zmSQShyT9L
— ⚾️Bethune-Cookman Baseball (@BCUDiamondCats) March 28, 2026
Why Southern’s Marshall Faulk told ex-Tulane head coach, ‘I'm not taking this job without you’ | Toyloy Brown III
"I'm not taking this job without you."
— Toyloy Brown III (@TJ3rd_) March 28, 2026
That was part of how Southern's Marshall Faulk sold former Tulane coach Curtis Johnson on joining him in Baton Rouge.
Inside Johnson's importance as Southern’s associate head coach and wide receivers coachhttps://t.co/c9hkiVqPPI
FINAL SCORE | FAMU 8, B-CU 2 | FAMU 6, B-CU 3
FINAL SCORE 8-2 pic.twitter.com/Lo5n6J1E59
— Florida A&M Softball 🥎 (@FAMU_Softball) March 28, 2026
Final from Sunnyland.
— Bethune-Cookman Softball 🥎 (@BCUsoftball) March 28, 2026
#𝙃𝙖𝙞𝙡𝙒𝙞𝙡𝙙𝙘𝙖𝙩𝙨 | #𝙋𝙧𝙚𝙮𝙏𝙤𝙜𝙚𝙩𝙝𝙚𝙧 pic.twitter.com/1N0TDAZyOx
Jakobi Heady has signed with the Johannesburg Giants of NBA Africa!
From B-CU to the NEXT LEVEL!
— 🏀Bethune-Cookman Men's Basketball (@BCUhoops) March 28, 2026
Jakobi Heady has signed with the Johannesburg Giants of NBA Africa!
#𝙃𝙖𝙞𝙡𝙒𝙞𝙡𝙙𝙘𝙖𝙩𝙨 | #𝙋𝙧𝙚𝙮𝙏𝙤𝙜𝙚𝙩𝙝𝙚𝙧 pic.twitter.com/UqPS21pBDH
Savannah State puts up a season high 26 runs and rolls to a Game One run rule victory over @GoldenBearsOfMC in their doubleheader!
Savannah State puts up a season high 26 runs and rolls to a Game One run rule victory over @GoldenBearsOfMC in their doubleheader! Game Two starts at around 3:15pm here at Tiger Field! #HailSSU! #ClawDown!🐅🔵🟠⚾️ pic.twitter.com/R3aMIY6Z4j
— Savannah State University Athletics (@SavStateTigers) March 28, 2026
𝗗𝗼𝗴𝘀 𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗿 𝗕𝘂𝗹𝗹𝘀 𝗔𝗡𝗬𝗗𝗔𝗬! 🔥
𝗗𝗼𝗴𝘀 𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗿 𝗕𝘂𝗹𝗹𝘀 𝗔𝗡𝗬𝗗𝗔𝗬! 🔥#BulldogNation | #BiteDown pic.twitter.com/aeWk92XhbU
— Bowie State Athletics (@BSU_Sports_Info) March 28, 2026
Make it 2️⃣ in a row!
Make it 2️⃣ in a row!#SWARMAS1 pic.twitter.com/jVpGf1Oucd
— Bama State Athletics (@BamaStateSports) March 28, 2026
The Benedict College Lady Tigers are the 2026 BCIC Women's Champions.
The Benedict College Lady Tigers are the 2026 BCIC Women's Champions.
— HBCUGO.TV (@HBCUGoTV) March 28, 2026
Raven Johnson finished with 21 points and 13 rebounds. pic.twitter.com/Qo8H6Ekw7G
Final.#BulldogNation | #BiteDown pic.twitter.com/cfWz9zeEd8
— Bowie State Athletics (@BSU_Sports_Info) March 28, 2026
Morgan Price Set the Standard. Fisk Set the Stage. The Impact Will Last
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Before there was proof, there was belief.
Before packed meets, national attention, and scores that demanded respect, there was a single question surrounding Fisk University’s gymnastics program:
Could this actually work?
Morgan Price answered that question the moment she stepped onto the mat.
She didn’t just compete. She set a standard.
Every routine, every landing, every score made it harder to ignore what was happening inside Fisk’s gym. She gave the program credibility before it had history. She gave it visibility before it had stability.
And in doing so, she helped turn an idea into something real.
Building Something That Didn’t Exist
But Morgan Price was not alone in building that reality.
From the beginning, Fisk’s first head coach, Corrinne Tarver, brought something just as critical as talent—knowledge of the pipeline.
Tarver understood the landscape because she had lived i
t.
A former NCAA champion at the University of Georgia, Tarver was part of the 1980 national championship team and became the first Black gymnast to win an NCAA all-around title. She had competed—and succeeded—at the highest level of the sport. She knew where the talent was, even when the system did not fully see it.
She understood what had been missing.
And more importantly, she understood how to connect the two.
There had always been Black gymnasts with the ability to compete at the highest level. What Fisk created—under Tarver’s leadership—was a place for that talent to land. A place that was intentional, visible, and unapologetic in its purpose.
This wasn’t accidental.
It was designed.
Recruit by recruit, routine by routine, the program took shape. Not as an experiment, but as a statement—that HBCUs could exist, and compete, in spaces where they had long been absent.
And it started with someone who already knew what excellence in that space looked like.
A Program in Transition
The program’s rise was not without disruption.
About February 19, 2025, founding head coach Corrinne Tarver stepped down, closing the first chapter of Fisk gymnastics just as it was still finding its footing. Her impact was already clear—she had built the roster, established the standard, and connected a pipeline that had long existed without a home.
But her departure created an immediate question:
What happens to a historic program when its foundation is suddenly without its architect?
That answer would not come easily.
In the weeks that followed, Nuriya Mack stepped forward as interim head coach, moving from supporting role to the front of a program that carried national attention and cultural significance. It was not a gradual transition. It was immediate.And it came with pressure.
Mack was not just managing lineups or practice schedules. She was being asked to stabilize something that meant more than wins and losses. Fisk gymnastics had become a symbol—of opportunity, of visibility, of what HBCUs could build when given the chance.
Now, in real time, she had to prove that the program could withstand change.
Interim roles are, by nature, uncertain. They test leadership in compressed time. They demand clarity without guarantees.
Mack met that moment.
She brought consistency where there could have been disruption. She maintained structure where momentum could have slipped. And most importantly, she kept the athletes focused—not on what had changed, but on what still needed to be done.
By the time her role transitioned from interim to permanent leadership, the program had already answered its biggest question:
It could endure.
A Final Season Defined by Growth and Resolve
By the time Fisk entered its final season, the program had already been tested.The foundation had held through transition. The leadership had been established. And the focus had shifted from survival to growth.
That responsibility now fully belonged to head coach Nuriya Mack.
And in 2025–26, her team responded—with performances that reflected everything they had endured to get there.
This season was not easy.
It was shaped by weather disruptions, injuries, and constant adjustment. But through it all, Fisk never fractured. It regrouped. It refocused. And it continued to improve.
That resilience showed clearly in the team’s final regular season meet on March 15, 2026, at the U.S. Air Force Academy, where Fisk posted a 189.250 to close the regular season.
But more than the score, it was how they competed.
From the opening rotation on uneven bars, the tone was set.
- Aiyana Thomas opened with a 9.15
- Ciniah Rosby followed with a strong 9.675
- Hadassah Diggs delivered a season-high 9.25
- Kennedi Johnson closed the rotation
Bars—once a developing event—had become a symbol of the team’s growth.
On vault, the momentum carried.
- Makia Rosado led with a 9.075
- Hadassah Diggs powered through for a season-high 9.65
- Ciniah Rosby added a steady 9.7
- Aliyah Reed-Hammon contributed a 9.65
- Aiyana Thomas closed with a season-high 9.5
By the time Fisk reached floor, the confidence was visible.
- Liberty Mora brought energy and scored a 9.275
- Aliyah Reed-Hammon added a 9.75
- Allie Berkley contributed a 9.525
- And Ciniah Rosby elevated the moment with a season-high 9.85
Then came beam—the final test of focus.
- Aliyah Reed-Hammon opened with a 9.825
- Sophia Pratt delivered a season-high 9.65
- Allie Berkley followed with a 9.7
- Ciniah Rosby remained steady at 9.725
- Hadassah Diggs added a standout 9.825
- Liberty Mora closed with a clean 9.325
It was Fisk’s highest-scoring event of the meet.
That performance wasn’t just execution.
It was maturity.
“This was a great experience for them to go against Air Force,” Mack said. “The team went through a lot this season. This was a good way to cap off the regular season.”
And it set the stage for what came next.
Six Athletes. Eleven Events. One Final Stage
A few days later, Fisk’s postseason reality came into focus.
Six gymnasts qualified for the 2026 WCGNIC in West Chester, Pennsylvania, competing across 11 events—a significant achievement for a roster of just 11 athletes.
“With only 11 on the roster, it is quite an accomplishment,” Mack said. “It truly shows the dedication, talent, and determination of all the athletes.”
Those six now carry the final chapter:
-
Ciniah Rosby (Junior) – All-Around qualifier for the third consecutive year
- Season highs: 38.95 AA | 9.85 Floor | 9.75 Bars
- Finished 4th All-Around and 5th on Beam at nationals last year
-
Aliyah Reed-Hammon (Senior) – Fourth consecutive nationals appearance
- Competing on Vault, Beam, and Floor
- Chasing a third straight All-American honor
-
Allie Berkley (Senior) – Fourth nationals appearance
- Battled through injury to return
-
Liberty Mora (Senior) – Returning from surgery
- Former All-American, competing on Floor
- Zyia Coleman (Senior) – Back at nationals for the first time since her freshman year
-
Hadassah Diggs (Freshman) – First season, first nationals appearance
- A breakthrough performer in multiple events
This group reflects the full weight of the moment—experience, resilience, and unfinished goals.
Now, the Final Stage
At the 2026 Women’s Collegiate Gymnastics National Invitational Championship (WCGNIC), March 27–29, Fisk steps onto the national stage one last time—no longer as a program proving it belongs, but as one that has already left its mark.
They arrive tested.
They arrive prepared.
They arrive together.
Six gymnasts will take that stage—each routine representing a season defined by resilience, growth, and resolve. From veterans making their final run to a freshman stepping into her first national spotlight, this moment reflects the full arc of the program.
For the seniors, it is the last time wearing Fisk across their chest.
For the younger athletes, it is the responsibility to carry forward what has been built.
For head coach Nuriya Mack, it is the task of guiding it all to a proper and meaningful close.
The routines are still ahead.
But the meaning is already clear.
This is not just an ending.
It is a final statement—from the athletes who stayed, who competed through adversity, and who carried Fisk gymnastics all the way to the finish.
This program was built on the legacy of generations of Fiskites, and these student-athletes now stand among them—legendary for what they achieved and what they overcame.
Their names, their routines, and their impact are now part of Fisk University’s story—forever etched into an institution that has carried its mission for more than 160 years and will carry theirs forward for generations to come.
🥎 | @HUBisonSoftball hosts SC State in three-game series
🥎 | @HUBisonSoftball hosts SC State in three-game series https://t.co/PeFHYATtwv pic.twitter.com/9zBfLXOuRz
— Howard Athletics (@HUBisonSports) March 28, 2026
Today marks the FIRST SCRIMMAGE — where preparation meets pressure, and talk turns into ACTION.
#GoDogs
— South Carolina State Football (@SCState_Fb) March 28, 2026
BULLDOG NATION—IT’S THAT TIME‼️🐶🔥
Your 2025 HBCU NATIONAL CHAMPION FOOTBALL BULLDOGS are BACK AT IT AGAIN…
SPRING BALL JUST HIT A NEW LEVEL.
Today marks the FIRST SCRIMMAGE — where preparation meets pressure, and talk turns into ACTION.
💥 Pads popping
💥… pic.twitter.com/rb7V1JLnLP
How Quincy Ivory, JaCobian Morgan, others performed at JSU football pro day | Tia Reid
Jackson State’s pro day saw several of the team’s top performers take the next step in their journey toward the NFL. Here’s how the day went.https://t.co/mZFhSKrds4
— Tia (@TiaReid65) March 27, 2026
ESPN Original 'Why Not Us: UMES Volleyball' to premiere Monday on the ESPN App
ESPN Original 'Why Not Us: UMES Volleyball' to premiere Monday on the ESPN App
— ESPN PR (@ESPNPR) March 27, 2026
Follow the inspiring journey of the newly formed @UMESHawksMVB team at the University of Maryland Eastern Shore - the 1st men’s volleyball program at a DI HBCU
More: https://t.co/Fmbgy0ua67 pic.twitter.com/STfOwrN6fs
