Gamecocks Lead SEC in Winter Academic Honor Roll
COLUMBIA, S.C. – A total of 861 student-athletes were named to the 2024-25 Winter SEC Academic Honor Roll, announced Wednesday by SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey. The Honor Roll includes the sports of basketball, equestrian, gymnastics, and swimming & diving. It is based on grades from the 2024 Spring, Summer, and Fall terms.
South Carolina had 88 student-athletes make the list, the second-highest total in department history, behind only the group from 2021-22. The Gamecocks narrowly beat out Auburn, Georgia and Texas A&M for the most student-athletes on the honor roll. This marks back-to-back years where the school paced all conference rivals.
Any student-athlete who participates in a Southeastern Conference championship sport or a student-athlete who participates in a sport listed on his/her institution’s NCAA Sports Sponsorship Form is eligible for nomination to the Academic Honor Roll. The following criteria will be followed: (1) An undergraduate student-athlete must have a grade point average of 3.00 or above for either the preceding academic year (two semesters or three quarters) or have a cumulative grade point average of 3.00 or above at the nominating institution. A graduate student-athlete must have a grade point average of 3.0 or above for either the preceding academic year (two semesters or three quarters) of graduate school enrollment or have a cumulative graduate school grade point average of 3.00 or above at the nominating institution. Undergraduate grade point average may not be included in the graduate point average calculation for a graduate student. (2) If a student-athlete attends summer school, his/her grade point average during the summer academic term must be included in the calculation used to determine eligibility for the Academic Honor Roll. (3) Student-athletes eligible for the Honor Roll include those receiving an athletics scholarship, recipients of an athletics award (i.e., letter winner), and non-scholarship student-athletes who have been on a varsity team for two seasons. (4) An undergraduate student-athlete must have successfully completed 24 semester or 36 quarter hours of non-remedial academic credit toward a baccalaureate degree at the nominating institution. A graduate student-athlete must have successfully completed 18 semester or 27 quarter hours of academic credit toward a graduate degree at the nominating institution. (5) The student-athlete must have been a member of a varsity team for the sport’s entire NCAA Championship segment.
South Carolina’s honorees are as follows:
Men’s Basketball (5)
- Benjamin Bosmans-Verdonk – Law – Juris Doctor
- Zachary Davis – Mass Communications
- Austin Herro – Retailing
- Myles Stute – Services Management
- Jacobi Wright – Sport and Entertainment Management
Women’s Basketball (8)
- Sania Feagin – Services Management
- Aubryanna Hall – Sport and Entertainment Management
- Raven Johnson – Services Management
- Tessa Johnson – Psychology
- Te-Hina Paopao – Sociology
- Adhel Tac – Sports Media
- Sakima Walker – M.S. Coaching Education
- Ashlyn Watkins – Mathematics
Equestrian (32)
- Alexa Aureliano – Graduate Non-Degree Seeking
- Abby Bauknight – Sport and Entertainment Management
- Eleanor Beard – Political Science
- Jenna Berghorst – Hospitality Management
- Alexis Daugird – Biological Sciences
- Brianna Felton – Advertising
- Mahaley Gann – Sport and Entertainment Management
- Madison Hammon – Management
- Tierney Horton – Advertising
- Jordyn Humbert – Hospitality Management
- Natalie Jayne – Criminology & Criminal Justice
- Carly Jenkins – Finance
- Alyssa Jipping – Public Health
- Susannah Johnson – Advertising
- Camden Kitchens – Sport and Entertainment Management
- Kenley Koch – English
- Julia Lee – Mass Communications
- Emerson Madonia – Sport and Entertainment Management
- Mattilyn McNeill – Public Health
- Mary Hunter Millet – Mathematics
- Sophie Mitchell – Marketing
- Mya Pinski – Criminology & Criminal Justice
- Payton Poter – Environmental Studies
- Ava Prat – Environmental Studies
- Bella Primavera – Environmental Studies
- Grace Rabb – Nursing
- Sarah Rabb – Sport and Entertainment Management
- Chloe Stephenson – Environmental Studies
- Carson Tulloss – Finance
- Haley Turner – Mass Communications
- Chloe VanStone – Retailing
- Ruby Voortmeyer – Mechanical Engineering
Men’s Swimming and Diving (15)
- Charles Bayer – Marketing
- Quinn Buck – Sport and Entertainment Management
- John Carman – Sport and Entertainment Management
- Connor Fry – Pharmaceutical Sciences
- Tyler Hoard – Exercise Science
- Ryan Hufford – Mechanical Engineering
- Gage Hulbert – Computer Science
- Linus Kahl – Services Management
- Liam Kerns – Biological Sciences
- Kyle Korvick – Biological Sciences
- Wilder Kruse – Real Estate
- Raymond Prosinski – Accounting
- Kaden Smesko – International Business
- Maxwell Spencer – Sport and Entertainment Management
- Umut Yildirim – Computer Science
Women’s Swimming and Diving (28)
- Jordan Agliano – Journalism
- Makenzie Blake – Psychology
- Sterling Burd – Visual Communications
- Caroline Chasser – Mass Communications
- Makayla Ciancanelli – Exercise Science
- Paige Collins – Sociology
- Peyton Curry – Services Management
- Grace Daniels – Public Health
- Emily Eaton – Public Health
- Emily Fekete – Political Science
- Aubrey Finn – Exercise Science
- Delaney Franklin – Psychology
- Breckin Gormley – Sport and Entertainment Management
- Meaghan Harnish – Marketing
- Elizabeth Isenhour – Psychology
- Faith Khoo – International Business
- Sofia Krstolic – Public Health
- Caroline Kudela – Advertising
- Megan Maholic – Journalism
- Pia Murray – Psychology
- Ellery Otem – Biological Sciences
- Greta Pelzek – Psychology
- Amy Riordan – Biological Sciences
- Dylan Scholes – Sport and Entertainment Management
- Annaliese Streeter – Public Health
- Hannah Wachendorfer – Public Health
- Jessica Wigham – Biological Sciences
- Aislinn Zuechner – Finance
