Minnesota, Utah, and Baylor Set to Join Power Esports Conference for 2025-26 Season

Minnesota, Utah, and Baylor Set to Join Power Esports Conference for 2025-26 Season

Three powerhouse programs bolster PEC’s expanding collegiate roster

The Power Esports Conference (PEC) is getting a major boost for the upcoming 2025-26 season. The University of Minnesota, University of Utah, and Baylor University are joining the fold, bringing fresh talent, deeper competition, and new storylines to one of collegiate esports’ most dynamic conferences.


The addition of these three schools raises the PEC’s total membership to nine institutions, signaling a continued surge in collegiate esports momentum across North America. The conference has become a hotspot for high-level, student-centered competition in titles like Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, Valorant, Rocket League, and Overwatch 2.


Each of the new members brings something different to the table—whether it’s an already-established program, an energetic fan base, or a commitment to the holistic development of student competitors. For Doug Goon, Program Director for Esports at Minnesota, the opportunity marks a major leap forward.

“Joining the Power Esports Conference is an exciting step forward for our program,” Goon said. “We’re eager to compete at a higher level and give our students a platform to showcase their skills on a national stage.”


That sentiment is echoed by AJ Dimick, Esports Director at the University of Utah, who emphasized how well the PEC’s vision aligns with the Utes’ approach.

“Utah Esports is proud to join a conference that aligns with our vision for competitive integrity, academic balance, and program growth,” Dimick said.


The PEC’s current lineup already features some heavy hitters. Boise State enters the new season as reigning champions in Rocket League and Overwatch 2, while Michigan State claimed the 2025 titles in both Valorant and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. Programs like Syracuse, Nebraska, Kansas, and Ohio State continue to build strong rosters and passionate communities, setting the stage for a highly competitive field this fall.


Adam Stanley, Director of Esports and Head Coach at Baylor, sees the conference as a natural
fit.

“This is a great opportunity for our players, our fans, and our institution,” Stanley said. “We’re honored to be part of a growing and respected esports ecosystem.”


Beyond the obvious boost in competition, the expansion adds exciting new regional rivalries and opportunities for student shoutcasters, analysts, and esports professionals-in-training to shine on larger platforms. With more schools, more games, and more exposure, the 2025-26 PEC season is shaping up to be its biggest yet.


Schedules, matchups, and new broadcast partnerships are set to be announced in the coming weeks. But one thing’s already clear—the PEC just leveled up.

Scott Tainsky’s Research Focus Aligns Perfectly With New Falk College of Sport

Falk College Senior Associate Dean of Faculty Affairs and Academic Operations Scott Tainsky at the University of Michigan.

Scott Tainsky (far right), shown here with Detroit Country Day School players and coaches at a University of Michigan summer team camp, is the new Senior Associate Dean of Faculty Affairs and Academic Operations for the David B. Falk College of Sport.

The earliest memories Scott Tainsky has involve playing sports and watching the golden age of Big East Conference basketball with stars like Patrick Ewing, Chris Mullin and Syracuse University star Pearl Washington.

Now, as a father of two children who play youth sports, Tainsky says the “anchor events” in their household revolve around his children’s games and practices, and the sports they watch together on TV. Tainsky built his research career around the idea that sports bring people together, and that’s the focus and sensibility he’s bringing to the David B. Falk College of Sport as its new senior associate dean of faculty affairs and academic operations.

“It’s the same feeling I hope to experience very shortly at the (JMA Wireless) Dome,” Tainsky says. “Being able to come together and root, root, root for the home team with the family was a salient experience for me as I grew up and became an athlete. Then, as a soon-retired athlete, it evolved from me competing to being one of the people either coaching or analyzing what’s going on for others to do their best to compete at the highest level.”

Falk College Senior Associate Dean of Faculty Affairs and Academic Operations Scott Tainsky.

Scott Tainsky

Tainsky, who started at Falk College on July 1, was previously a professor of management and Director of Sport and Entertainment Management at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan, where he was awarded Mike Ilitch School of Business awards for innovative teaching and excellence in research. He’s currently editor in chief of the Journal of Sport Management, the official research journal of the North American Society for Sport Management (NASSM) and he has co-authored over 50 journal articles, becoming a NASSM Research Fellow in 2015.

At the core of Tainsky’s research are the decisions made by high-level sports managers and how they impact both organizational performance and the collective well-being of fans.

“Scott’s research interests–economics of sports leagues and teams, player performance analytics, and corporate social responsibility in national and international sports leagues–align perfectly with our vision for creating the nation’s premier College of Sport,” says Falk College Dean Jeremy Jordan. With programs in esports, exercise science, nutrition, sport analytics and sport management, the Falk College of Sport launched July 1 as the first standalone college on a high-research activity campus (R1) to focus on sport through a holistic academic lens.

We connected with Tainsky to learn more about his research and how it will impact the College of Sport.

How did you develop an interest in studying the impact of sport?

My curiosity about the world and trying to incorporate that into my daily life. Being able to better the community that I’m a part of is ingrained by the fact that I grew up in a house where my father (Dr. Michael Tainsky) was a researcher—in his case he was trying to cure cancer and improve people’s lives that way.

Mine was much more social. As a social scientist, I have noticed the way sport can be such a valuable part of people’s lives. My first memory was watching Big East basketball, and I liked math. I try to bring those two worlds together to create the best social experiences for the greatest number of people possible.

One of the College of Sport’s areas of excellence is community sport and wellness, or as Dean Jordan also calls it, “sport for good.” How does your research fit with the uplifting power of sport?

The intellectual side of that is no one has to do sport; it’s an elective part of our lives. Since so many are choosing to spend so much of our attention on this leisure activity, it’s an incredible opportunity to see what people truly value. At the same time, we can provide leadership in utilizing that to help create the most good in the community.

Falk College Senior Associate Dean of Faculty Affairs and Academic Operations Scott Tainsky with his daughter Shana.

Scott Tainsky with his daughter, Shana, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., after Shana led her club soccer team to the championship of the top flight of the 2021 Women and Girls in Soccer tournament.

We’re here to help round out that part of their choice, to provide the right amount of sport, marketed and delivered in a way that’s consumable and made more efficient, where the product is better and where the athletes are more informed.

Is there a specific theme throughout your research?

If there’s a theme to my research, it’s this idea of positive externalities, and that’s a very technical term of what is being produced can produce additional good captured by others. So, for example, in the latest work that I did with (Sport Analytics Professor) Adrian Simion, we look at how the hotel industry is impacted by college football games. It’s not like Marriot or Hilton does anything different to be able to raise their rates or increase their occupancy rates on home football games. It happens because there’s so much excitement around sport; so much interest in being a part of that experience. So, in that case, we’re looking to quantify the externalities produced by football games.

There are other ways this presents in terms of viewership. When I follow Syracuse basketball and Syracuse basketball is having a good year, you would think that because we only have so much leisure time and I’m watching more of the Orange, it might take away the amount I choose to watch other basketball teams. But in fact, the opposite is true. As I become more deeply connected to Syracuse basketball, I’m actually more interested in some of the rival teams we’re competing against. So, we’re looking for those externalities, quantifying those externalities, and then helping round out the experience with the understanding that those things that may be counterintuitive are in play. How do we capitalize on this knowledge to produce the most good?

What are your impressions of the Falk College of Sport and what it can become?

Falk College and Syracuse University have recognized that there are four legs of the stool, and you can’t get any balance unless all four of them are functioning and working together. You can’t create athletes and have competition at the highest level without understanding the exercise science portion and the nutrition portion of sport. You can’t produce teams and individuals functioning at their highest level without sport management and sport analytics. You can’t appreciate the whole of it unless all of those pieces are talking with one another…and there is not one other place that’s doing what’s happening right now at Falk College. It’s 100 percent the reason I wanted to be a part of this project.

What drew me to Falk College was this vision of what can be if we bring together these disciplines that are often times separated and siloed. It’s such a welcome idea that I expect us to be doing incredible things quickly because of all the support I’m seeing and all of the buy-in for what we’re doing from so many different, important pieces of this puzzle.