
Boise State Student-Athletes Set Record with 3.46 Cumulative GPA
5/22/2025 9:52:00 AM | General
Football sets all-time record for both cumulative and single-semesterÂ
BOISE, Idaho - Boise State student-athletes set another record during the 2025 spring semester by establishing an all-department cumulative grade-point average (GPA) of 3.46, the highest GPA in department history. The Broncos also turned in an all-department single-semester GPA of 3.39, which is the best spring semester in department history.Â
"These achievements are a direct reflection of the discipline and dedication our student-athletes bring to both their academic and athletic pursuits," said Gabe Rosenvall, Associate Athletic Director, Student-Athlete Academic Services. "Setting a new department GPA record is no small feat, and to see programs like women's basketball, football and volleyball reaching historic highs shows how deeply committed our teams are to excellence across the board."
As a department, all 18 sport programs secured a 3.0 GPA or higher, 87% of all student-athletes earned a 3.0 GPA or higher, and 70 student-athletes secured a perfect 4.0 GPA.
Three sports programs established GPA milestones. Women's basketball set a team record with a 3.82 cumulative GPA, the second best in department history. Football set an all-time single-semester record with a 3.22 GPA which translates to 81% of football student-athletes receiving a 3.0 GPA or higher and volleyball tied their record with a 3.55 cumulative GPA.
"Boise State Athletics fosters an environment where academic success is not only possible—but expected and supported," said Roger Munger, Professor, Department of Writing Studies at Boise State and NCAA Faculty Athletics Representative. "These results reflect their ongoing commitment to advising, mentoring, and helping student-athletes manage the demands of their dual roles. When every team earns above a 3.0 and programs like football, volleyball, and women's basketball post record-setting GPAs, it demonstrates a culture that values education and growth."