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World's tallest basketball player, 7-foot-9 Olivier Rioux, is transferring from Florida

Sport

World's tallest basketball player, 7-foot-9 Olivier Rioux, is transferring from Florida
Sport

Sport

World's tallest basketball player, 7-foot-9 Olivier Rioux, is transferring from Florida

2026-03-31 22:06 Last Updated At:22:10

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — The world's tallest college basketball player is on the move.

Florida's Olivier Rioux, a 7-foot-9 center from Canada and the most popular athlete on campus, announced Tuesday he is entering the transfer portal. The portal officially opens April 7.

Rioux played sparingly in two years with the Gators, redshirting as a true freshman during the team's national championship season and then getting on the court in mop-up duty this past season. He played 15 total minutes, finishing with seven points, six rebounds and an assist.

He set a Guinness World Record as the world's tallest teen before he stepped foot on campus. Now 20, he's looking for a chance to play more as a third-year sophomore.

“After taking time to reflect on my journey and what's best for my future, I've decided to enter the transfer portal,” Rioux wrote in an Instagram post.

Rioux became the tallest person to ever play college basketball when he made his debut in a 104-64 victory over North Florida last November. He scored three games later, making a free throw after getting fouled. He also recorded his first rebound.

Rioux is 2 inches (5 centimeters) taller than former NBA giants Gheorghe Muresan and Manute Bol, and 3 inches taller than popular big men Yao Ming, Tacko Fall and Shawn Bradley. He already owned a spot in the Guinness record book when he signed with Florida in 2024.

Golden gave Rioux the option of playing sparingly as a true freshman or taking a redshirt season and working on his game. Rioux chose the latter. Nonetheless, he was a walking viral video, from riding his custom-made bike on campus, to ducking under every doorway, to cutting down nets while standing flat-footed during Florida’s NCAA Tournament run.

Golden made it clear before the season that Rioux would only play late in blowouts, the result of having all four frontcourt players returning. But Rioux doubled down on wanting to be at Florida and welcomed the challenge of playing against Alex Condon, Thomas Haugh, Rueben Chinyelu and Micah Handlogten in practice and behind them in games.

He was always the bigger — literally — attraction.

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Florida center Olivier Rioux (32) collects a pass during practice at the NCAA college basketball tournament, Thursday, March 19, 2026, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux)

Florida center Olivier Rioux (32) collects a pass during practice at the NCAA college basketball tournament, Thursday, March 19, 2026, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux)

SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mar 31, 2026--

The Women on Boards Project, a nonprofit dedicated to increasing the representation of women on for-profit consumer brand boards, today announces that Madeline Haydon, entrepreneur, investor and founder of nutpods, the best-selling non-dairy creamer brand, made a $100,000 philanthropic contribution to the organization. The investment will support a new initiative designed to place women in board roles while strengthening the organization’s infrastructure to scale its impact.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260331639915/en/

A central component of the gift will fund the Madeline Haydon Board Access Initiative and Research Study, a program that will partner with companies to place women as independent directors or advisors. Through a structured selection process, the initiative will support at least five board placements, while providing governance education, placement support and program management.

The initiative will also support the development of educational materials for consumer brand founders, helping demystify the board recruitment process and expand the pipeline of women ready to serve. The remaining funds will be directed toward expanding the organization’s operational capacity, including building systems to support growth, developing educational resources for founders and board candidates, and expanding outreach to companies seeking board leadership.

“Boards are where some of the most consequential decisions in business are made,” said Haydon. “I’m inspired by the work the Women on Boards Project is doing to ensure that talented women have access to those rooms. Supporting this initiative felt like a meaningful way to help create more opportunities for women to influence the companies shaping the consumer economy.”

Haydon knows the landscape firsthand. While she was pregnant with her second child, she built nutpods from a Kickstarter campaign into a category-leading brand sold in more than 15,000 retail stores nationwide and the #1 non-dairy creamer on Amazon. Named Amazon Small Business of the Year in 2020 and an Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year, Haydon has been candid about the barriers female founders face in accessing capital and reaching an exit. After successfully selling a controlling stake in nutpods and transitioning leadership, she remains on the brand's board and is now channeling that experience into expanding access for other women. Her connection to the Women on Boards Project is personal as well as professional. Haydon's relationship with co-founder Kara Cissell-Roell, who passed in 2021, brought her into the organization's orbit and ultimately inspired her to invest in its mission in a meaningful way.

Founded in 2020, the Women on Boards Project works to connect experienced female operators, founders and investors with board opportunities at consumer companies. To date, the organization has placed 75 women on boards, the majority of whom were first-time directors. Following their initial placements, those women have gone on to secure more than 50 additional board seats, significantly expanding the network of female leadership across the consumer sector.

“This investment from Madeline will have a direct and lasting impact on our ability to place more women into board leadership roles,” said Kierstin Rielly, CEO of the Women on Boards Project. “Her support allows us to launch a focused initiative that will place women on the boards of consumer companies while also strengthening the infrastructure needed to scale this work. Every placement represents not only greater representation, but stronger governance and better outcomes for the companies we serve.”

For more information on the Women on Boards Project and their mission to increase women’s representation on for-profit consumer brand boards, visit www.wobproject.com.

About Women on Boards Project

The Women on Boards Project is a national nonprofit organization committed to accelerating the representation of women—including women of color—on corporate boards. Through strategic partnerships, public awareness campaigns and board placement support, the organization helps companies build more inclusive and effective leadership teams. They have successfully supported the placement of more than 70 women to the boards of prestigious companies such as Simple Mills, Ancient Harvest, Humm, Honeypot, King Arthur Baking and many more. For more information on the Women on Boards Project or to learn how your company can get involved, visit https://www.wobproject.com/.

Madeline Haydon

Madeline Haydon

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