Kayla Kamya commits to Paris Junior College women’s basketball
Kayla Kamya is the newest women’s basketball commit tied to Paris Junior College, a move that adds an early piece to the program’s next roster in Paris, Texas. Her commitment went public through FieldLevel, and the listing places Kamya in the Class of 2026, a detail that puts her squarely in the current wave of prospects shaping junior college recruiting.
For Paris Junior College, the timing matters as much as the name. Junior college programs often build fast, and a verified commitment like Kamya’s helps the coaching staff start mapping depth, practice competition and lineup balance for the 2026-27 cycle. FieldLevel’s women’s basketball commitment board shows 2,050 pledges overall, a reminder of how active and closely watched the JUCO recruiting lane has become.

Kamya’s pathway also fits the way NJCAA basketball is increasingly used by prospects who want a direct route into college minutes. A recruiting footprint already exists around her, with an NCSA Sports profile linked to New Hope Academy and a MaxPreps career page also surfacing in search results. Those listings point to an athlete who has been on the radar before this commitment, even as Paris Junior College now becomes the clear next stop.
What Kamya brings on the floor right now is the value of a confirmed college-ready prospect entering a program that wants to stock the roster before the season turns over. The commitment does not come with a published stat line in the available listing, but it does give Paris Junior College another player it can plan around immediately. In junior college basketball, that matters because a newcomer can move into the rotation quickly once practice starts, especially if the staff sees her as someone who can help stabilize the bench and compete for minutes from the jump.

For Kamya, the choice locks in a college destination and a place inside the NJCAA development pipeline. For Paris Junior College, it signals a recruiting approach built on identifying talent early and adding pieces before the market tightens, a method that often shapes which programs are ready to compete when the season arrives.
Sources
- [1]fieldlevel.com
- [2]ncsasports.org
- [3]maxpreps.com